Interviewing Sharmila Tagore is always a dream come true. A favourite, she ruled my heart with her glamour and talent in the films of Satyajit Ray specially Apur Sansar, then Shakti Samanta’s Aradhana and Amar Prem and Basu Bhattacharya’s Aavishkar and Grihapravesh. No actress combines the best of the East and the West so fluentlyRead More
The post “Cakes and parties are for Taimur and Inaaya I am just happy to be healthy” – Sharmila Tagore appeared first on Bollywood Hungama.
The post “Cakes and parties are for Taimur and Inaaya I am just happy to be healthy” – Sharmila Tagore appeared first on Bollywood Hungama.
- 12/8/2017
- by Subhash K. Jha
- BollywoodHungama
Ribbon
Starring Kalki Koechlin, Sumeet Vyas
Directed by Raakhee Sandilya
And then, something happens. Something awful and irreversibly life-changing happens in this true-life portrait of an urban marriage threatening to fall apart under the strain of coping with daily vicissitudes.
Debutant director Raakhee Sandilya uses her two principal actors to mirror metropolitan mores and meltdowns with masterful vigour and a scrupulous authenticity. The camera is used not to accentuate or glamorize Mumbai’s suburbia but to simply serve as a functional topography for the lives of the couple Sahana and Karan played with such an absence of bravura and flourish that we forget Kalki and Sumeet Vyas are playing characters who don’t exist beyond the film.
At least not in the way we see them here.
The authenticity instilled into the couple’s lives is comparable with what Basu Bhattacharya achieved with Rajesh Khanna and Sharmila Tagore in the...
Starring Kalki Koechlin, Sumeet Vyas
Directed by Raakhee Sandilya
And then, something happens. Something awful and irreversibly life-changing happens in this true-life portrait of an urban marriage threatening to fall apart under the strain of coping with daily vicissitudes.
Debutant director Raakhee Sandilya uses her two principal actors to mirror metropolitan mores and meltdowns with masterful vigour and a scrupulous authenticity. The camera is used not to accentuate or glamorize Mumbai’s suburbia but to simply serve as a functional topography for the lives of the couple Sahana and Karan played with such an absence of bravura and flourish that we forget Kalki and Sumeet Vyas are playing characters who don’t exist beyond the film.
At least not in the way we see them here.
The authenticity instilled into the couple’s lives is comparable with what Basu Bhattacharya achieved with Rajesh Khanna and Sharmila Tagore in the...
- 11/2/2017
- by Subhash K Jha
- Bollyspice
The Directorate of Film Festivals (Dff) and the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting organized a three-day retrospective of Bollywood's first superstar, Rajesh Khanna, as a tribute to the cinema's legend who died of a prolonged illness on July 18. Rajesh Khanna was 69 years old. The event was held for three days at Siri Fort auditorium in New Delhi. The retrospective screened some of Khanna's landmark films such as Aap Ki Kasam, Aradhana, Amar Prem, Kati Patang, Ittefaq, Avishkaar, Bawarchi, Safar and Anand. Inaugurated on August 18, the retrospective was followed by the screening of Aap Ki Kasam on Day 1. Rajesh Khanna's wife Dimple Kapadia was the chief guest at the event and was accompanied by her younger daughter Rinkie. Dimple also thanked the Dff and the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting for giving a chance to relive his memories.
- 8/21/2012
- by Bollywood Hungama News Network
- BollywoodHungama
A Retrospective of late superstar Rajesh Khanna will be organized from August 18-20, 2012 at Sirifort Auditorium II, New Delhi.
Entry is free, on first come first serve basis for all screenings and panel discussions.
This Retrospective is being organized by the Directorate of Film Festivals and Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.
Inauguration of the programme will be on August 18 at 12:30 pm in the presence of Choudhary Mohan Jatua, Minister of State (I & B), Rajeev Shukla, Minister of State (Parliamentary Affairs), Dimple Kapadia, actor and wife of the late superstar and Om Prakash, producer and director.
Aap Ki Kasam (1970) directed by Om Prakash will be screened after the inauguration.
The films to be screened are as follows:
18th August, 2012
Aradhana (1970) by Shakti Samanta
4:30 pm
19th August, 2012
Aakhri Khat (1966) by Chetan Anand
10:30 am
Ittefaq (1969) by Yash Chopra
1:30pm
Amar Prem (1972) by Shakti Samanta
3:30 pm
Panel Discussion- The...
Entry is free, on first come first serve basis for all screenings and panel discussions.
This Retrospective is being organized by the Directorate of Film Festivals and Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.
Inauguration of the programme will be on August 18 at 12:30 pm in the presence of Choudhary Mohan Jatua, Minister of State (I & B), Rajeev Shukla, Minister of State (Parliamentary Affairs), Dimple Kapadia, actor and wife of the late superstar and Om Prakash, producer and director.
Aap Ki Kasam (1970) directed by Om Prakash will be screened after the inauguration.
The films to be screened are as follows:
18th August, 2012
Aradhana (1970) by Shakti Samanta
4:30 pm
19th August, 2012
Aakhri Khat (1966) by Chetan Anand
10:30 am
Ittefaq (1969) by Yash Chopra
1:30pm
Amar Prem (1972) by Shakti Samanta
3:30 pm
Panel Discussion- The...
- 8/18/2012
- by NewsDesk
- DearCinema.com
One of Indian cinema's first superstars who appeared in 15 consecutive hit films in the course of three years
Rajesh Khanna, who has died aged 69 after a long illness, was Indian cinema's first superstar. At the height of his fame he generated adulation that sometimes verged on mass hysteria and appeared in 15 consecutive hit films over the course of three years.
He first achieved acclaim in Aradhana (Worship, 1969), playing two roles – the husband and grown-up son, both air force pilots, of the established star Sharmila Tagore. Notable among the romantic drama's musical numbers was the sexy Roop Tera Mastana (Your Beauty Is Intoxicating), recorded in a single take, a first for Hindi cinema.
Further highly commercial films followed, including Aan Milo Sajna (Come Meet Me, Beloved, 1970), Kati Patang (Broken Kite, 1970) and Haathi Mera Saathi (Elephant My Partner, 1971). More thought-provoking were Daag (Stain, 1973), dealing with the subject of bigamy, and Anand (1971), in...
Rajesh Khanna, who has died aged 69 after a long illness, was Indian cinema's first superstar. At the height of his fame he generated adulation that sometimes verged on mass hysteria and appeared in 15 consecutive hit films over the course of three years.
He first achieved acclaim in Aradhana (Worship, 1969), playing two roles – the husband and grown-up son, both air force pilots, of the established star Sharmila Tagore. Notable among the romantic drama's musical numbers was the sexy Roop Tera Mastana (Your Beauty Is Intoxicating), recorded in a single take, a first for Hindi cinema.
Further highly commercial films followed, including Aan Milo Sajna (Come Meet Me, Beloved, 1970), Kati Patang (Broken Kite, 1970) and Haathi Mera Saathi (Elephant My Partner, 1971). More thought-provoking were Daag (Stain, 1973), dealing with the subject of bigamy, and Anand (1971), in...
- 7/29/2012
- by Asjad Nazir
- The Guardian - Film News
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