Sunday, September 4, 2016

Sarabjit Full Movie 2016


Sarabjit Full Movie 2016.

Friday, October 2, 2015

Singh is Bling Movie Review

Singh is Bling Movie Review Singh is Bling Movie Review
Review: 2.5 - "A fun filled with lighthearted Comedy" by , written on October 2, 2015
A must watch for Akshay Kumar and Amy Jackson Fans. Akshay is superb as usual and Amy is promising action actress, apart from comedy and action movie has nothing much to offer.

A movie which has it all Action, Comedy, Punjab, Dance and Music. Movie start with Askhay Kumar Song "Tung Tung" unveiling his character as "Raftaar Singh" - Man who can do anything but is unstable in his life and get out of focus and distracted as a result does not able to complete any thing in his life properly. Yograj Singh ( Askhay's Father) send Akshay Kumar to Goa to his friend's place to do work and secure his future and career. That's where Akshay Kumar met Amy Jackson's character "Sara" as a guest from Romania. As the movie proceed both fell in love and in the climax Akshay kill many gangster and after dramatically killing Kay Kay Menon's character "Mark.

Movie has many innocent comic scene on which you may laugh or "say it is a Joke", at time you may end getting bored and wonder why this is happening.

Pros:
If you are Fan of Akshay Kumar and Amy Jackson, Light hearten action and comedy movie or Chill with your friends and family then go for it.

Cons:
If you are looking for a Movie which has Story, Screenplay and tight script then its a NO NO for you.


Thursday, October 1, 2015

Singh is Bling Movie




Singh Is Bling Movie 2015 : Akshay Kumar latest an upcoming Bollywood movie is Singh is Bling which is schedule to release on 2nd October 2015. This Akshay Kumar movie is Bollywood action comedy which is directed by Prabhudheva and movie is produced by Grazing Goat Pictures. Sing Is Bling star cast are Akshay Kumar, Lara Dutta, Kay Kay Menon and Amy Jackson all are in leading role. Movie’s trailer was released on You Tube on August 19th, 2015.

  Akshay sports a lightweight beard and a depressing expression, the same as what he did in his previous outing ‘Gabbar Is Back’. Not that we have a tendency to disapprove of it, we have a tendency to actually hope for higher from the show. British histrionic Amy Jackson has stepped into Kriti Sanon’s shoes as she opted out of the show citing date problems. Amy appearance pretty, simply what’s expected from her, however can she have a job to play.

While "Singh is Bling" is a Hindi flick, "Puli" will be released within Tamil, Telugu as well as Hindi. Both movies will be released using a massive scale this also may certainly not allow "Kanche" to get released within sufficient volume of theatres. In addition,  Vijay's 'Puli', Akshay's 'Singh Is Bling' force makers of 'Kanchi' to delay release the 2 films feature superstars Akshay Kumar as well as Vijay, respectively, whose star power could have taken the toll about the box office collection of "Kanche".

It can also be call Akshay's best movies of 2015.

Let see what kind of performance and money can be collected in the box-office by the movie which is directed by Prabhudeva and produced by grazing goat picture and have super action star Akshay Kumar and pretty Amy Jackson.

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Richa Chadda - Masaan gets 5 minute long standing ovation at Cannes 2015


The Richa Chadha starrer that was premiered in the Un Certain Regard section of Cannes 2015 received a 5 minute long standing ovation.
Director Neeraj Ghaywan’s “Masaan” was treated to a five-minute long standing ovation at the Cannes International Festival, leaving the actress teary-eyed. The film premiered in the Un Certain Regard section of the prestigious annual movie gala.
Starring Richa Chadha, the movie is an Indo-French co-production produced by Manish Mundra, Macassar Productions, Phantom Films, Sikhya Entertainment, Arte France Cinema and Pathe productions. “Got teary at the 5 minute long standing ovation. Thank you everyone. @ghaywan, first thanks to you,” Richa tweeted alongside a photo, showing people applauding and congratulating the team of the film. Ghaywan also took to Twitter to express his happiness.
“Broke down at the unstoppable applause. Thanks everyone! Missed you so much @anuragkashyap72, editor @nitin_baid, DP @avinasharun20! #Masaan.” Shweta Tripathi, who also stars in the film, tweeted, “Sweetest khushi ke aasoos happend. Thank you @ghaywan fr this beautiful film n memories tht will last a lfetme #Masaan.” “I was always curious about what a man, who encounters death in his day-to-day life, thinks about mortality. That’s where the idea for ‘Masaan’ came,” Ghaywan had told PTI before his trip to Cannes.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

First Look: Priyanka Chopra as a Cop in Gangaajal 2

PRIYANKA WILL PLAY THE ROLE OF POLICE OFFICER ABHA MATHUR IN THE FILM

Priyanka Chopra as a Cop in Gangaajal 2

Actress Priyanka Chopra has traded her glamorous Dil Dhadakne look for a khaki uniform in Prakash Jha's upcoming film Gangaajal 2. The makers of the film have released the first look of Priyanka as police officer Abha Mathur.

The film will begin shooting soon.

Gangaajal 2 is the sequel to Prakash Jha's 2003 hit Gangaajal, starring Ajay Devgn, Gracy Singh and Mukesh Tiwari in pivotal roles.

The sight of a uniformed Priyanka left director Prakash Jha shaken

Priyanka just left for New York to film her upcoming American TV show Quantico, in which she plays an FBI agent. She has two Bollywood films releasing this year - Zoya Akhtar's Dil Dhadakne Do which is out in June and Sanjay Leela Bhansali's period filmBajirao Mastani coming up later.

Friday, May 15, 2015

Bombay Velvet Movie Review

Bombay Velvet Movie Rating: 5.8 out of 10
Bombay Velvet - Movie 2015


3/5 Star*

The most striking aspects of Bombay Velvet are its evocative visual texture and its lush and layered sound design.

But these, unfortunately, can only be external accoutrements for an ambitious film that clearly aspires to be infinitely more than the sum of its superficial parts. 

Meticulous is indeed the word to describe the way director Anurag Kashyap and his team recreate the eventful past of an urban sprawl that was carved out of seven separate islands and turned into one landmass through multiple reclamations from the sea. 

The Bombay Velvet plot is littered with street fights, shootouts and murders on the one hand, and jazz soirees, bitter tabloid wars, fierce political rivalries, deadly depredations of land sharks and labour unrest on the other. 

The remarkably redolent period detailing, however, stays largely on the surface. It does not seep into the core of the crime thriller set against the transformation of Bombay into a city of dreams and deep divisions.

All things considered, Bombay Velvet is, at best, a passable story of vaulting ambition, all-consuming love and destructive greed. 

A diligently crafted and gripping first half gives way to a dreary second-half account of nattily attired men plotting to defame and destroy each other and take control of all the reclaimed land that is up for grabs. 

If Bombay Velvet is trying to tell the audience exactly how Bombay mutated into India’s financial capital, the point does not come through strongly enough for it to become the film’s principal takeaway.

The saga of the city at the heart of Bombay Velvet doesn’t quite offer the panoptic view that the film’s source material – Princeton University subaltern historian Gyan Prakash’s ‘Mumbai Fables’ – managed to do owing to its scholarly sweep and depth.

That drawback obviously stems from the limitations that a two-and-a-half film must necessarily contend with. 

The screenwriters (Gyan Prakash, Thani, Vasan Bala and Anurag Kashyap) are constrained to be selective with what they focus on in Bombay Velvet.

As a consequence, the chief protagonist of the film, the city of Bombay, is seen only in random snatches, beautiful but not fully delineated. 

The story that overshadows all else in Bombay Velvet is that of Johnny Balraj (Ranbir Kapoor), a street kid who strays into a city in rapid flux two years after Independence and is raised by a Falkland Road sex worker.

By the 1960s, Balraj is a strapping, violence-prone lad ready to take on the world. A wannabe bare-knuckles boxing champ, he dreams of breaking free from his struggles. 

With childhood chum and fellow migrant Chimman Chopra (Satyadeep Mishra), a gawky-eyed Balraj watches James Cagney die in the arms of Gladys George in the climax of the classic 1939 gangster film, The Roaring Twenties. 

“He used to be a big shot,” the lady says about the lifeless man. That line changes Johnny’s life and he becomes obsessed with the idea of becoming a big shot.

The only other major obsession of Balraj’s life is jazz singer Rosie Noronha (Anushka Sharma), who sings with gusto of the hard knocks that life has subjected her to.

Their passion for each other is intense and defies all norms. The moments that the rebellious twosome shares provide a few of the more electrifying moments of Bombay Velvet. 

Balraj gets his big chance of a shot at being a big shot when a failed robbery bid brings him into contact with pushy pro-capitalist media magnate Kaizad Khambatta (Karan Johar).

Balraj quickly earns Khambatta’s trust and is made the manager of his hip nightclub, Bombay Velvet, where Rosie is the star attraction, and where the down-and-dirty collides in unseemly ways with the decorous and dandy.

Cut to the late 1960s: on the back of the Backbay Reclamation come plans to develop a Manhattan-like skyline in Bombay and big money and political avarice join forces to snatch the largest chunks of the lucrative action.

Balraj, as Khambatta’s hitman, gets the job of fixing his mentor’s bete noire, anti-establishment newspaper editor Jimmy Mistry (Manish Chaudhary).

Mistry is no mug and spares no trick in the book to outwit Khambatta and his trusted lieutenant.

In this game of life-threatening one-upmanship, it takes a friend no time at all to turn into a foe. 

By the time the myriad manipulations begin to wind down, Bombay Velvet runs out of steam. The last half-hour of the film is devoted to going through the motions to reach a climax that is as grotesque as it is risible.

Ranbir Kapoor gives the pivotal role all he has. He does have a great deal, and is able to invest Johnny Balraj with the moral ambiguities that come with the territory he inhabits.

Anushka, the femme fatale who ends up playing into the hands of the men she ensnares, serves as the ideal foil. 

But of Karan Johar as the master manipulator who gives the protagonist a hard time, the less said the better. Acting isn’t his kettle of fish. 

One final act in the film by an under-utilised Kay Kay Menon, playing a crime branch detective on the trail of Johnny Balraj, sums up his and the audience’s frustration. He flings his hat into the ground. 

It certainly isn’t disgust that you feel at how Bombay Velvet turns out. It is after all a deftly mounted film with much going for it.

What you leave the hall with is a sense of disappointment. Bombay Velvet has neither the softness of velvet nor the sweep of the city it is an ode to. 

Unlike its pugilist protagonist, the film punches well below its weight.

  • Genre:
    Period film, crime drama
  • Cast:
    Ranbir Kapoor, Anushka Sharma and Karan Johar
  • Director:
    Anurag Kashyap