Wednesday, August 31, 2011

WATCH: Trailer of Ranbir's Rockstar

Imtiaz Ali's much awaited film Rockstar's trailer is out highlighting journey of Ranbir Kapoor from a lover boy to a rockstar in the film. The film combines elements of desire, passion, fame and destruction in the making of a rockstar.

Rockstar marks Nargis Fakhri's debut who's an American model of half Pakistani-half Czech origin. Ranbir-Nargis can be seen getting intimate and sharing a kiss.

This is also late legendary actor Shammi Kapoor's last film. He'll be seen in a jugalbandi sequence with his grandnephew Ranbir. Ranbir will strum a guitar while Shammi will play a shehnai.

AR Rahman has composed the music for the film. The film's trailer was released today with Salman Khan's Bodyguard.

The film is scheduled for a November 11 release (11.11.11) which is considered to be a lucky date.

 

 

Watch Full Length Bollywood (Hindi) Movies Online For Free

Few months ago YouTube has launched BoxOffice channel which allows you to watch Bollywood movies by streaming online and its for free.

Now to give competition to YouTube, Yahoo! India has launched a new portal, MoviePlex, which too allows you to watch movies online for free of cost, Yahoo is providing licensed movies to the users.

In country like India where people are crazy towards the movies these kind of service can stop piracy.

Yahoo! India has join hand with some of the leading production house of India who will provide new movies to yahoo on a regular basis, and user will also be able to watch new movies regularly.

Yahoo!’s MoviePlex is too ad-supported and most probably some part of the revenue earn through these ads will go into the pocket of movie makers which will be beneficial for them also.

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Currently Yahoo! MoviePlex is providing Rock On!!, Dil to Bachha Hai Ji, Aakrosh, Rann, Lamha, Crook, Rakht Charitra, and Rakht Charitra 2, movies are limited till now but as you can see it has some popular movies, you will see more movies on it very soon.

As you know YouTube displays 15 seconds in-stream ads after every 10 minutes, but on Yahoo! there are no such in-stream ads for you means you will get uninterrupted movie experience.

Some of the movies featured on Yahoo MoviePlex are A certified by Censor Board, YouTube required you to login and confirm your age to watch A rated movies, but Yahoo just displays a simple warning before the start of movie and no login is needed.

But YouTube is providing movies on both Standard Quality and High Quality but Yahoo is providing movies only on Standard Quality, Yahoo is using Flash player means non Flash supported devices like iPad will not be able to play movies.

You can also share it with your friends on Facebook or Twitter and tell them you are enjoying movie on Yahoo MoviePlex.

All movies on MoviePlex are only viewable in India only due to copyright restrictions, non-Indian will not be able to watch free online movies.

I had some doubts that how many users in India will be able to watch full movies as due to FUP (Fair Usage Policy) imposed by ISPs, low bandwidth, drop in connections and many more such problems are very common in India.

Visit Site :- Yahoo MoviePlex

First Look of Hrithik in Agneepath!

We have two special exclusive treats for you about the upcoming and highly anticipated Agneepath starring Hrithik Roshan, Priyanka Chopra and Sanjay Dutt. Today Dharma let us in on the release date of the film: 13th January 2012. Not only that they have given us the first look of Hrithik Roshan as Vijay Dinanath Chauhan!

Stay tuned because we will be sure to bring you much more about the remake of Agneepath!

Vidya's hot item song in The Dirty Picture

The first look of Ekta Kapoor’s The Dirty Picture was unveiled at Bandra’s Galaxy theatre yesterday. Later in the day, the shoot of a song was flagged off at Film City on a lavish set reminiscent of the South potboilers of the ’80s. The set complete with chandeliers and glitzy props is reported to have cost the producer Rs 1 crore.

The item number will feature in the film post-interval and is one of the highlights, apart from being integral to the plot. It features Vidya Balan, who plays an aspiring starlet in a competitive song situation with another dancer-actor, played by a fresh new face. It ends with her becoming a star in the mould of Silk Smitha, one of the muses for the role.

“Vidya is wearing just one outfit in this song, a long, sexy gown, and looks absolutely gorgeous,” informs choreographer Pony Verma, adding, “She’s been rehearsing really hard, from 10 am to 10 pm, and I don’t foresee too many retakes. I’ve watched many Silk Smitha songs and I have to admit that she wasn’t a great dancer like Helen aunty. She was a big, voluptuous woman and her moves were ordinary. It’s her sensual expressions that made those songs memorable. I always wondered what she was thinking when she was performing these numbers.”

Verma reveals that filmmaker K Balachander gave her the title Silk Smitha, saying, “It was perfect for her, given how sensual and soft the fabric is.”

Pony admits that the initial reaction to Vidya as the choice for this role was laughing skepticism, but insists she was cast because she’s a brilliant actor who has put her heart and soul into the role. “Today, everyone admits that Vidya’s looking hot. And this is just the beginning,” Verma promises.

Review: Bodyguard

This is the third time for Siddique. Yes, believe it or not, this is the third time that the writer-director has chosen to film this yucky yarn in the span of a year and a half – first in Malayalam, then in Tamil and now in Hindi, effecting minor changes in each follow-up without achieving any perceptible improvement.

He and the producer of this film probably had no option. Who in the right mind would want to direct this damp squib of a screenplay thrice even if he has Salman Dabangg Khan’s tried-and-tested biceps and pectorals to hang its hollow premise on?

The thread that Bodyguard hangs from is hopelessly slender and perpetually on the brink of snapping. If it doesn’t end up in a complete heap, credit in some measure is certainly due to the Bollywood superstar who seems to have mastered the craft of peddling vacuity with the swagger of a seasoned, cocksure sabre-rattler, and to the director of photography Sejal Shah, who imparts a neat, sparkling look and feel to the film.

Bodyguard Of course, whether you find Bodyguard entertaining or not will hinge entirely on whether you have any patience for a storyline that is as brainless as a pea. The story soars on the wings of wild whimsy without for once letting logic getting in the way.

Our hero, Lovely Singh (Salman Khan), owes a debt to a wealthy feudal lord, Sartaj Rana (Raj Babbar), that he cannot repay. So he lives in a sprawling mansion in a place called Jaisinghpur. So the invincible bodyguard is willing to lay down his life for his benefactor.

"When it comes to loyalty, Lovely doesn't spare even royalty," quips the muscleman's boss. How lovely!

So when the master's only daughter, Divya, (Kareena Kapoor), is packed off to a management school in faraway Pune, Lovely Singh is deployed to keep vigil on her and keep her out of harm's way. Sartaj Rana has many enemies but with Lovely's brawn on his side, his daughter is as safe as a Swiss bank.

But this bodyguard is too intrusive for comfort and the girl in his charge resorts to the most ridiculous pranks to get the man off her back. Do you need to be told that there is a love story lurking somewhere in this edifying mix and that the path of the lovers is strewn with thorns? Unfortunately, it is the viewer who steps on them. Ouch!

The director is merciless: he loses no opportunity to exploit Salman’s shirtless action-hero image. Bodyguard has three protracted fight sequences. The hero is a one-man army. He vanquishes all opposition and when he emerges from the uber-violent scuffles, there is nary a scratch on his body and not a hair is out of place.

But Siddique is unable to decide whether he wants the star to project his Wanted and Dabangg ready-for-battle persona all the way through or adopt a softer, more romantic manner in the second half. Either way, the male protagonist and the film end up looking rather moronic.

The script makes feeble attempts to raise some laughs by throwing in a corpulent comedian (debutant Rajat Rawail). His character is called Tsunami Singh but he doesn't quite sweep the audience off its feet. Bodyguard is the kind of film that thinks physical deformity is funny: the fat man is the butt of jokes, so is a midget-student in the heroine's class.

In the ultimate analysis, Bodyguard is an out-and-out Salman Khan film meant to be taken in the festive spirit of the season. Love it or lump, chances are that its backers will be laughing all the way to that bank while you, if you aren’t willing to give its excesses a long rope, will be tearing your hair out in exasperation.

So, if you value the mop on your scalp and the grey cells in your head and want guard yourself against this potentially mind-numbing body blow, give it a miss. Better be safe than sorry!

Lady Gaga goes Indian for Shah Rukh Khan

Lady Gaga is planning to Indian for Shah Rukh Khan. Buzz is that the international super-star might do a song for SRK in his next production RA.One.

Khan was introduced to Gaga by his good friend and co-star Priyanka Chopra. There are discussions at this stage there are discussions about incorporating a song which will be used to promote the film at a later stage.

A source rebeals, "Gaga is hugely inspired by India. She loves the fashion sense and the ethnic and traditional look. Her manager is discussing a possibility of her appearing a desi avatar for the music video which might also feature Shah Rukh."

Even though talks are in the initial stage, sources confirm that Gaga has already given the go ahead and plans to come down to India to discuss the project soon.

Salman Khan ‘Bodyguard’ – Movie Watch Online

Salman Khan Bodyguard Film Trailer watch online.

When it comes to being punctual and doing his duties perfectly, Lovely Singh is unmatchable. Taking great pride in what he does, he spares no effort in giving his everything to his profession.

Summoned for an assignment of guarding Divya, the daughter of Sartaj Rana, a business tycoon Lovely Singh accompanies her to her campus, but ends up rubbing her the wrong way with his over-protective nature and paranoia about security. She finds him to be a major obstacle in leading a regular campus life. To throw him off-track and get him out of the way, she comes up with a ‘master-plan’- that of trapping him in a fake love affair. ‘Once he’s smitten by the girl of his dreams and is reveling in his new-found romance, he will leave us alone, and we shall be free to do our own thing unhindered’, says Divya to her friends.


She becomes an anonymous admirer of his and starts hounding him, expressing her ‘feelings’ in no uncertain terms. Lovely Singh however proves to be a tough nut to crack, and it takes quite a bit of doing from her side to penetrate his fort-like exterior. But once she succeeds in doing so, he transforms into a completely different person. Divya is triumphant and is all set to relish her regained freedom.
But things take an unexpected turn when she learns a few things about Lovely Singh. Things that she could’ve never even imagined! And she soon finds herself trapped in a dilemma that she’s unable to resolve! And with her, soon enough, Lovely Singh finds himself ensnared in a web of lies, trickery and deceit!
Bodyguard is the story of conflict- between innocence and mischief, love and power and life and death!

Film Review: Bodyguard

Yet another South Indian-inspired masala film, but this one crashes fast.

Just when we were beginning to admire the progress in narratives, style and technique in recent Hindi cinema, there comes along a sucker punch like Bodyguard to push us backwards several steps. South Indian director Siddique holds the distinction of making the same film four times. When his original Malayali film of the same name became a massive hit, Siddique then decided to remake it in Tamil as Kaavalan, in Hindi as Bodyguard, and the upcoming Telugu version titled Ganga. While the Malayalam and Tamil versions garnered significant box office and critical success, the Hindi remake – starring Salman Khan and Kareena Kapoor – is an exercise in redundancy. Bodyguard tries to build on the current resurgence of the full on masala film that has been doing surprisingly well lately. But it ends up simply as an exhausting experience, offering painfully little by way of entertainment, plot or performances. Or anything else you might expect from a film.

For a film that has the biggest of India’s film factories clamoring  for remake rights, you would naturally go in expecting some sort of novel experience and plot. But the story is predictable from the start and resorts to every possible stereotype and plot device that has been used umpteen times. There’s a fearless (and feared) one-man juggernaut, Lovely Singh (Salman Khan), who beats up evil goons for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Then there’s an omnipotent wealthy man Sartaj Rana (Raj Babbar) whose daughter Divya (Kareena Kapoor) faces some sort of vague danger. We are never told why. But this seems enough for the scared father to call in the brawny nice guy to look after his little girl as she moves to college.

In a bid to loosen up the robotically loyal bodyguard, Divya begins prank-calling him pretending to be a long lost girlfriend. Surely enough, the prank backfires and Divya falls for her bodyguard, while he falls for the non-existent girlfriend he’s been speaking to on the phone. And a gimmicky move to use Karisma Kapoor’s voice for Divya’s alter-ego on the phone oddly results in the older Kapoor sister having more interesting speaking parts than the actual female lead in the film, Kareena.

Such seemingly hasty moves define Bodyguard as it unravels, one dud slapstick joke after another. The film also checks off every cringeworthy stereotype in what becomes a desperate move to evoke laughter. At any cost. There’s an obese sidekick named Tsunami Singh who grunts, makes weird noises and is a bumbling, overacting fool. A dwarf character is thrown in just so Lovely Singh can make some flat jokes about a “half human” who needs to drink Complan. And when a flamboyantly gay man (wearing all pink) flirts with the hero, he gets scared and avoids any sort of contact as if a mere touch would bring on the “gay disease.”

To his credit, Siddique employs some of the requisite elements of a masala film. Khan’s introduction – grand song sequence, silly-cool dance moves and an afterthought appearance by Katrina Kaif – is engineered for mass appeal. The fight sequences are creative, to say the least, and the anticipated climax scene where Khan must inevitably lose his shirt as he readies for one last smack down is actually funny in its outlandishness. However, the film suffers overall from bad dialogues, a sorely punctured script, and half-hearted performances.

Khan tries hard to revisit his Chulbul Pandey of Dabanng but fails to do much in Bodyguard. His expressions and dialogue delivery both remain monotone throughout. There are a few moments when he successfully moves beyond his usual range of histrionics; for example, the scene where he is nervous about meeting his telephonic girlfriend in person is suitably executed. But for the most part, Khan hardly moves his lips to mouth the dialogues and then resorts to overacting when a scene demands some level of intensity.

Kapoor, while she looks radiant, offers shockingly little in terms of substance. Perhaps more at fault is the writing, which makes her an incredibly mundane character that could have been played by absolutely anyone. Yes, a masala film heroine is usually a mere trophy, but even Sonakshi Sinha had depth in Dabanng. Here, the be all and end all of the Divya character is Lovely Singh. She is first angry with him, then she teases him, then plays a prank, then falls in love with him. She has no other purpose in her life besides doing something related to Lovely.

The villains – special appearances by Mahesh Manjrekar and Aditya Pancholi – seem unnecessary since we never know exactly what they want or what their motives are. The songs aren’t exciting enough and are forcefully inserted without much regard to the plot or visual themes.

With Bodyguard, Khan hopes to continue his winning streak at delivering successful masala films after Wanted, Dabanng and Ready. However, this film by Siddique goes wrong in numerous places, most of all in the script. The best dramatic point in the film only comes at the end, which is when the film finally begins to get interesting. If only the same innovative dramatic streaks ran throughout the film, Bodyguard would have veered away from becoming the bumbling, unfunny and bland film that it is. This bodyguard won’t save anyone!

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Bodyguard movie review: Salman Khan rocks as a bodyguard

The much awaited flick on this Eid-ul-Fitr, Bodyguard hit the silver screens all across the globe.

Salman Khan has been aiming hat-trick of hit with the film Bodyguard.

Salman Khan and Kareena Kapoor starrer masala entertainer Bodyguard is set for August 31st release and it is expected that the movie is going to be superhit like Wanted and Dabangg.

Bodyguard is a romantic-action film, which is set to woo the family audience.

Bodyguard movie review:

Director Siddique has brilliantly used Salman factor in the film Bodyguard, which is remake of Malayalam movie with the same name. Salman's body lurching action is the key attraction of the film.

In the movie, Salman has played a role of profession security guard. He safeguards Kareena in the film.

The first half of the film moves simply but there is a twist just before the end of first half.

There are stunning events of twist in the film which will keep you stay with your seats till the end.

The story of the film revolves around Lovely Singh (Salman), who is very sincere and punctual with his duty. He is appointed as a bodyguard of Divya (Kareena Kapoor), who is a daughter of businessmen Satraj Rana (Raj Babbar).

He starts following Divya in her college campus. Due to his protective nature, Lovely becomes a menace for Divya and her friends. In a bid to get rid off him, Divya makes a fake lover, To know what happens, is she really love with her falls lover or Salman, you will have to book you show.

The film deserves 4 stars due to its song, action and several twists.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Bhojpuri Movie GORIYA KE GORE GORE GAAL

The Grand party of R.N. Enterprises’s “GORIYA KE GORE GORE GAAL” held at Blue Waters Andheri w. on 20 th January . On the occasion of promo release and birth day celebration of writer- director S.S. Lalit. Many film personalities like Suresh Chavla, S.K. Chatarjee, Das babu, D.K. Thakur, Ramesh meer, Vaishno Deva, Chandu Dhanvani, A.T. Pipre, Ajay Gupta, Ashish , Uday Srivastav, Kishan Deo, Aasif khan, Amar Devgade, Ajay Shah, Prabhat Pandey, Ajeetabh, Surendra saluja and film publicist Samarjeet and Uday Bhagat were attended. The film is being written-directed by S.S. Lalit and produced by Ravi Shankar Tiwary. It has screenplay by S.S. Lalit & Ras Bihari Pandey, music by Rajesh Lalit & Vinod Gwaar, lyrics by Bipin Bahar, Ras Bihari Pandey & S.S. Lalit. dialogues by Lalit Shukla, choreography by Gyan Singh, action by Riyaz Sultan art by Sunil jha and cinematography by Arun Mishra. Co-producer : Raj Mehta. Exec. Director: Sawan Verma. It stars, Uttam Kumar, Lovi Rohatgi, Ravi Shankar Tiwary. Ritu Pandey, Monika Verma, Raj Mehta, Liliput, Ramesh Goel, D.P. Pandey, Salim Ansari, Neeraj Badshah, Neeraj podel, Akhilesh Gupta and Seema Singh (item song).