'To be pitched against him as a rival was not right. Luckily, it did not affect our personal equation.'
'The real test whether the movie has worked or not is when the people remember it five years later. Just like wine and relationships, the same is true for movies.'
'One can do Manto only when you are completely honest with yourself.'
'Watching these actors is like a masterclass.' 'All that I've done so far pales in comparison.'
'In India, dark-skinned actors are always cast in a particular kind of role.'
Joginder Tuteja lets us know what to expect.
Idiocy is the source of Heropanti 2's outdated thrills, observes Sukanya Verma.
After a glamorous opening night, Bollywood continued to put up a solid presence at the Jio MAMI Film Festival.
Nandita Das' Manto get its first screening at Cannes.
It's movie night in Bollywood!
India put up a strong show at the International Emmy Awards on November 25, looking beautiful on the red carpet.
Hotstar's new show Hostages will start streaming from May 31, and the makers held a special screening the night before.
Catch up on the screenings of Sacred Games 2 and Batla House.
Sacred Games 2 is an upgrade, and is shaping up to be one of India's great cultural events, feels Sreehari Nair.
With RRR adding to the line-up, Joginder Tuteja takes a look at how well films on revolutionaries have done at the box office.
Are you ready for Rajinikanth's dashing look in Petta?
'I am really grateful to God with respect to the films I get because choosing them are not a conscious effort.'
Syed Firdaus Ashraf/Rediff.com finds out why Sacred Games has run into trouble.
Joginder Tuteja lists some lesser known facts about this blockbuster starring Sunny Deol and Ameesha Patel.
'I'm very proud of having worked with one of the finest minds of India and Indian cinema.'
Nawazuddin Siddiqui gets ready for Babumoshai Bandookbaaz.
What stars around town were doing on Wednesday...
Subhash K Jha looks at actresses who dared play Momma at the risk of getting typecast.
'Whatever had to be said from the original novel has already been said.' 'There is nothing left in Vikram Chandra's novel to be put in Season 3.'
'He needed to speak to the women he wrote about. You can't just write your version of the honest truth in a relationship. Two people are involved and they both need to be aware of what will be put out in public.' Asha Parekh on Nawazuddin Siddiqui's memoir, An Ordinary Life.
'It would have been easy to make a small film with Tiger in a basti or an action film like Pushpa which was all mud, grunge and a repeat of what I had done before.'
'I always believed films don't have any language.'
Can Nawazuddin Siddiqui bring Bal Thackeray's powerful personality to life? Syed Firdaus Ashraf watches the Thackeray trailer to find out.
'I'm apologising to everyone whose sentiments are hurt because of the chaos around my memoir,' says the actor.
'I admire the way he is able to maintain a balance between his personal and professional life.' 'I don't think it's something most of us can boast of.'
Joginder Tuteja looks at the lesser known films of these stars.
Unlike his The Lunchbox, Ritesh Batra's Photograph fails to engross us, feels Ritwik Sharma.
Amazon Prime Video has doubled its content investments in India and announced as many as 41 new titles in Hindi, Tamil, Telugu and English, thereby throwing an open challenge to their streaming competitor, Netflix.
Wherever the stars go, the cameras follow.
'His personality, work, life is much beyond a film.'