The hits and misses of the week.
Twitter India launched a new emoji and asked everyone to list their favourite 1990s movie and tag their friends to continue the chain. Bollywood responded right away!
A look at the red carpet glamour.
'My brother broke down because he thought I was letting go of years of hard work.'
Jabariya Jodi constantly confuses tacky as terrific, feels Sukanya Verma.
'Helmet is a proper family film, just a film on condoms.' 'It can never be a sex comedy.'
If you are looking for a true wireless stereo experience at a budget price, Ashish Narsale says you can certainly try the pTron Bassbuds Urban.
2019 seems totally ready for new directors, with superstars queuing up to work with fresh talent.
'I am making movies in a jiffy because I want to work with everyone.'
'When you are half decent looking, you want to look like yourself, especially in your first project. But it was important to do justice to the role, especially when it is such a big project. I don't want to play the lead and look like a hero. I am open to do character roles, what is the harm in it?' Dangal actor Aparshakti Khurrana looks ahead in life.
Celebrating the brother-sister bond.
'Even when he moves beyond his traditional repertoire, he sticks to a template that does not take him too far from the viewer's gentler emotions,' notes Vikram Johri.
'We wanted people to love Stree and that has happened.' 'It is a unique, one-of-a-kind movie.'
'I try to do my own stunts as much as possible.' 'I tried this stunt for Saaho and my foot got stuck. My other leg was stretched in the air.' 'If it had stretched two more inches, there could have been a tear.' 'I was limping for a while, but thankfully, because I have been physically training for Saina, my body is warm all the time.'
Meet Bollywood's finest casting director Mukesh Chhabra.