Yet another wild card contestant enters Bigg Boss 14, and this time, it is television actor Aly Goni.
Feeling comfortable to be yourself around your partner is primarily a sign of being compatible with your partner.
As cinemas remain shut and watching movies on big screen still a distant dream, OTT platforms are keeping us distracted from the pandemic with its steady supply of content.
As a thriller, Dial 100 is much too passive to convey the urgency or hazard of the instability at loose, feels Sukanya Verma.
Life, history, adventure, Sukanya Verma offers a rather feverish schedule on OTT this week.
Thrillers, horrors and real-life inspired stories dominate the OTT scene this week.
You'll be spoilt for choice on OTT this week. Sukanya Verma lists everything you simply cannot afford to miss.
This poorly paced movie is too dull to be a drama and shows no signs (or intrigue) of a thriller, observes Sukanya Verma.
DC superheroes, Marvel superheroes, sleep science, scandals, Sukanya Verma brings you all you catch on OTT this week.
Naxalbari has some really good and unexpected twists and turns, observes Moumita Bhattacharjee.
The Wife could have been a game-changer in the horror genre, but falls prey to listless execution, complains Moumita Bhattacharjee.
Lara Dutta nails her character's daunting temperament, Soha Ali Khan's sophistication is tailor-made for the part, Anya Singh conveys a tidy blend of shy and spirit, but it's Kritika Kamra's hilarious Kareena-fication that makes her the life of this willy-nilly game of thrones, observes Sukanya Verma.
Kate Winslet's turn as detective while Seema Pahwa turns director, all this and more on OTT this week.
Dia Mirza, Sahil Sangha took to social media to announce their separation
Ross and Rachel end their super long break. Kate Winslet solves Easttown's grimmest mystery. Huma Qureshi gets political in Bihar. All this and more on OTT this week notes Sukanya Verma.
The film will releases both in theatres and digitally, reveals Subhash K Jha.
'My hunger for characters, stories, and work is becoming even more insatiable.' 'I'm obsessed with films, characters, and this whole world.'
'We are talking about history, about things that transpired.' 'If we don't know our history, we will never be able to evolve as individuals.'
Joginder Tuteja looks at August's OTT releases.
Love Hostel stays focused on the murky present and revelling in its increasingly dark outcome. Despite the reach of social media and technology, this isn't the cushy, liberal India of mainstream culture. It's a lawless, ruthless, endless minefield where uncertainty and bigotry go hand in hand and patriarchy is a foregone conclusion, observes Sukanya Verma.
The argument that the pandemic has given a boost to streaming video is fallacious. Only three OTTs saw a rise in viewership; the others fell.
'While I was shooting fake guns in Minsk, there were real grenades being thrown just a little distance away.'
Vihir is a balm for our troubled souls, says Aseem Chhabra. It is a like a book on life lessons -- joy, laughter and tragedy are all part of our existence.
Sunny Leone joins Amitabh Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and many others.
Sunflower creates intrigue right from the start, and lives up to its potential, observes Prateek Sur.
Kunal Kemmu's crime thriller Abhay 2 continues to be gripping in the second season, notes Moumita Bhattacharjee.
Shabana Azmi presents Mee Raqsam, Baba's directorial debut.
Netflix is reminiscent of Star TV in the 1990s: Very Western in its gaze, very expensive, and clueless, notes Vanita Kohli-Khandekar.
200: Halla Ho's filmi treatment of events diminishes the impact of a fiery reality, says Sukanya Verma.
'The stories I want to tell are very important.'
Silence... Can You Hear It is definitely a recommended watch of the week, assures Joginder Tuteja.
'I don't think you will see too much of Rohit Roy as an actor now.'
The OTT glass is full again. Here's all the exciting new fare to watch over the week. Sukanya Verma offers a peek.
Indoo Ki Jawaani is fun while it lasts, discovers Joginder Tuteja.
14 Phere delivers on the feel-good factor, but if you are looking for ground-breaking humour, it will fail to work its way into your hearts, notes Anita Aikara.
Companies like Amazon Prime Video are also temporarily lowering bit rates -- a measure of how much data is being transferred -- to ease pressure on telecom network infrastructure.
Mentalhood will start streaming from March 11.