Now Watching

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Posted by Liju Philip | Posted in cinema, films, India, Movies, Music, World | Posted on 23-11-2008

My Blueberry Nights (*** 3/5)

blueberry

To End All Wars (**** 4/5)

to-end-all-wars

Mean Girls (* 1/5)

mean-girls

Hero (**** 4/5)

hero

Max Payne (** 2/5)

max-payne

Karzzzz (** 2/5)

karzz

Children of Men (*** 4/5)

children-of-men

Above pictures from: IMDB & Santa Banta

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Movie Reviews & 500th post

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Posted by Liju Philip | Posted in bollywood, cinema, films, hindi, hollywood, India, Movies, Music, Personal, World | Posted on 15-10-2008

Edit: Ya, just saw that this is my 500th post.  Yay :D

Cold Mountain (2/5)

Inspite of the splendid acting, cinematography and music, the movie left me cold. Dunno why.

Inside Man (2.5/5)

Spike Lee directed movie starring Denzel Washington, Jodie Foster and Clive Owen.  Sure recipe for a taut thriller, right? Unfortunately not. But its not a bad watch.  Watch out for the opening and ending credits of the movie with AR Rahman’s Chhaiya Chhaiya playing in the background. No reason for the song to play there.  It felt more or less like watching an english movie with an item song in it ;)

Prom Night (0/5)

Pathetic, boring, stupid slasher flick.

Drona (-1/5)

Abhishek Bachchan and superhero? hahahaha.  That is the joke of the century.  Wish wifey dear Aishwarya would do something about hubby’s flabby body. Half of the time, Abhishek is so sissy and stands with his heads bowed that you wonder if the superhero is suffering from a bad case of ‘inferiority complex’.  And now, Goldie Behl (who?) is planning a sequel.  May God save all of us from this Groana.

For the first time i have used a negative rating and the honour goes to Drona.

Kidnap (1/5)

A unique movie where mother (Vidya Malvade) and daughter (Minissa Lamba) compete on screen to see who has the better cleavage. Trust me, its still not worth it.  Sanjay Dutt looks haggard and wonders what the eff he was doing in this movie. As for Imran Khan, he has miles to go before he can even be a patch on his mamu jaan, Aamir Khan.  Sanjay Gadhvi, the director is an a$$.  He is better off in the company of the morons from Yash Raj.  Only they have the balls to promote his movies.

Pictures courtesy: Santabanta and IMDB

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Movies watched over the past week

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Posted by Liju Philip | Posted in bollywood, cinema, films, hollywood, Movies, Music, Personal, World | Posted on 06-10-2008

Death at a funeral - 3/5


Cloverfield – 2/5


Casino Royale – 4/5


Before Sunset – 3/5


Outsourced – 3/5


Disaster Movie – 0/5


Original Sin – 2/5 (for the steamy scenes of Angelina Jolie and Antonio Banderas)


Taare Zameen Par – 3/5


Matchstick Men – 3/5 (The hindi movie Bluffmaster starring Abhishek Bachchan was a ripoff of this movie)

All pictures courtesy: IMDB

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Paul Newman, Mahendra Kapoor – RIP

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Posted by Liju Philip | Posted in bollywood, cinema, films, hollywood, India, Movies, Music, World | Posted on 28-09-2008

The end of a generation of entertainers. May God bless their souls.

Chalo ek baar phir se

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EqBQd-uJZu0]

Tum agar saath dene ka

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXICci7VtbU&feature=related]

Neele gagan ke tale

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aN5rCSdgOQw]

Above pictures courtesy: TimesofIndia, Chicagotribune

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Dreamworks, Reliance ADAG in $1.5 billion marriage

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Posted by Liju Philip | Posted in bollywood, Business, cinema, dreamworks, films, hollywood, India, Investing, Movies, Music, World | Posted on 21-09-2008

It’s the biggest marriage of Bollywood and Hollywood in the history of cinema. Anil Ambani’s Reliance Big Entertainment and Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks SKG have inked a $1.5 billion deal to set up the new DreamWorks.

“The new age studio will be based in Los Angeles and produce six films per year for the next six years. The rights for all these films across platforms — theatres, DTH, television, DVDs — will remain with Reliance for the territory of India,” a top official in the Reliance ADA Group said.

“Serious negotiations began a few months ago but the deal was finally signed in Los Angeles on Friday. The deal is in part equity and part debt. The debt will be syndicated by JP Morgan Chase. But we can’t talk about the exact debt-equity ratio now,” he said.

According to the deal, DreamWorks will become a 50:50 joint venture of Spielberg, current DreamWorks chief executive Stacey Snider and Anil Ambani’s Reliance Big Entertainment. Snider has also worked as chairman of Universal Pictures.

David Geffen, one of the co-founders of DreamWorks and its current principal, will exit. Spielberg retains the rights to the name DreamWorks and is expected to affix it to the new entity, a news agency report said.

Spielberg is Hollywood’s most successful director of all times. Some of his well-known films are Raiders of the Lost Ark , ET and Jurassic Park . In May at the Cannes Film Festival, Reliance Big Entertainment had announced production deals with some of the biggest names in Hollywood such as Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Tom Hanks, Jim Carrey and Nicholas Cage.

Earlier this year, the company bought over 230 cinemas in USA and another 50 in Malaysia. Some theatres were also taken over in Mauritius and Nepal.

“The company is looking for other opportunities in the movie exhibition sector around the world,” the company official said. At present, Reliance Big Entertainment is producing about 70 films in nine languages across India.

“The deal gives DreamWorks co-founder Steven Spielberg and DreamWorks Chief Executive Stacey Snider the financial support they need to leave Viacom Inc.’s Paramount Pictures and start a new venture. Dreamworks was sold to Viacom in 2006,” the Wall Street Journal website reported on Friday.

“The marriage between some of Hollywood’s biggest names and an Indian conglomerate is less surprising than it seems. The new deal comes in the wake of a financial drought in Hollywood, with the industry looking to foreign investors to replace some of billions of dollars that Wall Street poured into film financing in recent years but has since evaporated with the crumbling credit markets,” the newspaper said.

Above news courtesy: TimesofIndia

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