Sridevi wins over TIFF but her film English Vinglish gets a ho hum response.
A look at the star arrivals!
Check out the star arrivals.
'Once I left my photographs at Ram Gopal Varma's office.' 'I told a friend I was concerned no one had contacted me. My friend said, "Itni jaldi nahin hota idhar. Time lagega".'
Director Vasan Bala tells us how Mumbai inspired his directorial debut Peddlers.
The actress obviously loves showing off her glorious back.
Kangana steps out to watch her latest film.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Box office report of Adam Sandler's Hotel Transylvania.
The actress makes an appearance at the Toronto film festival.
Kalki, Shriya, Shahana and many more have joined the ranks of Ash and Sonam when it comes to making stylish appearances abroad!
The actor has an interesting role in Frozen, his 150th movie.
"No producer or director wants to cast me in love stories," says Irrfan Khan
Twice-fried plantains make a great base for any kind of topping, especially something with avocado in it.
Author Salman Rushdie and director Deepa Mehta discuss the film at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Here's what your favourite celebrities have been up to.
Dev Benegal talks about his new film Road, Movie.
The film will soon get a new release.
'Karenge aur kaam, sir. Zindagi bahut choti hai, ideas bahut sare hain.'
Aseem Chhabra tell us how he watched 302 films in 365 days on airplanes, on Netflix, Amazon, iTunes, Google, Hulu, DVDs and even on YouTube.
A study of a dysfunctional family, Rachael Getting Married doesn't have the intensity director Jonathan Demmy's Oscar winning films like Philadelphia and The Silence of the Lambs offered. But this modestly budgeted film, which was one of the critics' favourites at the recent Toronto International Film Festival and endeared itself to the audiences too, has enough drama and a handful of excellent performances to be a hit with upscale audiences.
Check out the star arrivals.
Amir Bashir shares his experience of directing his debut film Harud, which will premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Rediff.com gives you a look at films in the past that have captured the lives of sporting icons, and their rise to glory, on the silver screen.
Aseem Chhabra gives us the top films that enriched his year.
'The point about arranged marriages is -- because I come from a progressive family -- the idea was completely alien. But I have realised over time that there are instances of assisted marriages working very well. If you look at it, really, in a microcosm, it is the same thing as Tinder, isn't it? I mean, if you are trying to meet -- yes, no, yes, no, no.'
Sar Jo Tera Chakraye, featured in Road, Movie has been credited to R D Burman, not his father, S D Burman, who composed the original music in Guru Dutt's Pyaasa.
The film was dead on arrival at 78 locations in America and Canada, as well as 40 locations in the United Kingdom.
Iram Haq's What Will People Say is a deeply relatable story of family values at odds with a modern culture.
'It is a film with a good human concept that would touch people around the world.' 'We are honouring a film that deserves to be at the Oscars.'
Naalu Pennungal, master auteur Adoor Gopalakrishnan's latest offering is a unique experience for the viewer as it compiles four short stories by Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai and tells the stories of four women in an interesting way.
Like Slumdog Millionaire, RRR will remain a one-time phenomenon until another big, larger-than-life, Indian film connects with the critics in the West, predicts Aseem Chhabra.
Is anyone even whispering that Aamir Khan's five-year-old marriage to Kiran Rao has been lacking in love in recent months?
Besides the five Indian films that are playing at the Toronto International Film Festival this year -- a rather large collection at an international film festival, says Aseem Chhabra -- there are more films with an Indian connect.