Ekta Kapoor and Anurag Kashyap’s new age thriller ‘Dobaaraa’ will hit the theaters on August 19, 2022 starring Taapsee Pannu and Pavail Gulati in the lead roles. Dobaaraa is a new age thriller that reunites Tapsee Pannu and Anurag Kashyap (as director) after Manmarziyaan.
Dobaaraa is helmed by Anurag Kashyap and is being jointly produced by Ekta Kapoor’s Cult Movies and Sunir Khetarpal’s Athena.
Reportedly many Bollywood celebrities watched Ekta Kapoor’s and Anurag Kashyap’s Dobaaraa’s screening and shared their reactions on the film. Recently content Czarina Ekta Kapoor shared the reactions of celebrities from the screening for the movie.
Actor Alaya F said, “Dobaara doesn’t disappoint at all I was at the edge of the seat the entire time.” Film director Dibakar Banerjee said, “The film Dobaaraa has opened new Visuals.” Radhika Madan said, “Dobaaraa is really interesting and she is going to watch the...
Dobaaraa is helmed by Anurag Kashyap and is being jointly produced by Ekta Kapoor’s Cult Movies and Sunir Khetarpal’s Athena.
Reportedly many Bollywood celebrities watched Ekta Kapoor’s and Anurag Kashyap’s Dobaaraa’s screening and shared their reactions on the film. Recently content Czarina Ekta Kapoor shared the reactions of celebrities from the screening for the movie.
Actor Alaya F said, “Dobaara doesn’t disappoint at all I was at the edge of the seat the entire time.” Film director Dibakar Banerjee said, “The film Dobaaraa has opened new Visuals.” Radhika Madan said, “Dobaaraa is really interesting and she is going to watch the...
- 8/17/2022
- by Glamsham Editorial
- GlamSham
Taapsee Pannu and Pavail Gulati starring upcoming thriller, Dobaaraa directed by Anurag Kashyap and written by Nihit Bhave has officially opened the Indian Film Festival of Melbourne 2022 (Iffm) in the most grand and glorious way. The Australian premiere and opening night was attended by Anurag Kashyap, Taapsee Pannu, Tamannaah Bhatia and Rithvik Dhanjani in presence of hundreds of Indian and Australian audiences.
The film received thundering response after the screening making a proud moment for the filmmaker Anurag Kashyap and the film’s leading lady Taapsee Pannu.
Speaking about the premiere Taapsee said, “Excited the film is being screened here in Australia a week ahead of the India release. I hope everyone sees and appreciates the film, it’s a whole new genre and the concept of time travel and parallel universe which is being experimented for the first time in the Hindi film industry.”
‘Dobaaraa’ is scheduled to be...
The film received thundering response after the screening making a proud moment for the filmmaker Anurag Kashyap and the film’s leading lady Taapsee Pannu.
Speaking about the premiere Taapsee said, “Excited the film is being screened here in Australia a week ahead of the India release. I hope everyone sees and appreciates the film, it’s a whole new genre and the concept of time travel and parallel universe which is being experimented for the first time in the Hindi film industry.”
‘Dobaaraa’ is scheduled to be...
- 8/13/2022
- by Glamsham Editorial
- GlamSham
Choked Paisa Bolta Hai
Starring Saiyami Kher, Roshan Matthew, Amruta Subhash, Rajshree Deshpande
Directed by Anurag Kashyap
Our prime minister Narendra Modi makes a guest appearance in Choked, Anurag Kashyap’s latest homage to the spirit of quirkiness where the characters are for once, not killing each other. This is Kashyap’s first film where no one one dies a brutal death with their head smashed by a hammer or blown away by a gunshot. Thank Kashyap, the God of Gore, for small mercies.
Everyone lives in Choked, even when demonetization nearly kills them all. The people who inhabit Kashyap’s universe this time are way too gentle by his standards. The most violent occurrence is a scuffle between two friends over a game of carrom.
Is the Wasseypur sharpshooter softening as he grows older? There is distinctive tenderness in tone specially when it comes to portraying the low middleclass couple Sarita and Sushant.
Starring Saiyami Kher, Roshan Matthew, Amruta Subhash, Rajshree Deshpande
Directed by Anurag Kashyap
Our prime minister Narendra Modi makes a guest appearance in Choked, Anurag Kashyap’s latest homage to the spirit of quirkiness where the characters are for once, not killing each other. This is Kashyap’s first film where no one one dies a brutal death with their head smashed by a hammer or blown away by a gunshot. Thank Kashyap, the God of Gore, for small mercies.
Everyone lives in Choked, even when demonetization nearly kills them all. The people who inhabit Kashyap’s universe this time are way too gentle by his standards. The most violent occurrence is a scuffle between two friends over a game of carrom.
Is the Wasseypur sharpshooter softening as he grows older? There is distinctive tenderness in tone specially when it comes to portraying the low middleclass couple Sarita and Sushant.
- 6/8/2020
- by Subhash K Jha
- Bollyspice
By Arijit Paul
Anurag Kashyap, the “angry young man” of Hindi cinema, whose creative genius envisioned works like “Gangs of Wasseypur“, “Dev D” and “Ugly” has always made films that are a warcry- a rebel with a cause to detract from the joie de vivre of Bollywood. Each of his films are decked upon another, a tryst with a dark caricature of the subaltern milieu, anchored at the helm by contemporary politics and violence. In an interview, Kashyap describes his latest endeavour “Choked: Paisa Bolta Hai” as a Sai Paranjpye thriller. Descriptions and definitions apart, it is starkly liberating from the Kashyap-esque tradition of filmmaking in terms of its storytelling and critique. As is his wont to stand ground against the establishment, Kashyap barters the nuances of a refined story for a more didactically inclined narrative.
The opening shot is of a man walking briskly up a staircase with an attache case,...
Anurag Kashyap, the “angry young man” of Hindi cinema, whose creative genius envisioned works like “Gangs of Wasseypur“, “Dev D” and “Ugly” has always made films that are a warcry- a rebel with a cause to detract from the joie de vivre of Bollywood. Each of his films are decked upon another, a tryst with a dark caricature of the subaltern milieu, anchored at the helm by contemporary politics and violence. In an interview, Kashyap describes his latest endeavour “Choked: Paisa Bolta Hai” as a Sai Paranjpye thriller. Descriptions and definitions apart, it is starkly liberating from the Kashyap-esque tradition of filmmaking in terms of its storytelling and critique. As is his wont to stand ground against the establishment, Kashyap barters the nuances of a refined story for a more didactically inclined narrative.
The opening shot is of a man walking briskly up a staircase with an attache case,...
- 6/7/2020
- by Guest Writer
- AsianMoviePulse
ReviewThe film begins in October 2016 in Mumbai, a month before Pm Modi announced the demonetisation of high value currency notes. Sowmya RajendranSarita is like millions of Indian women who have to do it all – work at home and work in their office, with no time for rest or relaxation. Her husband, Sushant, sits around all day doing nothing, shamefaced about Sarita having to pick up his slack but thick-skinned enough to maintain the status quo. The drain in their kitchen is a point of conflict. It gurgles, it chokes, it spills out water into the kitchen... it’s a curse, until it’s not. Choked: Paisa Bolta Hai, directed by Anurag Kashyap and written by Nihit Bhave, is now streaming on Netflix. The film begins in October 2016 in Mumbai, a month before Pm Modi announced the demonetisation of high value currency notes. It’s an imaginative little story about imaginative little people.
- 6/5/2020
- by Sowmya
- The News Minute
NetflixWhile Season 1 served as exposition, the show creators pack Season 2 with backstories, flashbacks within flashbacks, and subplots.Saraswati DatarKarl Marx once wrote, “Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people". Religion like opium can bring temporary relief and create an illusion of better things to come. In Sacred Games 2, now streaming on Netflix, this opiate is both literal and metaphorical. A drink made from pink berries that is an effective and profitable hallucinogen, and religion itself, that has created addicts and caused wars, all in the name of ironically a loving God. Season 1 of Sacred Games ended on a note of high drama with less than 15 days left for Sartaj Singh (Saif Ali Khan) to save Mumbai from an impending disaster. He gets the tip from runaway gangster Ganesh Gaitonde (Nawazuddin Siddiqui...
- 8/16/2019
- by Sowmya
- The News Minute
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