Latest updates from Bollywood!
Chalo Jeete Hain is a film based on Narendra Damodardas's childhood.
Looking forward to Jolly LLB 2, 2.0 and much more.
Bollywood's Eternal Dream Girl enters the seventh decade of a memorable life.
Even as Sonam Kapoor threw a Diwali party, Amitabh Bachchan hosted a grand celebration too.
Check out the star arrivals.
Bollywood's who's who come down to watch a film.
The Kapoors prayed for the matriarch at a chautha.
Bollywood's newest formula for guaranteed success?
PeeCee parites with her friends from the industry.
They sure take after their good looking folks, don't they?
Vote for your favourite sequel or prequel!
Bollywood says goodbye to Shashi Kapoor.
A look at the arrivals.
Here's looking at the latest style outings of our hottest stars.
The celebrities offer their condolences.
A look at the pictures from the prayer meet.
'Sci-fi is a very expensive genre; I need to become a much bigger star for people to invest that kind of money in me.' 1920 London actor Sharman Joshi talks about his favourite genre, and why he won't be doing it anytime soon.
Banking is a boring business but still the banker should enjoy it as fancy awards and cozy relationships with politicians, Bollywood stars and corporate honchos cannot save them if the job is not done properly. In the concluding part of the series Tamal Bandyopadhyay wonders how long Kochhar would need to wait for her redemption or downfall and atonement.
True Indian scenes most often lie on less travelled routes, along roads that have fallen off the map, after modern highways have come up. On the fourth leg of their 2,148 km journey, Rediff.com's Archana Masih and photographer Rajesh Karkera discover one such forgotten place in the Thar Desert.
Dhananjay Desai has been allowed to spread his poison to young men in Maharashtra and Goa over the last five years, by a 'secular' Congress-NCP government. The 23 cases pending against him have not stopped him. He and his supporters must have thought they were immune when they lynched a bearded Muslim at night. Neither Desai nor his followers, nor the police, nor their 'secular' political masters, must have expected the nationwide furore that followed, says Jyoti Punwani.