Shah Rukh and Gauri Khan, reveals Subhash K Jha, are looking at other directors for their daughter's debut.
After days of celebrations, the Ganpati festivities have come to an end.
In a tweet on November 22, Chouhan shared a few lines of a poem titled 'Bauji' (father) on his Twitter handle, stating that it was written by his wife to express her feelings after the last rites of his father-in-law. Bhumika Birthare, who claims to be a TV anchor/reporter, took to Twitter on Monday to assert that it was her poem.
The filmmaker turns 70 today!
Hum Do Hamare Do is the kind of rush job rom-com that cuts to the chase after so much dillydallying and in such a dull manner, it completely misses the point, sighs Sukanya Verma.
Nushrratt and Jacqueline at the Ram Setu mahurat... Chiranjeevi launches a teaser of Rana's film...
In this series, InstaStories, we let pictures on social media tell their beautiful back stories.
We believe Dishani is absolutely Bollywood ready.
'I admire the discipline with which she trained for the action scenes.' 'I admire her for the dedication with which she managed to lose all the weight she had put on for Thalaivi, physically transforming herself before coming into this film.'
Saina Nehwal was the cynosure of all eyes in a lovely wine velvet sari.
'Every single Indian dish is a jewel.'
Check out the happy and cute faces!
'I was scared and sceptical because I was not brought up to raise my hand on a woman.' 'So I didn't think I would look convincing in a hand-to-hand combat with a woman.'
The films cast attended the screening.
Spin's rather old-fashioned and vanilla depiction of the Indian American way is a bit of a bummer, feels Sukanya Verma.
Sushmita Sen's combination of blazing authority and maternal anxiety are perfectly cast as a woman thrown in the centre of chaos in Aarya 2, observes Sukanya Verma.
Where Ayushmann Khurrana gets the tone and texture of his hypermasculine chump in skinny gym shorts down pat, Vaani Kapoor is a picture of backbone and restraint in a role that could not have been easy, observes Sukanya Verma.
All along, Rahul, right till today 10 years later, hung onto his gut feeling that something surely had happened to Sheena.
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.
Announcing pregnancy on social media seems to be the latest fad and our B-town celebs are no exception.
'At the end of the day, we are all humans.'
Bollywood has so many reasons to celebrate!
It's her maasi's birthday! Happy birthday, Padmini Kolhapure!
Owing to cancelled schedules, busy Bollywood celebrities are engaging in all sorts of fun activities with their brood.
Special screenings were held for The Zoya Factor and Pal Pal Dil Ke Paas, and the cast members made sure to attend with their families.
When Indi Rae Warner asked her dad to dance, check what happened.
Everyone should believe in something, she says and she believes in.
Despite the lockdown, B-town celebs kept their spirits high and celebrated Easter.
Bandon Mein Tha Dum is about a team that hits rock-bottom, loses key players, has its global reputation shrink overnight, but despite all the setbacks, pulls off one of the greatest comeback victories in the history of international cricket, applauds Shailesh Karkera.
Stylish India batsman Rohit Sharma is one of the greatest ever ODI openers, considering his ability to score daddy hundreds, says former captain Krishnamachari Srikkanth. Out of his 29 ODI centuries, 11 times Rohit has scored in excess of 140, including a world record three double hundreds.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Namrata Thakker takes a peek into Farhan's life through these pictures.
Someone please get them on the cover of a magazine, minus KJo of course!
Netflix is reminiscent of Star TV in the 1990s: Very Western in its gaze, very expensive, and clueless, notes Vanita Kohli-Khandekar.