Bollywood turns up to watch Laal Singh Chaddha.
Bollywood stars pass on their warm wishes for Diwali.
Joginder Tuteja looks at promising comedies getting ready to tickle your funny bone.
The biggest Bollywood wedding of the year is happening in Rajasthan this week!
Saif and Rani will reunite after 11 years.
Sadak 2 is all set to release on OTT this month, and it joins a bunch of sequels whose original films released more than a decade ago.
While one waits to see when theatres will reopen, it would be nice to start off with light-hearted movies.
While the couple has kept mum about their relationship, according to sources close to the development, the wedding festivities -- starting with sangeet and mehendi followed by the marriage ceremony -- will be held from December 7 to 9.
There are several women-centric movies set to release post lockdown, and most of them are quite quirky.
The world's richest man and the founder of Amazon Jeff Bezos bonded with Bollywood at a grand party thrown in his honour.
The cons are dull, the chemistry is off, the zingers are in short supply and a kitschy display of brand logos and hammy accents takes centre stage, sighs Sukanya Verma.
'This is the first time when you see the story of the Azad Hind Fauj through the eyes of the soldiers.'
Joginder Tuteja looks at some of the fresh faces who may have to wait another year to make their debut.
'The blockbusters are unlikely to be launched in 2020.' 'They will move into the 2021 cycle when confidence level among people will be higher.'
With theatres shutting down, night clubs and restaurants closed and self-isolation being the latest key word, all eyes may just have turned to television.
'Adi Sir told me when he watched Gully Boy, he felt I was hero material.'
It's such a misconception that actresses -- any woman for that matter -- are on a downwards slope when they hit 40.
Here's the second part of guide to a year that will soon become history.
'He is not interested in cricket or football.' 'He is interested in singing, dancing and painting.' 'Right now, he thinks he's Lord Rama.'
'What was previously buried in the sands of time now gets buried by the weight of banality,' notes Sreehari Nair.