Showing posts with label ranveer singh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ranveer singh. Show all posts

Friday, September 26, 2014

Video: Ranveer Singh Turns Krrish & Dances Up A Storm On Mumbai Road – All For Hrithik Roshan

Hrithik Roshan has been challenging his B-Town buddies to various dares. Latest being Ranveer Singh, I couldn't help posting this! For, the quirky guy not only accepted Hrithik's challenge to pose in the middle of the streets of Mumbai, but also added Ranveer-ism to it!

It's super mind-blowing! The chap slipped into Hrithik's Krrish avatar with a mask and a robe, and danced to the tunes of Main Aisa Kyu Hoon on Mumbai' Linking Road. Watch the video right here!


Thursday, January 30, 2014

Photos: Priyanka Chopra's Cabaret In Gunday

The upcoming goon caper, Gunday, boasts of a sizzling-hot Cabaret number by the film's leading lady, Priyanka Chopra.

The racy lyrics of the tantalizing track go as Asalaam-E-Ishqum. PC has done a hot job in the song, courtesy her super sensational display of many bootilicious moves!

Here are some really sensuous, spicy shots from the sexy number:
















Images Courtesy: Screenshots from Youtube

Do you think it is Priyanka Chopra's sexiest item number so far? Share your views in the Comments section below.

Friday, January 03, 2014

Why Ram-Leela Fails To Strike A Chord


Courtesy my baby's arrival around the release date of Sanjay Leela Bhansali's over-hyped magnum opus, I could spare some time only recently to watch the film. So, here goes...

Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela is one helluva feast that is overflowing with all kinds of spices, yet it tastes oh-so bland!

There's a riot of colours (Bhansali has shifted from blue to red). Sets are too grand for our imagination. Background score is equally enchanting. So is the drop dead gorgeous, super sensuous leading lady. And then we have a crazy, sexy lover boy. All this in a chase to tell an iconic love story. Tempting package, I must say.

But, but, but... while all that sounds like a heartwarming cinematic experience, unfortunately, the charm of this outstanding package that could have dropped our jaws in absolute awe, fails to strike a chord!

Why? Well, the wobbly screenplay and a dwarfed handling of it, the cheesy dialogues along with plentiful of corny antics are to be blamed. On top of it all, it is the chemistry between the so-called lovers that put me off the most. Sensuality turns into sexuality much before I could blink an eye!

Here are 5 spoilers that made Ram-Leela look like a desperate attempt to enter the 100 crore club. Surely, it won that status. But miserably fell short of scoring with my taste buds.

#5: THE SLOPPY STORY
Ram sees Leela. Leela sees Ram. Sparks fly. Without leaving any room for a meaningful conversation, the two indulge in a lip-lock. If that is not enough, Ram is seen in Leela's bedroom a couple of frames later. On her bed, to be precise. Love... errr... lust at first sight! Obvious twist - the two firebrands belong to warring families. Ultimately, their story - post a series of illogical, avoidable, loud drama - meets a tragic end.

Okay... so where's the story? I mean the one that makes sense and makes a splash! This one sounds like a typical, seen-before-ample-times formula, minus any X-factor.

The screenplay is a dead duck right from the beginning. There's no real-looking, interesting 'thing' between the lead pair that convinces the movie-buffs about their so-called love saga.

Leela accuses Ram of killing her brother with utmost hatred in one scene, and is kissing him passionately the very next moment! The film is a bag full of such blah-blah-blah moments. The change of heart in Leela's otherwise foxy, bloodthirsty mother towards the climax, is yet another turn off! Far from reality.

To cut the two-and-a-half hour long story short, this Sanjay Leela Bhansali product fails to click.

#4: LEELA HAS IT, YET SHE LACKS IT
SLB has gained a reputation in the industry for his opulent cinema. That he presents his heroines in a certain way is yet another USP of the ace filmmaker. His leading ladies are strong, yet win our hearts with their vulnerability; they are sexy, yet send their men into raptures with their sensuality.

Sadly, Leela is an exception. She is super hot alright. But we miss the grace and the subtlety. Her character looks so awkward in many sequences, especially when she is supposed to act all bindaas. Because it's not effortless. It lacks conviction.

Deepika may have hit the jackpot at the box-office in 2013, but she clearly takes the heat here. Leaving your comfort zone and strolling through a completely new territory, and finding a gold mine, is no child's play, Dippy dear.

#3: THE UNBEARABLE RAM
Ranveer Singh's Ram is nothing more than a piece of meat for the female viewers. He looks hot and oozes oodles of sex appeal. But it ends there.

It seems, he has taken his Band Baaja Baaraat appreciation way too seriously. Ram's character has no depth. There's no connect between him and the audience. He looks plain hollow - someone whose shenanigans have no good reason or logic to please or persuade the ticket-buyers.

I'm utterly disappointed that Ranveer gave such an insipid, flat act after casting a spell with Lootera. A big thumbs down!  

#2: YAWN-WORTHY DIALOGUES
The film's dialogue-writer must have done a hell lot of hard work. Digging the scripts of the B-grade movies from the 90s, is not a cakewalk, after all! Add to that, the trashy texts exchanged between the two protagonists...arghhh!!! Who sends such unsavory lines to their sweethearts today? Absolute turn off!

#1: ALL SKIN, NO SOUL, NO SPIRIT
A cleavage-thrusting Leela would still have been passable, had she dived under the skin of her wild character and given an equally bold performance as her costumes and gestures. But no, the romantic drama is all glossy and no glory.

All Ram wants is to grab his girl and smooch her. Even Leela looks for opportunities to get dirty with her man. Such overdose gives us indigestion and all we want to do is puke.

Ram-Leela has surely raked in moolah. But has it raked in your positive reviews as well? Share your thoughts about the film in the Comments section below.

Friday, November 08, 2013

Why Is Kissing Still A Big Deal In Bollywood?

First things first. Okay, we have outgrown those days when two beak-rubbing birds had to endure all the pain to lay bare a supposed kiss between our screen-lovers. Or two roses would get together in a quivering osculation to hint at the intimacy. Times have changed. Lip-locking has turned a trend now – an indispensable component of a wholesome masala flick. Even art films, as some 'serious, thinking actors' love to label them as, aren't devoid of an 'aesthetically shot' smooch.

The freshest example is Sanjay Leela Bhansali's forthcoming magnum opus, Ram-Leela, promos of which have already dished out few of its spiciest and juiciest scenes. Apart from some naughty games played between Deepika Padukone and Ranveer Singh, the trailers have also served us with some real hot stuff! The two leads are getting cozy and passionate, in turn, indulging in some raw, intense kissing sequences. But as they say, heat whips up fire, and it surely holds true in this case too.

Deepika and Ranveer, rumoured to be real-life sweethearts too, have sent the cine-fans into raptures with their oh-so carefree kissing bits that come as naturally as there were no cameras around when the scenes were filmed. The two sexy stunners pull off the wild moments with sheer flourish and conviction. So-called virtuous scouts be damned!

Despite the so-called maturing times and ever-increasing flux of kisses in films, one thing remains rooted to the spot – intimacy and lip-locking are still frowned upon by a certain section of our society. Call them watch-dogs, moral police or responsible citizens – they never fall short of showing up each time a movie gets an 'A' from the censor board.

Our actors and actresses are thinking bolder now. And are always game for plunking down their inhibitions 'if the script demands'. However, some self-styled custodians raise their eyebrows and drop their jaws the minute they get wind of a 'scene' in an upcoming project. The intensity of their gripes and grumbles against such on-screen acts unwaveringly bank on the number of kisses a certain film boasts of. The higher the figure, the more the nit-pickings.

Bollywood kissing may have become a rage only in recent years, but its roots are almost as old as the Hindi film industry itself. It was Devika Rani who locked lips with her screen-man (and husband) Himanshu Rai in Karma back in 1933. The first ever on-screen kiss in tinsel town. Though the scene was edited before the film's release, it surely grabbed eyeballs. And the tradition hasn't taken a break since. Every filmi kiss is watched with eagle eyes.

From Zeenat Aman and Dimple Kapadia, to Madhuri Dixit and Karisma Kapoor, to Rani Mukerjee and Aishwarya Rai, to Mallika Sherawat and Bipasha Basu, to Vidya Balan and Kareena Kapoor, to Nargis Fakhri and Anushka Sharma, to Deepika Padukone and Katrina Kaif – almost all big league hotties have smooched their leading men on silver screens. And each time, those sensational frames became one of the biggest USPs of those films.

The fashion of counting kisses probably began with Mallika's 17 smooches in Khwahish. I wonder if some hawks were really toting up the digits! Anyway, the latest flick to get listed here is Shuddh Desi Romance that scorched the headlines with its 27 kisses. While in the West, such 'scenes' are just a part of their films, they are the driving points back home. They become the sole identities of many movies, irrespective of their decent storylines. All the credit goes to the moral inspectors who are outstanding at their jobs, hands down.

So birds and flowers have been replaced with real stuff. And the evolution – from a peck on the cheeks to on the lips, to tongue-fighting smooches – has been a slow yet steady process. That is only going stronger and bigger with time. Though we may have entered the freethinking era of 21st century, PDA-ing, kissing and smooching are still considered a taboo here.

I ask, is there no end to it? Will Hindi Cinema be ever assessed purely on the basis of its weight instead of the flesh involved?