A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
These sequels have failed to match up to their first installments.
The hits and misses of the week.
Trade analyst Vinod Mirani gives us the weekly box office verdict.
A look at this week's hits and misses.
The hits and misses of the week.
'Rajesh Pillai was a child at heart, crying at the sight of an injection syringe or making a fuss over the number of pills he was made to pop.'
The hits and misses of the week.
The hits and misses of the week.
A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'You'll find more wisdom on such matters in a Sara Ali Khan interview,' says Sukanya Verma.
Sukanya Verma salutes the late actor's spectacular cinematic legacy.
As late filmmaker Rajesh Pillai's Bollywood film Traffic releases this week, Rediff.com contributor Vijay George reveals what happened behind the cameras.
Darr @ The Mall might be an absolute failure in the horror genre but as a revenge drama, it is refreshingly simple and does manage to pull a few heartstrings at the end of the day.
A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Here's why Bollywood loves shaadi movies.
'Only when I lose the girl, the story moves ahead.'
Traffic is muddled and lacklustre in its set-up, feels Sukanya Verma.
A look at the Holi releases in the past decade.
Favourite movie homes, comparing Amitabh-Shashi's beds in Kabhi Kabhie and discovering the truth about Salman Khan's 1990s chartbuster... All in Sukanya Verma's Super Filmi Week.
'Apart from being total eye-candies, Saif and Shahid are very good actors. Saif is that classy man, who would open the door for you and pull chairs for you. Shahid would come to the sets with headphones on. He had a boyish charm.' Kangana Ranaut gets in Rangoon mode.
'With Tanu Weds Manu, I discovered myself.'
'People thought I am doing this for promotions, but I wouldn't do that.' 'I have better things to do and better ideas to promote myself.'
Here's looking at some popular Bollywood movies shot in Kashmir.
Bollywood's superstars have tried their hand at con films, and the genre has made quite a bit of money.
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.
Fugly is a trainwreck, says Raja Sen.
The heist stretch of the movie is not without imagination, but arriving at that chunk, and sitting through what follows, can be bad for your skin, warns Sreehari Nair.
Tanu Weds Manu Returns is not merely superior to its predecessor but the flamboyance and fun it provides is an implication we're not quite done with this mad duo and their quirky universe yet.
'During casting calls, people want you to a copy-paste version of who they think is good enough to be in Bollywood, especially if you are a girl. I didn't fit into that at all.'
Vijender Singh gives up amateur boxing to turn full-time professional, perhaps the words ring truer than ever.
A worse official remake of an already bad original, Bang Bang is more noise and less sound, rants Paloma Sharma.
Sukanya Verma talks about her yet another fun filmi week!