Beneath its grit and darkness, Kohrra 2 reveals surprising warmth and is a beautiful, beautiful show, promises Mayur Sanap.
Qualifies for India's able-bodied archery team for Asia Cup
Film and telly folk came to a special screening of the week's release, Thank You for Coming.
A revolt by 22 MLAs had led to the collapse of the Kamal Nath-led Congress government in March 2020.
The hits and misses of the week.
Kanika's problem is so ridiculous, it is surprising she did not discover till the age of 32 what every teen knows, sighs Deepa Gahlot.
The hits and misses of the week.
Latest updates from Bollywood.
Abhinay Deo's film never runs short of bite and sting, says Prasanna D Zore.
'Once Tere Bin Laden was over, the stardom was over, six months of living the Shah Rukh Khan life was over...' Pradhuman Singh returns with Tere Bin Laden: Dead Or Alive.
As Madhya Pradesh goes to polls, all eyes will be on 29 key assembly seats, out of the total 230, where the contest will be keenly watched.
You are neither entertained nor enticed in Rasbhari, complains Joginder Tuteja.
The victim's father Barun Thakur strongly held that the school should not be opened till the Central Bureau of Investigation takes over the case.
Vote for your favourite sequel or prequel!
Bollywood's newest formula for guaranteed success?
But it's nowhere as fun as the 2010 comedy Tere Bin Laden, writes Sukanya Verma.
'Some people might go through their entire careers without getting a role like this. It's once-in-a-lifetime kind of a role.' Sikandar Kher gets us ready for Tere Bin Laden: Dead Or Alive.
From SRK to Big B, many actors have played a double role in the movies.
'Being a director is brilliant. It's the second best job after being God because you get to create your own world and characters. You're always in control.' The man behind Tere Bin Laden -- Abhishek Sharma -- is back!
A single judge bench granted stay on the arrest of group chief executive officer, Ryan Pinto, and his parents, founding chairman Augustine Pinto and managing director Grace Pinto.
"SIT officers used torture and even drugged him to confess before the media that he had committed the crime," said Ashok's father.
The SIT clicked photos and shot videos of the suspected places to examine the nature of the crime again.