The Delhi High Court has granted Rajpal Yadav granted an interim suspension of his sentence until March 18.
'Everybody has stood by Rajpal Yadav. The industry has been supportive.'
Rimi Sen: 'Even today, Salman Khan or Shah Rukh Khan rule Bollywood but the heroines who started with them are now doing supporting roles, playing sisters or even mothers. A woman's lifespan in the film industry is very short.'
Sukanya Verma quizzes you to find out just how much you know about the movies.
Sukanya Verma quizzes you to find out just how much you know about the movies.
Trent Boult, Jimmy Neesham and Daryl Mitchell had everyone in splits as they danced on a Bollywood hit from the last decade.
Dia Mirza does a song for Neeraj Vora's upcoming Phir Hera Pheri.
Sukanya Verma quizzes you to find out just how much you know about the movies.
Before falling seriously ill, Neeraj Vora was working on the third instalment of the Hera Pheri franchise.
Sukanya Verma quizzes you to find out just how much you know about the movies.
Sukanya Verma quizzes you to find out just how much you know about the movies.
Sukanya Verma quizzes you to find out just how much you know about the movies.
Neeraj Vora talks about his new directorial venture, Short Kut: The Con Is On.
Come January, the 1968 hit which starred Sunil Dutt, Kishore Kumar, Mehmood and Saira Banu will be seen in a new avatar.
Bade Miyan Chote Miyan pits him and Tiger Shroff in titular avatars. While we wait to catch their distinct personality play off against each other, Sukanya Verma offers a lowdown on Akshay's two-hero jodis in the past.
The actor is becoming one of the most bankable Bollywood stars.
Akshay Kumar talks about the upcoming Phir Hera Pheri.
The rest of the core cast are Suniel Shetty, Paresh Rawal and Johnny Lever.
Many Bollywood personalities attend Vora's chautha ceremony.
Colleagues and friends pay homage to an unusual Bollywood talent.
From family dinners to gymming, it's all in a day's work for film folk.
Bollywood's superstars have tried their hand at con films, and the genre has made quite a bit of money.
What can you say about a Paresh Rawal comedy where only Sanjay Mishra offers great comic relief, wonders Prasanna D Zore.
'I feel every 10 years there is a bus that leaves.' 'You have to run and get into that bus, which will take you to the next 10 years.' 'Then you have to catch the bus again.'
'I had known Neeraj for 12 years. We worked together in several films and shared a close bond.' 'How could I leave him to die?'
'Good actors are supposed to be guys who wear kurta-pajama and look soft and nice.' 'People like me are not in that category.'
O Teri, which borrows heavily from Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro drowns it all in slapstick so noisy it all comes off as more lame than loving, more blasphemous than beholden.
Bollywood's newest formula for guaranteed success?