Plenty of adrenaline-packed action to catch on OTT this week.
Sukanya Verma quizzes you to find out just how much you know about the movies.
Despite its horror movie momentum, what draws us to Aditya Sarpotdar's narrative is Bittu's homely universe and sweet struggle to confess his feelings to Bela, not Munjya's malevolent antics.
From Vijay Devarakonda to Kung Fu Panda, Sukanya Verma lists everything you can watch on OTT this week.
Neil Gaiman's popular The Sandman comic series just got a taste of Bollywood.
It's raining brand new seasons and shows on OTT this week.
'Do anything as long as it feels like an adventure...The problems of failure are hard. The problems of success are harder... If you're making mistakes, it means you're out there doing something... The one thing you have that nobody else has is you... Make interesting mistakes, make amazing mistakes, make glorious and fantastic mistakes....Valuable advice from a best-selling writer.
Alia Bhatt, animated treats, action masala and comic book adaptations, OTT is quite the goodie bag this week.
It remains to be seen if all the gods in the Neil Gaiman book make an appearance in the televised adaptation, but at its core the show, which is streaming in India on Amazon Prime, is more significant now than ever. After all, it is the universal story of immigrants who stayed on to call America home, says Nikita Puri.
From a dystopian world set in 2047 to one of the most publicised crime trials in America, Nikita Puri brings you top 5 binge-worthy series.
1929-2018: The life and legacy of Ursula K Le Guin in her own words.
Sofia Ashraf's video 'Kodaikanal Won't,' slamming Hindustan Unilever for alleged 'mercury poisoning,' has gone viral with over 25,000 online petitioners demanding that the multinational clean up the mess as well as compensate those who worked at its thermometer factory in Kodaikanal.
At 15, she has already written two books on poetry and a novel. Meet the fascinating Zuni Chopra.
Sukanya Verma shares her exciting filmi week with us.
'Pratchett's work mocked the very idea of literary limitations, going from police procedural in one book to Christmas adventure in the next, from vampires to football, from the birth of motion pictures to the examining of religion itself.'