Bigg Boss 17: Munawar Faruqui’s Blatant Lies About Nazila Exposed As She Breaks Silence(Photo Credit –Instagram)
Bigg Boss 17 has turned into a Munawar Faruqui and his two ex-girlfriends, Ayesha Khan and Nazila Sitaishi saga. While the trio seems to play Splitsvilla in the reality show, Munna tries to hurl very hard accusations at his ex-girlfriend Nazila, which are shocking.
In the last episode, Munawar told Ayesha Khan that Nazila wanted to send his kid to a boarding school. He shockingly revealed that his ex-girlfriend even doubted Munawar’s relationship with his sister and accused them of having an affair.
After these revelations, Nazila Sitaishi posted a cryptic note on her Instagram account, which said, “It’s a shame, the lies people will say to defend themselves.” After her note, netizens have been exposing Munawar’s game plan and reacting to his blatant lies on the show.
Trending Koffee With Karan 8 Ep 12 Review Ft.
Bigg Boss 17 has turned into a Munawar Faruqui and his two ex-girlfriends, Ayesha Khan and Nazila Sitaishi saga. While the trio seems to play Splitsvilla in the reality show, Munna tries to hurl very hard accusations at his ex-girlfriend Nazila, which are shocking.
In the last episode, Munawar told Ayesha Khan that Nazila wanted to send his kid to a boarding school. He shockingly revealed that his ex-girlfriend even doubted Munawar’s relationship with his sister and accused them of having an affair.
After these revelations, Nazila Sitaishi posted a cryptic note on her Instagram account, which said, “It’s a shame, the lies people will say to defend themselves.” After her note, netizens have been exposing Munawar’s game plan and reacting to his blatant lies on the show.
Trending Koffee With Karan 8 Ep 12 Review Ft.
- 1/11/2024
- by Trisha Gaur
- KoiMoi
The waters are continuing to rise in Houston in the wake of Hurricane Harvey, with the National Weather Service predicting as much as 50 inches of rain in Houston and other parts of the Gulf Coast of Texas. And at the CBS Houston affiliate Khou, reporters kept smartphone cameras rolling as they were forced to evacuate from their studio. The water first began creeping in around 6:40 a.m. local time, forcing the news anchors and broadcast team to move upstairs. Forty minutes later, the water began pouring in, and just before 9 a.m., the team had no choice but to.
- 8/27/2017
- by Jeremy Fuster
- The Wrap
"I sometimes think, Do people find this interesting?" Todrick Hall shrugs. "Because this is my life every day and, you know, people could do this if they wanted to."
We are standing just backstage at the historic Theatre at Ace Hotel immediately following the Outfest screening of Behind the Curtain: Todrick Hall, a documentary that followed Todrick as he wrote and recorded a full-length visual album, Straight Outta Oz, then turned that album into a stage show and toured nationwide to perform it. From our vantage point behind the velvet curtain, we can watch the attendees -- hundreds of fans, friends and other industry folk -- filing out under the glimmering mirrored ceiling into the Broadway Theater District of Downtown L.A. I've asked Todrick if this all feels as glamorous to him as it seems.
"I thought at one point I would get to a certain place and I would be like, Ok, now I'm...
We are standing just backstage at the historic Theatre at Ace Hotel immediately following the Outfest screening of Behind the Curtain: Todrick Hall, a documentary that followed Todrick as he wrote and recorded a full-length visual album, Straight Outta Oz, then turned that album into a stage show and toured nationwide to perform it. From our vantage point behind the velvet curtain, we can watch the attendees -- hundreds of fans, friends and other industry folk -- filing out under the glimmering mirrored ceiling into the Broadway Theater District of Downtown L.A. I've asked Todrick if this all feels as glamorous to him as it seems.
"I thought at one point I would get to a certain place and I would be like, Ok, now I'm...
- 8/10/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
Distance has given David Letterman some perspective. In a rare public appearance, the comedian appeared in the season premiere of his friend Norm Macdonald's podcast Monday. Forty minutes into the conversation, Macdonald said he wished there were fewer talk shows. "At one point, there was two shows: The 11:30 p.m. show and the 12:30 a.m. show, Johnny Carson and David Letterman," he said. "Now, there are 100 Johnny Carsons and no David Letterman. I mean, there are 100 11:30 p.m. shows. The shows are indistinct." Letterman interrupted, asking if Macdonald meant they are "all the same template." "Do whatever you want. I think you are bound by the pressure of who is writing the checks....
- 7/26/2017
- E! Online
Robin Bell Apr 18, 2017
Cameron Crowe and Tom Cruise reteamed, following Jerry Maguire, on Vanilla Sky. It's a film with far fewer fans...
This article contains spoilers for Vanilla Sky.
Memorable moments - it seemed to be what Cameron Crowe had a knack for creating. Lloyd Dobler stood with a ghetto blaster held aloft in Say Anything, the 'Show me the money' or 'You had me at hello' scenes from Jerry Maguire, the singalong of Tiny Dancer or the imminent plane crash in Almost Famous. It also seemed Cameron Crowe could do no wrong on the wave of the success of those films, but then there came a film which, instead of creating memorable moments, everybody seemed to want to forget all about.
In 2001, Cameron Crowe made the much maligned Vanilla Sky.
It seemed to really rub people up the wrong way upon release. Was this because it wasn't what they...
Cameron Crowe and Tom Cruise reteamed, following Jerry Maguire, on Vanilla Sky. It's a film with far fewer fans...
This article contains spoilers for Vanilla Sky.
Memorable moments - it seemed to be what Cameron Crowe had a knack for creating. Lloyd Dobler stood with a ghetto blaster held aloft in Say Anything, the 'Show me the money' or 'You had me at hello' scenes from Jerry Maguire, the singalong of Tiny Dancer or the imminent plane crash in Almost Famous. It also seemed Cameron Crowe could do no wrong on the wave of the success of those films, but then there came a film which, instead of creating memorable moments, everybody seemed to want to forget all about.
In 2001, Cameron Crowe made the much maligned Vanilla Sky.
It seemed to really rub people up the wrong way upon release. Was this because it wasn't what they...
- 3/22/2017
- Den of Geek
A library book titled Forty Minutes Late was returned to a San Francisco library Friday — 100 years after it was checked out.
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Phoebe Marsh Dickenson Webb checked out the collection of short stories in 1917 when she was 83 years old. Unfortunately, she died one week before the book’s due date, so it spent nearly 80 years in a trunk before her great-grandchildren discovered it.
“We figured it was ours now,” Phoebe’s great-grandson Webb Johnson told the outlet upon discovering the book by F. Hopkinson Smith. “I’m guilty. I know it. Guilty, guilty, guilty.”
At...
According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Phoebe Marsh Dickenson Webb checked out the collection of short stories in 1917 when she was 83 years old. Unfortunately, she died one week before the book’s due date, so it spent nearly 80 years in a trunk before her great-grandchildren discovered it.
“We figured it was ours now,” Phoebe’s great-grandson Webb Johnson told the outlet upon discovering the book by F. Hopkinson Smith. “I’m guilty. I know it. Guilty, guilty, guilty.”
At...
- 1/16/2017
- by Stephanie Petit
- PEOPLE.com
Vienna, one month ago: Neil and I, in town for the city’s annual international film festival, get wind of a nearby press screening for Spectre, the new James Bond picture. Both of our upcoming schedules suggest that if we’re to get in on this cultural phenomenon, if we’re even to see it, we’ll have to wait till at least mid-November, owing to the slim chances of there being undubbed, original-language screenings in any of the far-flung locales we’re traveling to next. The wind changed—twice. First, we were welcome to attend the press screening in question so long as we didn’t mind the small fact that it was going to be in German. We did. But then came the prestige: it was going to screen in English after all. Smashing.If you’re going to crash a party, do it proper. Each of the...
- 11/24/2015
- by Michael Pattison
- MUBI
Let's jump back in time to a little over 16 years ago. It's the summer of 1998 and if you hit a gay bar or club in the continental United States, you could not miss Stars on 54's dance remake of Gordon Lightfoot's "If You Could Read My Mind." It was simply everywhere. The track was the promotional single for "54," a movie that promised a sexy look at the infamous New York City nightclub Studio 54 but couldn't ultimately live up to the marketing hype surrounding its release. The Miramax production was generating a ton of publicity because of its subject matter (one of the most legendary clubs of all-time), young up-and-coming stars such as Ryan Phillippe and Salma Hayek, the participation of Neve Campbell, who was coming off four straight hits (the first two "Screams," "The Craft" and "Wild Things"). Most buzzworthy of all, it was the first dramatic role for...
- 2/6/2015
- by Gregory Ellwood
- Hitfix
They're talented, individual, but could, possibly, do with a bit of editorial guidance. Could these directors use a boss, we wonder?
Odd List
In truth, we're a bit frightened about this one. Several times in pub/coffee shop/cider drinking in the park conversations, we've chatted about film directors who perhaps have got too powerful, that they seem to be able to get their own way without having someone to call bullshit on them - be it a good boss, or a very good friend that they trust and listen to.
This can be a very good thing. After all, we want film directors to be free to tell their stories. We don't want studio suits calling the shots. And some directors use their independence wondefully well, without losing what bought it to them in the first place (so, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, Robert Zemeckis and such like).
Still,...
Odd List
In truth, we're a bit frightened about this one. Several times in pub/coffee shop/cider drinking in the park conversations, we've chatted about film directors who perhaps have got too powerful, that they seem to be able to get their own way without having someone to call bullshit on them - be it a good boss, or a very good friend that they trust and listen to.
This can be a very good thing. After all, we want film directors to be free to tell their stories. We don't want studio suits calling the shots. And some directors use their independence wondefully well, without losing what bought it to them in the first place (so, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, Robert Zemeckis and such like).
Still,...
- 6/19/2014
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
Hello Total Film readers! I'm Terry Gilliam and to celebrate the release of my new sci-fi smorgasbord The Zero Theorem, I'm Guest Editing the Total Film website for the weekend! After spending an afternoon with the Total Film online team, I’ve discovered this involves a lot of coffee, biscuits and geeky film chat. But aside from that you can also expect the following: Tf’s first ever Career in Forty Minutes – a sprawling and encyclopaedic runthrough of my career to date. A series of special features linking you straight...
.
.
- 3/14/2014
- by Total Film
- TotalFilm
When Lost ruled the world, season five ended by fading to white rather than the usual black. Like many of the show’s finales, it was frustrating. Not the fade itself, but what it represented — rabies-inducing mystery offered in lieu of actual resolution. A cliff-hanger to distract from the fact that we’d lost sight of what cliff we’d been climbing all this time. It’s beyond my ken why Jack Bender — who’s become as much an in-house director for Under the Dome as he was for Lost — opted to end Dome’s first season on another whiteout. We’ve been hiking this summit for thirteen weeks, man — what do we have to do to get a goddamned treat?Forty minutes prior, though: Julia Shumway’s unamused voice-over kicks in for what I can only dream will be the final time ever (do not keep this for season two,...
- 9/17/2013
- by Zach Dionne
- Vulture
Any wardrobe malfunction is a bad one, so it has to be even more stressful when it’s right before the White House Correspondents’ Dinner!
Sports Illustrated model Chrissy Teigen definitely isn’t shy about showing off her body, but she did want to be fully dressed for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on April 27. However, she shared a picture on Instagram proving that even models have wardrobe malfunctions during the worst moments possible.
Chrissy Teigen Zipper Breaks Before Whcd
“Late for #whcd. Broke zipper. Any tailors in DC wanna sew me in?” Chrissy, 27, captioned the picture on Instagram, displaying a broken zipper.
From the picture, it’s clear that the dress can’t zip up, but it seemed a miracle happened — or just a back up dress!
Forty minutes later, Chrissy posted another pic wearing a different dress, made by Kaufmanfranco. She captioned it with “this one zipped.” Well,...
Sports Illustrated model Chrissy Teigen definitely isn’t shy about showing off her body, but she did want to be fully dressed for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on April 27. However, she shared a picture on Instagram proving that even models have wardrobe malfunctions during the worst moments possible.
Chrissy Teigen Zipper Breaks Before Whcd
“Late for #whcd. Broke zipper. Any tailors in DC wanna sew me in?” Chrissy, 27, captioned the picture on Instagram, displaying a broken zipper.
From the picture, it’s clear that the dress can’t zip up, but it seemed a miracle happened — or just a back up dress!
Forty minutes later, Chrissy posted another pic wearing a different dress, made by Kaufmanfranco. She captioned it with “this one zipped.” Well,...
- 4/29/2013
- by Emily Longeretta
- HollywoodLife
What has James Franco been up to lately, you ask? The 34-year-old actor is set to publish a poetry book in 2014, but we're more interested in a recent collaboration with San Francisco filmmaker Travis Mathews.
Their film, "Interior. Leather Bar," will premiere at Sundance New Frontiers program in January. Originally titled, "James Franco's 40 Minutes," the "homo-sex-art-film" is an homage to William Friedkin's 1980 thriller, "Cruising," starring a young Al Pacino. Forty minutes were cut from Friedkin's racy film, but the results still prompted censor Richard Heffner to reportedly proclaim, "There are not enough Xs in the alphabet" to rate it, the filmmaker once told the Guardian.
Watch the trailer below, and let us know what you think of the project in the comments section:
Interior. Leather Bar. trailer from Travis Mathews on Vimeo.
Their film, "Interior. Leather Bar," will premiere at Sundance New Frontiers program in January. Originally titled, "James Franco's 40 Minutes," the "homo-sex-art-film" is an homage to William Friedkin's 1980 thriller, "Cruising," starring a young Al Pacino. Forty minutes were cut from Friedkin's racy film, but the results still prompted censor Richard Heffner to reportedly proclaim, "There are not enough Xs in the alphabet" to rate it, the filmmaker once told the Guardian.
Watch the trailer below, and let us know what you think of the project in the comments section:
Interior. Leather Bar. trailer from Travis Mathews on Vimeo.
- 12/19/2012
- by Kathleen Massara
- Huffington Post
Forty minutes into this week’s episode of Castle, I was dying. Not literally, of course. But the anticipation was killing me — and not just because this week’s case was a nail-bitter.
You see, at the end of last week’s wildly fun Dancing With the Stars-themed episode, viewers were treated to a teaser for an episode that appeared to finally address the “I love you” Castle (Nathan Fillion) whispered to injured Kate (Stana Katic) at the end of last season. “I was shot in the chest and I remember every second of it,” she told a man...
You see, at the end of last week’s wildly fun Dancing With the Stars-themed episode, viewers were treated to a teaser for an episode that appeared to finally address the “I love you” Castle (Nathan Fillion) whispered to injured Kate (Stana Katic) at the end of last season. “I was shot in the chest and I remember every second of it,” she told a man...
- 3/27/2012
- by Sandra Gonzalez
- EW.com - PopWatch
Didn’t AMC learn anything from “The Walking Dead’s” pilot episode? The cable network’s latest scripted TV show “Hell on Wheels” should have been a two-hour pilot. Or at the very least, a condensed 90-minute opener. Instead, the Western was just only 60 minutes (plus commercials) when it premiered last night after the latest episode of “The Walking Dead”. That gives it, essentially, about 40 minutes of actual show. Forty minutes is not nearly enough time to introduce a whole new TV show, especially one with as many (literally) moving parts as “Hell on Wheels”, which sets a tale of revenge against the building of the Transcontinental railroad in 1865. (The “Hell on Wheels” of the title refers to the moving tent town and its many “entrepreneurs” that follow the railroad tracks as they’re built across the country.) What we did get, though, was an iffy introduction to our hero,...
- 11/7/2011
- by Nix
- Beyond Hollywood
The most exciting TV last night came unscripted. But unlike much of the Wednesday reality TV lineup, it didn’t involve histrionic singers or immunity idols. The drama came from a little game called baseball. And what drama!
If you were a Red Sox fan, your season’s sudden end felt apocalyptically anti-climactic. To put it into EW-friendly pop culture terms, the Sox missing the playoffs after entering September with a nine-game Wild Card lead is a bigger disappointment for the Nation than the respective bummer factors of The Phantom Menace, the Matrix sequels, that Roseanne finale, Chinese Democracy, and...
If you were a Red Sox fan, your season’s sudden end felt apocalyptically anti-climactic. To put it into EW-friendly pop culture terms, the Sox missing the playoffs after entering September with a nine-game Wild Card lead is a bigger disappointment for the Nation than the respective bummer factors of The Phantom Menace, the Matrix sequels, that Roseanne finale, Chinese Democracy, and...
- 9/29/2011
- by Christian Blauvelt
- EW.com - PopWatch
image.net Tom Hanks and Nia Vardalos on set for “Larry Crowne”
Nia Vardalos loves a free lunch. In fact, it was at a birthday party for Gary Goetzman, a well-known Hollywood producer, that Tom Hanks pulled Vardalos aside and pitched her his idea for a new film. Five years later, the script became “Larry Crowne,” a romantic comedy that Hanks co-wrote, stars in and directed.
“Tom was telling his agent and Gary about the idea and they were talking...
Nia Vardalos loves a free lunch. In fact, it was at a birthday party for Gary Goetzman, a well-known Hollywood producer, that Tom Hanks pulled Vardalos aside and pitched her his idea for a new film. Five years later, the script became “Larry Crowne,” a romantic comedy that Hanks co-wrote, stars in and directed.
“Tom was telling his agent and Gary about the idea and they were talking...
- 7/1/2011
- by Alexandra Cheney
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
At left, L’Oreal Paris Studio Line Springing Curl Mousse; at right, Paul Mitchell Round Trip Liquid Curl Definer. Courtesy L’Oreal Paris and Paul Mitchell. Dry shampoo is now all the rage for those with straight hair who want to extend the life of a blow-out or hairstyle. But what does the same trick for thicker, curlier hair—those for whom stringiness or oiliness is not as common? The best solution we’ve found is a frizz-controlling mousse, like this one (above left): L’Oreal Paris Studio Line Springing Curls Mousse. We woke up with mussed, matted frizz—pillows and curly hair are natural-born enemies, after all—but after finger-combing the tangles and scrunching dry hair with a fluffy dollop, our waves looked as good as new. Forty minutes, saved. To pre-empt bad-morning hair altogether, try scrunching damp hair with a squirt of Paul Mitchell’s Round Trip...
- 3/11/2011
- Vanity Fair
Liberia boasts Africa's first female elected head of state. But it also has one of the highest rates of violence against women in the world. Here, Emma Thompson and her adopted son Tindy Agaba, a former child soldier, share their diaries of an intimate visit to the people and projects that are empowering the country's daughters
4 February
Tindy I left Garden City, Cairo, where I have been working with refugees, at 5am yesterday. Africa is a funny old world. To go to Liberia from Cairo one has to go to Europe first and then get a connecting flight back to Africa!
In the lounge at Brussels Airport, I bump into George Weah, the former AC Milan player and world footballer of the year who was also an ex-presidential aspirant in Liberia. He hasn't changed at all, except that his beard is becoming grey.
On our way from Liberia's airport to our hotel,...
4 February
Tindy I left Garden City, Cairo, where I have been working with refugees, at 5am yesterday. Africa is a funny old world. To go to Liberia from Cairo one has to go to Europe first and then get a connecting flight back to Africa!
In the lounge at Brussels Airport, I bump into George Weah, the former AC Milan player and world footballer of the year who was also an ex-presidential aspirant in Liberia. He hasn't changed at all, except that his beard is becoming grey.
On our way from Liberia's airport to our hotel,...
- 3/6/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
Update Sunday Am: Last night's edition of Saturday Night Live hosted by Miley Cyrus with musical guest The Strokes drew a 5.4 metered-market rating, up 8% from the same night last season. Update 10:40 Pm: Added below is the video of tonight's Saturday Night Live cold open, featuring cast member Bill Hader as Charlie Sheen hosting his own talk show Duh! Winning! Ironically, the skit aired on the East Coast minutes after the end of the premiere episode of Sheen's new internet show Sheen's-Korner. Duh! Winning! featured guests John Galliano, Muammar Gaddafi and host Miley Cyrus as Lindsay Lohan. Update 8:40Pm: Word from the East Coast is that Saturday Night Live opened tonight's broadcast with a skit about Sheen that features host Miley Cyrus as Lindsay Lohan poking fun at the Two and a Half Men star and Tiger Woods. I'll post the video as soon as it's available. Previous: A...
- 3/6/2011
- by NELLIE ANDREEVA
- Deadline TV
Don't mess with Texas.
Sure, the Cowboys didn't make it to the Big Game this year, but we'll have Cowboys in cinematic form. But instead of rushing on 4th down, they'll be rushing from Invaders From Space!
A full length trailer for C & A has been out for months, but this is the first time we get a clear view at one of the transfmorphing bot-beings.
Check out the clip below and be sure to read my report from Butt-Numb-a-Thon where I was one of only 250 people to see Forty Minutes of the upcoming Daniel Craig/Harrison Ford pic.
Sure, the Cowboys didn't make it to the Big Game this year, but we'll have Cowboys in cinematic form. But instead of rushing on 4th down, they'll be rushing from Invaders From Space!
A full length trailer for C & A has been out for months, but this is the first time we get a clear view at one of the transfmorphing bot-beings.
Check out the clip below and be sure to read my report from Butt-Numb-a-Thon where I was one of only 250 people to see Forty Minutes of the upcoming Daniel Craig/Harrison Ford pic.
- 2/6/2011
- UGO Movies
This weekend: sisters take over their family's alligator park in Swamplandia!, Allison Pearson visits the cruel fates of adolescent fandom, and the haunting novels of Albania's Ismail Kadare.
Into the Swamp
Related story on The Daily Beast: This Week's Hot Reads
Swamplandia!, the talented short-story writer Karen Russell's debut novel, gives us two more of those precocious children who overcrowd the last 60 years of American fiction. From J.D. Salinger's Glass children to William Gaddis' Jr to Jonathan Safran Foer's Oskar Schell, our literature has clamored with intellectually overdeveloped but socially stunted children. Through their eyes, we're traditionally afforded fresh perspectives-often poignant or satirical-on modern society. Swamplandia!'s unique twist is to present two youths who at first seem to be Everglades savants, but turn out to be just regular kids in swampy circumstances.
The children in question are 13-year-old Ava Bigtree and her older brother Kiwi,...
Into the Swamp
Related story on The Daily Beast: This Week's Hot Reads
Swamplandia!, the talented short-story writer Karen Russell's debut novel, gives us two more of those precocious children who overcrowd the last 60 years of American fiction. From J.D. Salinger's Glass children to William Gaddis' Jr to Jonathan Safran Foer's Oskar Schell, our literature has clamored with intellectually overdeveloped but socially stunted children. Through their eyes, we're traditionally afforded fresh perspectives-often poignant or satirical-on modern society. Swamplandia!'s unique twist is to present two youths who at first seem to be Everglades savants, but turn out to be just regular kids in swampy circumstances.
The children in question are 13-year-old Ava Bigtree and her older brother Kiwi,...
- 2/5/2011
- by The Daily Beast
- The Daily Beast
The ex-Pentagon official found dead on New Year's Eve was seen disoriented the day before his body was found. Friends tell Pat Wingert and Christine Pelisek what made them suspect something terrible had happened.
The murder of former Pentagon official John P. Wheeler III, whose body was found on New Year's Eve in a Delaware landfill, has been baffling since it was first discovered. But the more facts that emerge about his mysterious death, the more perplexing it seems to become.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Obama's Vick Prison Gambit
Newark police say images of a visibly disoriented Wheeler, a 66-year-old Beltway insider who had worked in four presidential administrations, were captured on surveillance videotape in downtown Wilmington as late as 8:30 p.m. on December 30, the night before his body was spotted at a local landfill.
The night before that, Wheeler, a West Point, Yale, and Harvard grad...
The murder of former Pentagon official John P. Wheeler III, whose body was found on New Year's Eve in a Delaware landfill, has been baffling since it was first discovered. But the more facts that emerge about his mysterious death, the more perplexing it seems to become.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Obama's Vick Prison Gambit
Newark police say images of a visibly disoriented Wheeler, a 66-year-old Beltway insider who had worked in four presidential administrations, were captured on surveillance videotape in downtown Wilmington as late as 8:30 p.m. on December 30, the night before his body was spotted at a local landfill.
The night before that, Wheeler, a West Point, Yale, and Harvard grad...
- 1/6/2011
- by Pat Wingert & Christine Pelisek
- The Daily Beast
As they come together to promote The Remix, Luke nabs some time with Brett Ratner, Hrithik Roshan and Barbara Mori
We may not have seen a Brett Ratner film in cinemas since 2007's Rush Hour 3, but that doesn't mean he's been putting his feet up. One project that's been keeping him busy is Kites: The Remix, a Bollywood film re-edited and re-mixed under his supervision. Ahead of the film's release in cinemas this Friday, we talk to Brett and the film's stars, Hrithik Roshan and Barbara Mori, about how this collaboration came to be.
I enjoyed the film. And I have to admit I haven't seen many Bollywood films before.
Brett Ratner: See, that's what I like.
Was that the intention, to reach people who wouldn't otherwise see it?
Br: Yes, introduce people who normally wouldn't see a Bollywood movie. That's the audience who's different. It opens it up.
We may not have seen a Brett Ratner film in cinemas since 2007's Rush Hour 3, but that doesn't mean he's been putting his feet up. One project that's been keeping him busy is Kites: The Remix, a Bollywood film re-edited and re-mixed under his supervision. Ahead of the film's release in cinemas this Friday, we talk to Brett and the film's stars, Hrithik Roshan and Barbara Mori, about how this collaboration came to be.
I enjoyed the film. And I have to admit I haven't seen many Bollywood films before.
Brett Ratner: See, that's what I like.
Was that the intention, to reach people who wouldn't otherwise see it?
Br: Yes, introduce people who normally wouldn't see a Bollywood movie. That's the audience who's different. It opens it up.
- 5/23/2010
- Den of Geek
By Josh Dickey
The best thing about the new “Phish 3D” film was actually Kenny Chesney.
More on that in a bit.
Everything else about the advanced “Phish 3D” screening they staged Tuesday night at The Bridge – and in several U.S. cities on this hallowed 4/20 – was excruciating.
That is to say I experienced actual physical pain, and considerable mental anguish, while watching it.
Forty minutes in, I left the theater.
Just so we’re clear as I get going here, I love Phish. I was in the 11th row when they ushered ...
The best thing about the new “Phish 3D” film was actually Kenny Chesney.
More on that in a bit.
Everything else about the advanced “Phish 3D” screening they staged Tuesday night at The Bridge – and in several U.S. cities on this hallowed 4/20 – was excruciating.
That is to say I experienced actual physical pain, and considerable mental anguish, while watching it.
Forty minutes in, I left the theater.
Just so we’re clear as I get going here, I love Phish. I was in the 11th row when they ushered ...
- 4/21/2010
- by Josh Dickey
- The Wrap
But not before loads of massive robot attacks. And at 150 minutes long, that's an awful lot of metal bashing. So, as the film hits the DVD shelves, save your eardrums and try our condensed screenplay instead
Transformers: Revenge of the FallenBy Paul MacInnes, with apologies to Ehren Kruger, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman
Scene 1
Ext: The great Pyramid. Cradle of civilisation. Symbol of humanity's grandest ambitions. A Wonder of the world. At least, it was until a CGI Robot modelled on a particularly ugly Langoustine started smashing it up, the better to reveal the Massive Gun he stashed there millennia ago in the hope of sucking all the energy from the Sun. This robot, for reasons too complicated and tenuous to explain, is called The Fallen.
The Fallen
Raaararrararararararrrr!
Beneath the Pyramid stand Shia Labeouf and Megan Fox. Shia Labeouf is dressed like a lawyer on a night out.
Transformers: Revenge of the FallenBy Paul MacInnes, with apologies to Ehren Kruger, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman
Scene 1
Ext: The great Pyramid. Cradle of civilisation. Symbol of humanity's grandest ambitions. A Wonder of the world. At least, it was until a CGI Robot modelled on a particularly ugly Langoustine started smashing it up, the better to reveal the Massive Gun he stashed there millennia ago in the hope of sucking all the energy from the Sun. This robot, for reasons too complicated and tenuous to explain, is called The Fallen.
The Fallen
Raaararrararararararrrr!
Beneath the Pyramid stand Shia Labeouf and Megan Fox. Shia Labeouf is dressed like a lawyer on a night out.
- 12/2/2009
- by Paul MacInnes
- The Guardian - Film News
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.