A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
We take a look at his life through his pictures over the years.
Sukanya Verma picks 10 essential David Dhawan movies you need to watch to understand their loony appeal.
White is pure. White is powerful. And our movies just love to channelise its immaculate energy and enhance a visual's impact.
Sukanya Verma looks at notable troikas in Bollywood's catalog of three hero vehicles.
Sukanya Verma presents a DDLJ special quiz to test your knowledge about one of Hindi cinema's most successful films of all time.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Where a few film-makers are sensitive in their treatment as noted in the depiction of lesbian love in Hindi movies, a significant number is prone to poking fun for cheap laughs.
Madhuri Dixit and Sanjay Dutt Dutt will act in a movie again after 21 years.
The most thrilling, romantic, terrifying, musical and comical tring tring moments!
This multi-talented actor has charm with a big C.
'Working in DDLJ has been one of the best moments in my career.' Satish Shah relives the DDLJ moments.
It's not just the aam aadmi who has been feeling the corruption heat.
Ghayal Once Again starts out wobbly but gains substantial momentum till interval point, only to go completely haywire in its latter half, writes Sukanya Verma.
Raja Sen, who discovered Pran's filmography in the VHS-crazed era and was instantly hooked, tells us why the late actor's onscreen villiany is stuff legends are made of.
'The Ek Do Teen star struggled with a problem skin all through her reign as numero uno.' 'And yet acne never got into the way of her incredible success.' All this and more in Sukanya Verma's Super Filmi Week.
'I got an offer to do a cameo in Jassi Jaisi Koi Nahin.' 'I did it just to get out of my house, and so that my parents would not see me so depressed.'
Meet Bollywood fan Ranjit Dahiya. If you are in Mumbai, you can't miss his massive tributes to the industry that he loves.
A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
We celebrate Independence Day with this special feature, published on Rediff.com in January 2013.
As Dilip Kumar passes away in the ages, Sukanya Verma feels a deep gratitude for the enormous legacy he's left behind.
Even after three decades, Mandi proves its lasting relevance and powerful impact on cinephile memory by inviting comparisons to Vidya Balan's Begum Jaan.
'It reminded me of the Ramayana, a story that runs in every Indian's blood.'
Veteran theatre personality Dolly Thakore, who made her film debut as a casting director with Richard Attenborough's Gandhi, kept in touch with him till much after work on the multiple award-winning biopic was over. Distraught upon hearing the unfortunate news, the Indian thespian revisits her long and 'wonderful' association with Sir Richard Attenborough.
If only making it official was as easy as falling in love, says Sukanya Verma.
You'll come out laughing till your sides hurt, promises Sukanya Verma.
The actor has quite a body of memorable death scenes to boast of.
'Shah Rukh had only one bad habit -- he would wake up late. It became my duty to wake him up during the shooting of King Uncle, Karan Arjun and Koyla, since all three films were shot outstation.' Rakesh Roshan takes Patcy N/ Rediff.com back in time.
Sukanya Verma looks at the various baap-beti equations depicted on the screen.
Interviewing Anil Kapoor, Syed Firdaus Ashraf discovered, can be a real pleasure!
Tiger Shroff could not have asked for a shoddier launch with Heropanti. Yet, somehow beneath the pin-up torso, the soulful eyes and an awkward smile -- a genuine, graceful, likeable boy comes through, writes Sukanya Verma.
Before Akshay Kumar takes centrestage in the courtroom this Friday, here's looking at filmi lawyers before him.
'I have done so much work after the Mahabharat, but people still remember me as Duryodhan.'
Sukanya Verma's nostalgic filmi week!
As means of transport or metaphor, the romance of trains is unmistakable in Hindi cinema.
Pran lived a full life, entertaining and scaring the hell out of many people, writes Aseem Chhabra, in his tribute to the legendary actor who passed away on July 12.
Dilip Kumar remained in demand all through his career because he kept reinventing himself in keeping with the changing times in Indian cinema, argues Mohammad Asim Siddiqui.