Invest in the person you are dating or romancing and enjoy the time you two spend together, advises Sybil Shiddell.
'The whole state is very proud of me.' 'I have been home twice after the release of the movie and I could feel the pride in the people's eyes.'
Joginder Tuteja takes a look at the film projects that are on floors now.
'A good pipeline of movies is fuelling this trend of revenge consumption.'
Trade pundits and quick think piece experts can speculate all they like, but what works at the box-office is a mystery as always.
Who rocked the sari style best in the British Raj? Sukanya Verma asks you to take a poll.
'Kangana is such a stylo, she knows what will look good on her.'
If fate had willed, Alia Bhatt's first movie co-star would have been Aditya Narayan, singer Udit Narayan's talented son.
'Once you become a mother you can win the big wars at work and you can win the big wars in your life. 'But, sometimes, you lose the small battles at home and lose the small battles with your children.'
Joginder Tuteja looks at Bollywood's ladies, where they will be calling the shots in their films.
Joginder Tuteja looks at the major films that released in theatres and how they fared.
These are the big budget films that have been designed either as a spectacle or just for the masses, hence warranting a large segment of audiences coming together to enjoy the experience in theatres.
Many big Bollywood's big movies have been pushed forward to 2021, thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown. Among them are quite a few bio-pics.
Nobody else needs to boycott Bollywood, they are doing a pretty good job of digging up their own foundation, notes Deepa Gahlot.
Joginder Tuteja looks at the new release schedule for actress next year.
'It is felt that the decision to re-open cinemas and resume shooting was premature.'
What better occasion than International Women's Day to take a look?
Quite a few superstars are bringing their big releases to the big screen this month.
Alia Bhatt is not allowed to talk about her role in Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Gangubai but she has already started preparing for it.
After years of living with his family in a poky 110 sq. ft. 'house', textile worker Sambhaji Surve dreams of moving into a home four times the size once the Maharashtra government starts its ambitious redevelopment of the 39-acre Kamathipura shanty town in south-central Mumbai. Sharing his dream are about 8,000 other families hoping for a better life when the redevelopment project, part of the government's effort to redevelop old settlements and make life more livable for some residents, gets underway. The Shiv Sena-Nationalist Congress Party aims to redevelop BDD Chawl and Dharavi but for Surve all the matters is Kamathipura where he arrived in the 1970s from Nasik to work in a textile mill. Kamathipura was originally built 150 years ago following construction of a causeway to connect the seven islands of Mumbai. From the British Raj to post-independence, it became infamous for slums and brothels.
'When I contracted COVID and was extremely unwell, I almost thought I was not going to make it.' 'But this man (Karan Johar) was like family for us in Bombay. He would send doctors for me, made sure my medication was done correctly and made sure I came out of COVID.'
Joginder Tuteja looks at the magic she's created with her leading men in the past.
Joginder Tuteja looks at the upcoming films and their release dates.
With so many films shifted to the new year, it's going to be a busy year for Bollywood's actors.
'It will be very tough to create an audience for such films after the lockdown ends.'
'Ranveer Singh is very lively on the sets. You don't feel the pressure when he's there.'
'Who said they didn't meet on her birthday? Right now Ranbir has his father's health issues to deal with.'
Wading through the long list of biopics coming up, Subhash K Jha picks the ones likely to make a mark.
A copious amount of blood, beating, crying, saving, sacrificing, nationalism fills up its staggering three hours running time. Emotions run sky high, but you feel nothing, sighs Sukanya Verma.
The next 12 months will see many world cinema heavyweights unveiling exciting new films.
'Everybody is losing money as interest costs keep piling up.' 'Some films will wait for a theatrical release and some won't, keeping their profit and loss situation in mind.'
'I don't let it affect my life because otherwise, we will go mad.'
From the many large communal riots across decades to the six-hour mass cull of Muslims in Nellie, 1983; Sikhs in Delhi and elsewhere, 1984; Kashmiri Pandits, 1990; selective massacres of Hindus in Punjab, 1983-93; and Gujarat, 2002, we have failed to bring perpetrators of our biggest tragedies to account, asserts Shekhar Gupta.
'He listens to you and he will do exactly what you tell him to do.'
With the film's leading man's death, the release plan for Dil Bechara has been revived in a big way.
There are several women-centric movies set to release post lockdown, and most of them are quite quirky.
2020 could well have been a year of biopics with females taking centre-stage. After Chhapaak, it was time for Shakuntala Devi and Gangubai Kathiawadi to release later in the year with many more in the pipeline for 2021.
'The pressure was very high because I am not a Saroj Khan or a Vaibhavi Merchant.' 'I am someone from a reality show.' 'I was a nobody who was given an opportunity to express myself in the best way I could.'
Sukanya Verma looks at the recent spate of book-to-screen adaptations.