Kuttey, on the other hand, did not open well.
Shahid Kapoor packs in a lot of blood and gore in his new film, Bloody Daddy, directed by Ali Abbas Zafar (Tiger Zinda Hai, Gunday).
Justice in medieval times, whodunit in the woods, mafia boss in the making, Sukanya Verma takes a look at the sheer variety on OTT this week.
'Previously, when people used to meet each other, without any hesitation, they used to hug each other or shake hands.' 'But no longer.'
The stars Rediff.com Contributing Photographer Pradeep Bandekar sighted on Tuesday.
Looking at Bollywood's Class of 2023 Directors.
Action, drama, thriller and rom-coms, this week has a lot of entertainment coming up on OTT as well as in theatres.
'For no other leader of India do so many people turn up for an event every year without invitation.'
'I started losing sleep.' 'I started having trust issues.' 'I knew that actors sometimes go through this and I thought I'll be able to step in and step out of the character.' 'But it took me a while to feel good again.'
'In a family, your mother-in-law or sister-in-law are your core team.' 'If they don't support you, it becomes very difficult.'
Bollywood turns up to watch Laal Singh Chaddha.
Rehabilitation of street kids, pet parenting, housing dreams, desert dramas and life changing magicians, Sukanya Verma suggests all this and more on OTT this week.
'Acting is probably the most wonderful profession anyone can have because you make every film set with 200 people, so you make 200 new friends every four months, and you learn so many things from these new lives.'
'I preferred theatre rather than going to production houses and giving photographs. I didn't have that kind of temperament. I didn't think I was unfortunate as I have struggled so much. I feel whatever happened was for my good.'
Kidnapping, revenge, wars, zombies, manhunts -- things get pretty intense on OTT this week. Sukanya Verma offers everything you can watch.
'Till a cheque comes into my account, I don't feel like a professional actor.'
'She is associated with our growing up years.' 'When I first met her, it was a little awkward for a couple of days as she is a really popular actor of the '90s.'
Sukanya Verma gives us her OTT recommendations for the week.
Considered a chilling chapter in the history of Delhi crime, the docudrama by Leena Yadav travels back in 2018 when 11 members of a family residing in the Burari locality were found hanging dead in their house leaving behind eerie handwritten notes prompting all sorts of theories and speculation.
It means more tickets sold and therefore more revenues and hastens the recovery of the devastated-by-the-pandemic film business.
Aliens, serial killers, time loops, disasters, Sukanya Verma gives you your OTT fix of the week.
The OTT scene is bustling again this week with brand new shows and movies. Sukanya Verma suggests what you can watch.
An eight-part crime drama set in the mid-1970s highlighting notorious serial killer and conman Charles Sobhraj's sinister activities around the hippie trail.
'I don't think 'oh, I have done 534 films' or 'I have 40 years of experience behind me.'
'No politics for me.' 'I can't handle that at all.'
'This has been both challenging and inspiring for me.'
Quite a few superstars are bringing their big releases to the big screen this month.
Here are Sukanya Verma's favourite female performances of 2021.
Nobody else needs to boycott Bollywood, they are doing a pretty good job of digging up their own foundation, notes Deepa Gahlot.
Netflix and Amazon Prime are raising their stakes in the game, commissioning original shows and going all out to acquire regional films for their libraries.
Karan Kundrra clarifies he's not in the game to play with someone's heart.
'City Of Dreams ended the shameless self-promotion that my films had to be necessarily subjected to.'
Subhash K Jha lists actors whom you may have missed this year.
'This is a blip in the 100-year history of cinema.'
'It's been an up and down journey and every actor has to go through it.'
'For us, values and morals acquire the highest place in our lives.'
Kolhe, facing criticism from a senior party colleague and also political opponents over the role, clarified that he does not support the ideology of Godse.
'It depends on how you look at fame, how you treat fame.'
'I am not a part of any group or politics.' 'I work with everyone.' 'I have worked with Akshay Kumar and Ajay Devgn.' 'None of the Khans have ever taken me in their films.'