The hits and misses of the week.
After breaking records at the box office with its super successful run, it was time for team Dangal to celebrate!
The hits and misses of the week.
Check out their glamorous outings.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'There is always so much to learn from Aamir sir.'
What do you have to say about their style?
'I hear of so many people not getting their money and producers not taking their calls to pay them.'
Sukanya Verma lists significant memories in our 1996 recap.
A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'I have never had a foul experience in the industry.' 'There are rotten apples everywhere, in your family, relatives, friends circle, colleagues...' 'It's very vulnerable because of the glamour, but it's very heartbreaking to hear bad things about the industry.' 'It's not such a bad place.'
'We always want to pull down the other person.' 'All we need right now is sensitivity, not just in our industry, but everywhere.'
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'Thugs is smarter than a lot of 'nationalistic' movies,' notes Rohit Sathish Nair.
Take a look at the list.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Munna Michael's hollowness is as striking as Tiger's chiselled torso, one that he freely bares in everything from an unzipped hoodie to a doily masquerading as a shirt, says Sukanya Verma.
Not all cricketer-actress romances culminate in heartbreak. Some have stayed reassuringly rock-solid.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Back on the small screen after quite a while, actress Pallavi Kulkarni relates the many unlikely adventures she experienced during her time away from the spotlight.
Looking forward to Jolly LLB 2, 2.0 and much more.
Yet, Guddu Rangeela never quite soars, says Raja Sen.
A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Beginning a fascinating new series where film folk reveal what their movies taught them...
Here's what caught our eye at the movies this year.
'I have an absolutely professional relationship, nothing personal, with Amitabh Bachchan.' 'I am the only person in the industry whom he never calls for home parties or festivals. Unless we have work, we don't call each other.'
Savouring Spielberg's fierce, fine movie; salivating over MAMI's line-up; gobbling a Shrek cake; visualising a desi Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants with Alia, Bhumi and more in Sukanya Verma's Super Filmi Week.
Rediff's film critic Sukanya Verma lists her top Hindi movies of 2014.
10 Ways Bollywood has kidnapped in the movies.
Ugly -- a constantly riveting, ticking timebomb of a film -- is by far Kashyap's finest film, says Raja Sen
'I am going to direct a film for him.' 'He thinks I will make a good film.' 'For me, that in itself is an award.'
Ram Gopal Varma is back with Part Three of that series, which presented to us the first clear evidence that the great man was slipping, rues Sreehari Nair.
'Once you are a mother, you don't have time for yourself, especially if you are a first-time mother. You want to do everything for the child and then you realise that you don't have 10 hands.' Rakshanda Khan is back, and ready to thrill!
Raag Desh is one of the best films of the year, Sreehari Nair raves.
The Oscar winner tells Subhash K Jha how Hrithik's voice was used to sound like various characters in Kabali.
Bollywood celebrities mourn the death of the charismatic actor.
'Woman need to be respected much more in our country. But choices should be allowed for women as well as men. I don't care about the box office collections of Ki & Ka; I care about the thoughts and conversation that it brings on. Every actor has that one film in their filmography where they pushed the envelope further.' Arjun Kapoor takes on new challenges with Ki & Ka.
'In Udaan and in Lootera, the initial sensations that drove Vikramaditya Motwane to make those pictures never quite travelled beyond the walls that contained them.' 'Here, in Trapped, this sensations-strangled-by-the-walls feeling becomes the movie's real tune,' says Sreehari Nair.