Ek Khiladi Ek Haseena director Suparn Verma gets ready with his next.
All that you would like to know about the 1971 war.
Shabana will now be seen in Sanjay Gupta's Alibaug, which also stars Irrfan Khan, Dia Mirza and Mansi Joshi Roy.
The simple tale of a couple and their struggle will tug at your heart strings.
Manoj Bajpai plays the lead in a movie about prisoners of war.
The film is a long, tedious and predictable film about friendship and revenge, set in the backdrop of the Mumbai underworld
'Alkazisaab trained innumerable actors to be good human beings.'
The hits and misses of the week.
In the political satire, Lollypop Since 1947, Deepak Dobriyal will play an aam aadmi who becomes a mighty political force.
Here's how Bollywood makes use of towels.
The hits and misses of the week.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Meet the Big B, a master of (voice) disguises.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
A look at films that were shot in Sri Lanka.
These characters have entertained us despite the fact that they do not have any name at all.
'Look at what we are doing to the goats, the cows, the women, the children...'
Of the two brothers in Kapoor & Sons, Fawad Khan's is the more successful, the better-earning, the more polite, the apple of his parents's eyes. Beside this perfection sits his homosexuality and the film forces us to question if we can look at Rahul as perfect, inspite of that fact.
'In Angamaly Diaries, dreams, kinks, small corruptions, cheap lives, and hopes are all given their due and that attitude frees us up to believe that perhaps there is more good than bad in the sum total of us.' 'This is a coming-of-age tale taken straight out of a diary written in blood,' says Sreehari Nair.
In the world of harebrained Bhai films, Kick is the best made and the most fun, says Raja Sen.
'The directors of these movies to me are less like artists and more like red-pen remarkists, whose idea of a script is basically checking off the broadest of issues in the broadest possible ways: Sexism, Check. Misogyny, Check. Loving yourself, Check,' says Sreehari Nair.
How do you even define a movie that primarily exists as an invitation to its audience -- an invitation to come and merely laze around with a set of interesting characters, asks Sreehari Nair.