Bollywood actors Huma Qureshi and Diana Penty will be heading to the French Riviera this week to attend the 72nd Festival de Cannes.
Both actresses are representing Vodka brand Grey Goose and are set to walk to red carpet on 19th May for the in competition film A Hidden Life.
They will also partake in a discussion at the India Pavilion on 18th May. The session is titled ‘Women in Global Cinema’ and will be hosted by filmmaker Madhur Bhandakar (Fashion) and will also include Judi Beecher and Saara Lamberg.
The festival runs from 14th May to 25th May and will see world premieres of highly-awaited movies such as Once upon a Time in Hollywood starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Al Pacino and Margot Robbie and is directed by Quentin Tarantino.
Both actresses are representing Vodka brand Grey Goose and are set to walk to red carpet on 19th May for the in competition film A Hidden Life.
They will also partake in a discussion at the India Pavilion on 18th May. The session is titled ‘Women in Global Cinema’ and will be hosted by filmmaker Madhur Bhandakar (Fashion) and will also include Judi Beecher and Saara Lamberg.
The festival runs from 14th May to 25th May and will see world premieres of highly-awaited movies such as Once upon a Time in Hollywood starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Al Pacino and Margot Robbie and is directed by Quentin Tarantino.
- 5/15/2019
- by Sunny Malik
- Bollyspice
Stars: Liam Neeson, Forest Whitaker, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen, Don Harvey, Dylan Bruno, David Warshofsky, Jon Gries, Andrew Borba, Judi Beecher, Andrew Howard, Catherine Oyer, Jimmy Palumbo | Written by Luc Besson, Robert Mark Kamen | Directed by Olivier Megaton
In some ways, Taken became the little franchise that could. Kicking off in 2009, it was marketed and released as a fairly mid-level actioner with few ambitions other than to not lose money. Its Us theatrical release only happened because of the weird pop-culture zeitgeist it captured where people were excited about Oscar Schindler punching Eastern Europeans out of existence. The sequel came and made even more money with its 12a rating proving controversial but meeting distributor Twentieth Century Fox’s aim of making a massive haul of cash, taking over £20 million at the UK box office alone. Liam Neeson and previous instalment director Oliver Megaton are back with another chilling look at...
In some ways, Taken became the little franchise that could. Kicking off in 2009, it was marketed and released as a fairly mid-level actioner with few ambitions other than to not lose money. Its Us theatrical release only happened because of the weird pop-culture zeitgeist it captured where people were excited about Oscar Schindler punching Eastern Europeans out of existence. The sequel came and made even more money with its 12a rating proving controversial but meeting distributor Twentieth Century Fox’s aim of making a massive haul of cash, taking over £20 million at the UK box office alone. Liam Neeson and previous instalment director Oliver Megaton are back with another chilling look at...
- 6/9/2015
- by Ian Loring
- Nerdly
Stars: Liam Neeson, Forest Whitaker, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen, Don Harvey, Dylan Bruno, David Warshofsky, Jon Gries, Andrew Borba, Judi Beecher, Andrew Howard, Catherine Oyer, Jimmy Palumbo | Written by Luc Besson, Robert Mark Kamen | Directed by Olivier Megaton
In some ways, Taken became the little franchise that could. Kicking off in 2009, it was marketed and released as a fairly mid-level actioner with few ambitions other than to not lose money. Its Us theatrical release only happened because of the weird pop-culture zeitgeist it captured where people were excited about Oscar Schindler punching Eastern Europeans out of existence. The sequel came and made even more money with its 12a rating proving controversial but meeting distributor Twentieth Century Fox’s aim of making a massive haul of cash, taking over £20 million at the UK box office alone. Liam Neeson and previous instalment director Oliver Megaton are back with another chilling look at...
In some ways, Taken became the little franchise that could. Kicking off in 2009, it was marketed and released as a fairly mid-level actioner with few ambitions other than to not lose money. Its Us theatrical release only happened because of the weird pop-culture zeitgeist it captured where people were excited about Oscar Schindler punching Eastern Europeans out of existence. The sequel came and made even more money with its 12a rating proving controversial but meeting distributor Twentieth Century Fox’s aim of making a massive haul of cash, taking over £20 million at the UK box office alone. Liam Neeson and previous instalment director Oliver Megaton are back with another chilling look at...
- 1/12/2015
- by Ian Loring
- Nerdly
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