She has got a pretty girl wardrobe that you'll want to own right away.
Producer-Director Aanand L Rai and his wife Yogita threw a grand Diwali bash for their friends and colleagues from the film industry.
Then there is Love And War featuring Alia, Ranbir, Vicky...
Movie folk rubbed shoulders at the Global Peace Honours 2025 event in Mumbai over the weekend.
"If something look nice on someone, it's not necessary that it will look nice on you too. So just have your own style. Be comfortable. Be confident," says Riddhima Kapoor Sahni.
Bhai returns to the big screen after 18 months.
The possibilities of this serviceable thriller are immense but the makers prefer to play it safe and hold back the daredevil in the diplomat's clothing, observes Sukanya Verma.
Jasmin cuts her birthday cake... Sadia smiles for the camera... Where's Prateik off to?
There's room for all kinds on OTT this week, as Sukanya Verma tells us.
Bollywood is making beautiful pictures in different parts of the world.
Janhvi meets her fans... Shah Rukh Khan makes a rare airport appearance... Akshay promotes Raksha Bandhan.
Bollywood is making beautiful pictures in different parts of the world and we bring them to you.
Akshay Kumar invited his friends from the film industry to watch Raksha Bandhan.
Neha-Angad leave Mumbai... Vidyut, Rajkummar promote their films... Deepti launches her memoir...
'I have enjoyed working on this film. It is one of my best films,' says the star.
Bollywood works hard but travels harder! Here's bringing you beautiful images from their travel diaries.
Akshay promotes Raksha Bandhan... Suhana-Agastya on a dinner date... Alia promotes Darlings...
After two flops, Akshay Kumar is hungry for success. And Raksha Bandhan might just give it to him, says Namrata Thakker.
'When he was invited on Koffee With Karan, he did not ask for the questions beforehand, like many stars do.' 'Vijay was quite taken aback when Karan launched into a sex discourse.'
Joginder Tuteja looks at how well recent films highlighting sibling love have done at the box office.
If in the current streaming age, audiences can watch the originals, why would they spend their money on second-hand content? Is it possible that mainstream Hindi filmmakers have lost the pulse of their audience, asks Deepa Gahlot.
Dangerous messaging punctuates every ounce of its storyline wherein dowry is normalised, the kidney is a small price to pay for it, observes Sukanya Verma.
'If you have only one hit out of 100 movies in a year, it is death for Bollywood.'