Sci-fi blockbusters, massy masala, poignant classics, playful cartoons, Sukanya Verma has something for every taste on OTT this week.
Celebs spotted at the special screening of Madaari!
Irrfan Khan's fascinating interview with Savera R Someshwar/Rediff.com.
Quite a sight to see lead stars from the trilogy come together on stage!
'If the film becomes a hit within Friday, Saturday and Sunday, I am relieved.' 'But by Monday, I need to come back to earth.'
A look at the hits and misses of the week.
Beloved movies, brand new shows, must-watch documentaries and feel-good fare, it's all there on OTT this week. Sukanya Verma offers a peek.
KPAC Lalitha's specialty was evoking on screen people that the audience felt they knew intimately, and evoking them through telling details that tore down the boundary between the audience and the performer, observes Sreehari Nair.
Here's a super fun way to while away your time
Madaari is not a film that will stay with you as you, in your day to day routine, succumb to the pressure and become part of the corruption that ails our system, says Savera R Someshwar/Rediff.com.
'He is in full spirits as he proceeds to battle it,' says Hrithik.
Subhash K Jha presents five super-talented actors waiting to break through.
Joginder Tuteja looks at just how much audiences have loved Bollywood's serial killers.
'She made you feel relaxed so that you can do the scenes best.'
A look at the hits and misses of the week.
A look at the hits and misses at the box office this week.
The proceeds from the concert will go to the India COVID Response Fund.
'If I've been nominated alongside these greats, it means something.'
'I have wanted to act since I was seven. I wasn't confident enough.' 'I thought I didn't have the face, the body and the figure because back then, it was all about the body.' 'Now, the industry is changing.' 'People are noticing talent.' 'It has become more than someone just having a good body.'
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Joginder Tuteja looks back at Bollywood's wedding movies to see how well they have done in the past.
Bollywood queues up to watch a good film.
'Throughout my journey, people have been wishing me well, praying for me, from all over the world.' 'People I know, people I don't even know.' 'They were praying from different places, different time zones, and I feel all their prayers become ONE.' 'One big force, like a force of current, which got inside me through the end of my spine and has germinated through the crown of my head.'
'Katrina gives a lot of inputs, like the colours that suit her skin tone.'
Hindi Medium works because it manages to stretch itself beyond its scrubby elements, easy half-baked jokes, lessons about consumerism and our love for English, into a simple story about a boy who would do anything to see his girl smile, feels Sreehari Nair.
'There are a lot of really unhappy people out there.'
'It's like as if God was telling us that we have not spent time with each other despite being siblings, so now you have to spend time and talk.'
'A young film-maker like me doesn't have the luxury of first choices.'
'Gratitude for the blessings of one's life is my greatest takeaway this year.'
A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'I'm glad that now we have so many opportunities to tell all kinds of stories, be it cinema or on OTT.'
In Maqbool, Vishal Bhardwaj did a Godfather; in that he took something that was pulpy and fast and gripping, and made out of it something timeless and grand, feels Sreehari Nair.
Indie stars flock to see High Jack.
'Sushant Singh Rajput, a bright young lad who had a life beyond films, was probably too good for Bollywood.' 'To blame his death by suicide on a gang of Bollywood bullies is stretching the point too far,' argues Saibal Chatterjee.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.