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Dhurandhar advance booking: Ranveer Singh’s film ticket price rises to Rs 2400, here’s how it is impacting footfalls

Entertainment Home»News»Dhurandhar advance booking: Ranveer Singh’s film ticket price rises to Rs 2400, here’s how it is impacting footfalls» Although there is not much certainty if Dhurandhar can release on the scheduled date owing to a court order, the advance booking sales for Ranveer Singh’s film appear promising. Ranveer Singh in a still from Dhurandhar song Ishq Jalakar – Karvaan Ranveer Singh’s upcoming film Dhurandhar is among one of the most-spoken-about in recent times. The film, which promised to be huge for Ranveer, is awaited by few, if the advance booking numbers are anything to go by. Despite the rising ticket prices across India, Dhurandhar continues to see a fair growth in advance booking sales. The theatre in Delhi-NCR that has the highest price of Rs. 2400 currently is almost houseful. The buzz for the film, otherwise, is only fairly good, with most screens still waiting for footfalls. Entertainment Dhurandhar’s highest ticket pricing, among the few screens that are almost houseful Dhurandhar Dhurandhar’s craze is currently highest in Delhi-NCR, but even then, the theatres are mostly going empty. In fact, the only theatre which is selling tickets at Rs. 2400 is almost houseful. Nonetheless, it is important to note that the advance booking has just started and is expected to pick up pace by Wednesday-Thursday. Most bookings are expected to take place on Friday. The current trend sees only few almost houseful screens on first Friday and Saturday. Dhurandhar’s highest ticket price started at Rs 2000 undefined Surprisingly, till recently, the highest ticket price for Dhurandhar was Rs. 2000. The starting ticket price for the Aditya Dhar directorial now is Rs. 307. The movie is in buzz not only for Ranveer but also the glimpses of Arjun Rampal, Akshaye Khanna, R. Madhavan and of course, Sanjay Dutt. Dhurandhar advance bookings numbers till now Dhurandhar created history by selling over 20,000 tickets within 24 hours of its advance booking opening. Sacnilk reports that the film has already earned Rs. 1.28 crore in advance sales so far. The film currently seeks an opening Box Office collection of Rs. 20-25 crore net. PS: Dhurandhar’s December 5 release is currently uncertain. There is a court order issued against the film. The next hearing is expected to decide whether Dhurandhar can release in theatres on the scheduled date. FAQs: Q: When is the Dhurandhar OTT release date? A: The tentative OTT streaming release date for Dhurandhar on Netflix is January 30, 2026, as per the rule of an 8-week window after the theatrical run. Q: Which streaming platform will Dhurandhar stream on? A: Dhurandhar will stream exclusively on Netflix following its theatrical run, as the streaming giant has acquired the film’s digital rights. Q: Who is the director of Dhurandhar? A: The film Dhurandhar is written, directed, and co-produced by Aditya Dhar, who is known for his work on the film Uri: The Surgical Strike. Read More

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The Great Shamsuddin Family OTT release date: When and where to watch Kritika Kamra’s comedy drama

Entertainment Home»News»The Great Shamsuddin Family OTT release date: When and where to watch Kritika Kamra’s comedy drama» The Great Shamsuddin Family is an upcoming Hindi-language family comedy drama. Starring Kritika Kamra in the lead role, the film follows the journey of Bani as she deals with her personal choices and family responsibilities. Here’s when and where you can watch The Great Shamsuddin Family on OTT! Entertainment The Great Shamsuddin Family OTT release date Movie The Great Shamsuddin Family OTT platform JioHotstar (OTTplay Premium) OTT release date December 12, 2025 Cast Kritika Kamra, Purab Kohli, Farida Jalal, Shreya Dhanwanthary, Juhi Babbar, Sheeba Chaddha The Great Shamsuddin Family storyline The story of The Great Shamsuddin Family unfolds over the course of a single day in Delhi. Kritika Kamra plays Bani Ahmed, a writer who faces a crucial 12-hour career deadline. Her day becomes chaotic when numerous mothers, aunts, cousins, and ex-lovers arrive at her apartment, each with their own emergencies and turning her home into ground zero for a family crisis. It will provide a mix of humour and chaotic family emergencies, as Vani tries to manage her professional deadlines amidst an unpredictable domestic circus. The film is directed by Anusha Rizvi. Anusha Razvi on The Great Shamsuddin Family Talking about The Great Shamsuddin Family, filmmaker Anusha Razvi, said that at its core, the film isn’t just about interruptions; it’s about how family, even at its most exasperating, shapes us in ways we can’t escape.  “Through Bani’s day of glorious madness, I hope audiences recognize glimpses of their own mothers, aunts, siblings, and that one relative who always shows up at the wrong moment but with the right heart,” she said. Describing her character Bani as the important eldest daughter in a middle-class family who takes care of others before prioritising her own ambitions, Kritika Kamra said, “She’s quietly dependable, endlessly responsible, and always putting herself last, even when all she wants is a single day to focus on her own future.” Catch The Great Shamsuddin Family on JioHotstar (OTTplay Premium) on December 12, 2025! FAQs Q: Where to watch The Great Shamsuddin Family? A: The Great Shamsuddin Family, a Hindi-language comedy drama, will land on JioHotstar (OTTplay Premium) on December 12, 2025. Q: Who are the actors in The Great Shamsuddin Family? A: The Great Shamsuddin Family casts Kritika Kamra, Purab Kohli, Farida Jalal, Shreya Dhanwanthary, Juhi Babbar, Sheeba Chaddha, Dolly Ahluwalia, Natasha Rastogi and Nishank Verma. Read More

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Avatar Fire and Ash: Meet the enigmatic villain in James Cameron’s sci-fi film, Here’s where to watch Avatar films on OTT

Entertainment Home»News»Avatar Fire and Ash: From plot to enigmatic villain in James Cameron’s sci-fi film and where to watch previous films» Avatar: Fire and Ash is slated to hit the screens on December 19. Ahead of the big premiere, here’s more about the plot, the villain, and where to watch the previous chapters on OTT.. Avatar: Fire and Ash stills Avatar: Fire and Ash is among the highly awaited films of the year, as it brings another Avatar installment and an epic fight between the heroes and the villains as allies and rivalries threaten to create chaos. James Cameron is set to bring another Avatar entry in his sci-fi franchise with the third installment. Avatar: Fire and Ash is slated to hit the screens on December 19. Ahead of the big premiere, here’s more about the plot, the villain, and where to watch the previous chapters on OTT.. Entertainment Avatar: Fire and Ash villain James Cameron’s blockbuster sci-fi film series is gearing up for another chapter of the Navi tribe. Avatar 3 centers around Jake’s family as they battle to survive, pushing their limits for saving the future of Pandora. From ruthless encounters with the villains and their tribes to the conflicted interests that threaten to ruin everything, the new installment takes you on a wild ride that goes beyond moral dilemma and power battle. Avatar: Fire and Ash is expected to be another addition to the dark and explosive world of Pandora. The third installment brings a brutal villain with Varang, a ruthless leader of the Ash tribe. Varang is a complex villain that forms a central part in the narrative as she leads the Na’vi tribe with her morally grey character arc. Jake and Neytiri will face more threats and internal conflicts as the rift grows thicker between various clans. The upcoming film will explore the volcanic realms, which shifts its tone from the ocean environment to the new backdrop. Avatar films on OTT After the massive success of the 2009 film, Avatar, and its sequel, Avatar: The Way of Water (2022), the Titanic filmmaker is back with the third installment of the Avatar franchise. The plot of this sci-fi franchise revolves around family, survival, colonialism, and self-discovery. Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, Stephen Lang, Michelle Rodriguez, and others appear in the ensemble cast. You can watch both the previous installments on JioHotstar and OTTplay Premium. FAQs: Q. Who is the villain in Avatar: Fire and Ash? A. Varang, the leader of the Mangkwan clan, is the new antagonist.  Q. Will Avatar: Fire and Ash be in IMAX? A. The third film of Avatar franchise to open in theaters worldwide in IMAX 3D, Dolby Cinema 3D, RealD 3D, Cinemark XD, 4DX, ScreenX, and premium screens on December 19, 2025. Q. Is Avatar 4 happening? A. Yes, James Cameron is planning for the fourth installment of the Avatar franchise. Read More

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Dispatch Proves That Not All Heroes Wear Capes, Some Sit Behind A Desk 

Entertainment Multiple HR violations incoming in this superhero workplace game — try not to burn down the city as you manage your group of reformed villains Episodic narrative games are one of the most intriguing genres of gaming. They blur the lines between comics, TV series, and video games until you don’t know where one begins and the other ends. In most forms of media we consume, the reader (or watcher) is akin to a passenger in the back seat of a car speeding down the freeway, helpless to the decisions of the driver. In episodic narrative games, you are given full and free rein to take the wheel and decide where you want to go, with each decision spelling out strong consequences for the narrative. Telltale Games used to routinely put out hard-hitting, stylized stories with familiar faces in situations that are far removed from the norm (in Batman: The Enemy Within, you could actually recruit the Joker as a potential Robin).   But there’s been a dearth of the kind of episodic video games that were a staple of the 2010s, and now in 2025, Dispatch has answered that call. AdHoc Studio, an indie game company comprising veterans of the episodic narrative gaming industry from Telltale’s golden era, has dispatched its first game, fittingly titled Dispatch.   You don the suit of Robert Robertson III, who, aside from the name, has inherited the legacy of Mecha Man — an ordinary man who becomes a hero when powered by his suit. He’s got the combat skills of Batman combined with Iron Man’s suit and Spider-Man’s bank account. Cynical, broke, and jaded, Robert and his suit have been held together with a combination of grit and duct tape until his father’s killer, Shroud, destroys his suit (and him in the process). Now, down and out, he’s recruited by fellow superhero Blonde Blazer to join the Superhero Dispatch Network (SDN) as a dispatcher in return for them fixing his suit.  Still from the Dispatch game At the SDN, Robert is in charge of dispatching the Z-Team, part of the Phoenix Program dedicated to rehabilitating villains. Think of it like managing the Suicide Squad, but with a competent Amanda Waller. This is where the primary gameplay mechanics come into play.   L.A. has a lot of emergencies. From cats stuck in trees, to drug busts, to theft, to judging talent shows, not to mention the looming threat of the Red Ring led by Shroud. Robert needs to evaluate each situation and send the right hero for the job. Fail the dispatch, and the city suffers; your hero gets hurt, and the next time you dispatch that hero for a job, chances for success are minimal. But remember, these rehabilitated heroes are people too (people being used loosely, since Sonar happens to be a bat-human hybrid, Malevola is a demon, and Golem is a construct), with faults of their own. They have their strengths and weaknesses; they synergize with certain members of the team and sabotage the others. They’re villains on their first hero gig, who, like you, are new to this.   Sometimes, Robert can intervene in a larger capacity. Just because his suit is out of commission doesn’t mean he is. Certain jobs call for the skill set of a hacker, something Robert is proficient in. Some of these are timed sequences where you occasionally get anti-viruses trying to stop you from fixing the system. Robert generally has three chances to succeed before he fails, and certain sequences are really challenging. For those who want a smoother, stress-free playstyle, however, there is an option to turn on the unlimited hacking attempts mode from the main menu.  Stakes are also higher because the emergency calls don’t last too long. Wait around and these blips on the map disappear, leaving dissatisfied citizens and dangerous repercussions. But your heroes also need to get some R&R before they’re dispatched again if you want them to be at the top of their game. In other words, Robert needs to keep an eye on the clock, his team and the city while constantly putting out fires both in and out of the workplace.   Still from the Dispatch game Robert is a hero through and through; he fights like a hero, talks like a hero, and stands for what a hero believes in. The Z-Team, however, thinks otherwise — they don’t even know who Robert is. For them, he’s just the guy behind the desk who sends them into the line of fire, an ultimate outsider in a world where people have superpowers. Over the course of the game, Robert has the opportunity to forge bonds and really rehabilitate these reformed villains, giving them the confidence that everyone is capable of being good.    This is where the narrative gameplay shines. It’s the little things, from a simple bro-fist with your new colleague to exercising restraint when handling your team or deciding to go for the least favorite flavor of a doughnut, that influence the other characters’ perception of Robert. There are also the large story beats that affect the world around him — a decision you make way back in episode one may come back to haunt you all the way in the finale. Each door you open closes another, and at the end of each episode, you can see whether or not you’re in the majority. There’s no right answer; there are only different choices, but that’s what adds to the replay value of this game.   The beauty of Robert Robertson III is that, at his core, he is a good person, and nothing you do to him can change that.  You might choose how Robert acts, decide the kind of person he is, or the person he’s becoming, but you can’t really mold him into something he’s not. That doesn’t mean that you can’t influence the kind of people Robert comes into contact with —keep in mind, a kind word goes a long way.   Of course, this wouldn’t be a workplace comedy if there wasn’t some drama. You can’t keep everyone happy. Robert is on the verge of committing multiple HR violations, between romancing his superior (Blonde Blazer) or his ex-villain protégé (Invisigal), though keeping romance out of the equation entirely is also an alternative. Meanwhile, he has some tough decisions to make as he figures out who to cut and who to keep on the Z-Team. These decisions have the power to change the dynamics of the group entirely, and the missions suffer as a result of it. Do you want to give a chance to the anxious trainee who shows promise or a depressed Superman-esque hero who could use the encouragement? It’s an unenviable position to be in, and it doesn’t help that the cast of characters are endearing and well fleshed out. The stacked voice cast — featuring Aaron Paul (Breaking Bad), Jeffrey Wright (The Batman), Matthew Mercer (Critical Role), Laura Bailey (The Last of US II) Yung Gravy, Jacksepticeye, and MoistCr1TiKaL, among many others — do a fantastic job of bringing them to life.   Stills from the Dispatch game Dispatch’s writing also sucks you in from the get-go. It’s grounded, despite the superhero setting. There’s no fantastical otherworldly threat; it’s people, their decisions, and what pushes them to the brink. Robert has only ever known life as the Mecha Man and expects to die in the suit just as his grandfather and father did. But when the suit’s taken away, what’s left? It’s interesting to see someone who’s trying to rebuild himself mentor a group in the same situation. There’s a line in the game that sticks with you: “We

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The 20 Best Movies of 2025

Entertainment From an epic tale of political resistance to a personal take on a literary classic — the highlights of a very, very good year for movie lovers 2025 was a year that posed a lot of questions for movie lovers: Did the success of Sinners prove that there was still a mass audience hungry for original (read: non-IP) stories on a blockbuster level? Does Ryan Coogler’s historic deal to have the film rights revert back to him in 25 years change how Hollywood deals with creative talent? How would James Gunn’s reboot of Superman transform the fate and fortunes of the DC cinematic universe? What was the ideal format to see One Battle After Another? Which would be the bigger existential threat to the medium — the continuing atrophy of the traditional theatrical experience or the introduction of the first AI “star”? Would Hamnet make you cry two gallons of tears, or three? Was Brad Pitt really driving those Formula 1 cars in F1? What the hell, exactly, is a KPop Demon Hunter? It was also a truly great year for great movies, period. We had to kill a number of darlings to get the following best-of-2025 down to 20 films. And between the various film-festival premieres, brief Oscar-qualifying runs, streaming-only standouts, and a number of left-field surprises, we could have easily doubled this list. (Special shout-outs to: Blue Moon, F1, Is This Thing On?, One to One: John & Yoko, My Undesirable Friends, The President’s Cake, The Secret Agent, Sinners, Sirat, and The Voice of Hind Rajab.) A number of name-brand auteurs reminded us why they’ve earned the title. Several newcomers released the sort of knockout debut features that made the future of film seem brighter. We got not one but two backstories behind the making of not one but two very different masterpieces, set centuries apart. For every major disappointment, there were two or three big swings that connected in ways that inspired audiences, instigated conversations, and instilled hope in a way that the world outside of the theater did not. These 20 titles aren’t just the highlights of the last 12 months. They’re the ones we’ll likely be going back to year after year. From an epic tale of resistance to a personal reimagining of a gothic horror classic, welcome to the best movies of 2025. Photographs in Illustration: Neon; Warner Bros.; Agata Grzybowska/Focus Features; Netflix Entertainment 20. ‘Weapons’ Warner Bros. Pictures. By this point, you likely know the central secret behind writer-director Zach Cregger’s ambitious follow-up to his Airbnb horror flick Barbarian (2022), and understand why veteran actor Amy Madigan is now generating a lot of awards-season heat for her portrayal of a mysterious, unwelcome houseguest. Even after all of this psychological thriller’s cards have been turned over, however, Cregger’s tale of the unexplained disappearance of 17 children in the middle of the night still manages to cast a chill. Juggling several different narratives and re-viewing events from the perspectives of a teacher (Julia Garner), one of her young students (Cary Christopher, amazing), the father (Josh Brolin) of a missing kid, and several others, the movie has a penchant for toying with viewers in the same way a predatory cat toys with a wounded mouse. The go-for-broke climax is well-earned, yet it’s the deft way that Cregger weaves between storylines and sets everything up for the kill that sticks with you more than the payoff itself. It’s a horror movie that knows how to hit its targets. (Read the review here.) Entertainment 19. ‘Frankenstein’ Netflix Guillermo del Toro finally tackled the movie he was born to make, and his take on Mary Shelley’s misunderstood monster and the man who made him is exactly what you’d hope for: tony yet pulpy, tender yet perverse, faithful to the source material while paying homage to all sorts of other Gothic and genre-related influences. Above all, however, it’s a passionately personal story about being an outcast, and trying to break cycles of bad parenting — no, seriously — that does not skimp on bringing the sound and the fury. Oscar Isaac’s Victor Frankenstein is part 18th-century dandy and part swaggering Swinging Sixties rock star, as if Lord Byron had been genetically spliced with Brian Jones. And for those who only know Jacob Elordi from Euphoria, his sympathetic interpretation of the creature as both an innocent and an angel of vengeance is eye-opening. (Read the review here.) Entertainment 18. ‘Caught by the Tides’ Janus Films Sifting through old footage during the pandemic, Chinese filmmaker Jia Zhangke (Unknown Pleasures, Still Life) came up with the idea of using outtakes and scenes from his previous films — all of which featured his longtime actors Tao Zhao and Zhubin Li — to craft something new. For a while, you ride shotgun through a stream-of-consciousness tour through the nation’s cities and rural provinces, complete with corporate-sponsored pageantry and personal strife. It’s only when you get to the final third of the movie that Jia drops the hammer, and you suddenly realize that what felt like a free-form slideshow of China’s prosperity in the early 21st century has been carefully crafted to break your heart. (Read the review here.) Entertainment 17. ‘The Phoenician Scheme’ TPS Productions/Focus Features Wes Anderson scores big with this combo of corporate-espionage thriller, slapstick comedy, and father-daughter family drama, centered around Anatole “Zsa Zsa” Korda (Benicio Del Toro), international business magnate of mystery. He’s trying to make sure his dream project involving a multinational transport system becomes a reality before he’s assassinated by rivals; if he can also mend fences with his estranged daughter (Mia Threapleton), who wants nothing to do with her dad and yearns to become a nun, that’s simply a bonus. It’s got all the hallmarks of an Anderson project, from an all-star ensemble cast to the meticulously composed imagery that’s made him a film-nerd idol. But this new film gels in a genuinely satisfying way that several of his recent works haven’t. And it gifts us with a real discovery in Threapleton, whose deadpan reactions, comic timing, and chemistry with Del Toro make this finely crafted film

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David Byrne and His Blue-Clad Band Tear Through Talking Heads Classics During ‘Tiny Desk’ Concert

Entertainment The musician also performed two tracks from his latest solo album, Who Is the Sky? David Byrne and his band perform at NPR ‘Tiny Desk’ NPR/YouTube David Byrne and his gigantic band of blue-clad backing musicians squeezed into the NPR offices for a Tiny Desk Concert, featuring a pair of Talking Heads classics.  While the setup didn’t necessarily allow for the elaborate choreography Byrne and Co. bring to their live performances, there was still plenty of energy throughout the four-song set. Byrne opened with two tracks from his most recent album, Who Is the Sky?, starting with “Everybody Laughs,” which was followed by “Don’t Be Like That.”  Next, Byrne and his band delivered a boisterous rendition of  “(Nothing But) Flowers,” bringing the song to a close with a chill-inducing blast of a cappella harmonies. And to wrap up their set, Byrne led the group through the Fear of Music favorite, “Life During Wartime.”  Byrne released Who Is the Sky? back in September, with the album marking his first solo release since 2018’s American Utopia. He’s already spent much of the fall on the road in support of the album, and has a few more gigs left before the run wraps Dec. 6 in Miami. (Dates in Australia, New Zealand, the U.K., and Europe will follow in 2026.) In a recent interview with Rolling Stone, Byrne once again dampened hopes for a possible Talking Heads reunion, even after he and his old bandmates — Tina Weymouth, Chris Frantz, and Jerry Harrison — reunited for several events promoting the Stop Making Sense re-release. Still, Byrne spoke about readily incorporating fresh versions of Talking Heads classics into his sets — including “Psycho Killer,” which he hadn’t played in 19 years — without falling into the nostalgia trap. “I can mix and match and have it adapt to the sound that I’m doing at the moment without completely destroying the integrity of the older songs,” he said. “But I’m also aware that there’s a real trap. If you do too much of the older material, you become a legacy act that comes out and plays the old hits. You cash in really quick, but then you’ve dug yourself a hole.”  From Rolling Stone US. Read More

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Kelly Clarkson’s ‘Since U Been Gone’ Hits One Billion Streams on Spotify

Entertainment The single from the singer’s 2004 album Breakaway marks her first to reach the milestone Kelly Clarkson at her new Las Vegas residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace on July 11, 2025. Denise Truscello/Getty Images Kelly Clarkson is the latest member of Spotify‘s Billions Club. “Since U Been Gone,” a single from her 2004 album Breakaway, has become her first release to reach one billion streams on the digital streaming platform. Earlier this year, Rolling Stone named “Since U Been Gone” the 31st greatest song of the 21st century, describing the record as “a song that quickly became both an enormous hit and (perhaps because of the sound it was aping) a universal critics’ darling. From the very first line, Clarkson makes the song her own; she later recounted having to argue with her collaborators about her desire to jump an octave for the chorus. But even if the song represented, for Clarkson, a fraught experience with A-list songwriters, it remains a masterful slice of early-aughts indie-pop cross contamination.” Clarkson crafted “Since U Been Gone” with songwriters Max Martin and Dr. Luke, who were inspired by early-aughts alt-rock like Yeah Yeah Yeahs. “It was a lot of trust in the label because I didn’t know Dr. Luke or Max. And it worked out,” she told Rolling Stone in 2015. “We ended up getting together in Sweden and they got to know me as an artist and we amped up the track and made it a little more rockin’. But they didn’t know I was going to go an octave above on the chorus.” In an interview with Di Weekend published in 2016, Martin credited the record with helping him find his way back after pop underwent a complete overhaul in the wake of his lucrative boy band boom. ”I’ve learned that things change. The whole boy band thing almost turned into a stock market crash. Then, there was a period when we thought that Pharrell (Williams) and the others came and ruined it all for us with their super cool beats,” Martin said at the time. “My first thought was: people are idiots for not understanding how great our stuff really is. Then, in the end, I realized: the world has moved on, we’re the ones who’re stuck in one place. So I started listening to other kinds of music. I spent a lot of time in New York and worked with artists who never really got anywhere. Then things took a new turn with ‘Since U Been Gone.’” Clarkson’s memory of the record is more complicated. “Behind the scenes, it was not so fun to record because of situations I won’t talk about, because I won’t sell people out,” she told Apple Music in 2020. But I will say, my favorite memory, if I’m being more positive about it, was the fact that I got to show up to a video shoot and completely trash an apartment, and that was my job. That video was possibly one of my favorite videos ever to make, because literally I just got to just have rage, and just break stuff all day long.” Clarkson earned her first Grammy Awards win when “Since U Been Gone” took home Best Female Pop Vocal Performance in 2006. She won Best Pop Vocal Album for Breakaway that same year. The singer’s Spotify stats show three more releases nearing the one-billion mark, with “Underneath the Tree,” “Because of You,” and “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)” each sitting at more than 805 million streams. From Rolling Stone US. Read More

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‘Marty Supreme’ Is Proof Timothée Chalamet Could Be One of the Greats

Entertainment Josh Safdie gifts the star with a gritty, giddy sports movie that pays tribute to the do-or-die grindset — and brings out the best in both of them Timothée Chalamet in ‘Marty Supreme.’ A24 Marty Mauser can’t be stopped. He won’t be stopped. The young man with the Coke-bottle glasses and pockmarked face and ferret-like frame may be one of eight million stories in the naked city known as Manhattan circa 1952. But Mauser refuses to be just another schlemiel working at a shoestore. Luckily, he’s got a plan. It involves being the single greatest table tennis player the world has ever seen. The kid has the willingness to beg, borrow, or steal (mostly the latter) in order to get to London for the sport’s world championship; the confidence to bum-rush his way into the tournament once he’s there; and the talent to go the distance. Mauser has got a genuine shot at the title. He is his No. 1 biggest fan. If only this perpetual fuck-up wasn’t also his own worst enemy. Imagine Rocky if you substituted ping-pong for prizefighting, Alexander Portnoy for the Italian Stallion, and an egotistical prick for a lovable underdog. You’d have something close to Marty Supreme, Josh Safdie‘s manic character study that doubles as a cracked American success story. Mauser may be loosely — and we do mean loosely — based on five-time world champ Marty Reisman, but he has a lot more in common with the filmmaker’s usual gallery of hustlers, rogues, crooks, and schnooks. Whether solo (see: his 2008 debut The Pleasure of Being Robbed) or in tandem with his brother Benny (Daddy Long Legs, Good Time, Uncut Gems), Safdie specializes in giving sad sacks a sympathetic spotlight while keeping things raw, rough, and paced like a Rube Goldberg machine of chaos. The character he’s dreamed up with co-writer, co-editor, and longtime collaborator Ronald Bronstein may be his most accessible, charismatic loser to date. Mauser recognizes he’s extraordinary; he’s just waiting for everybody else to catch up. It helps, of course, that Safdie has lots of supreme talent in his corner: cinematographer Darius Khondji (Seven), production designer Jack Fisk (Days of Heaven, There Will Be Blood), costume designer Miyako Bellizzi, composer Daniel “Oneohtrix Point Never” Lopatin. They’re below-the-line legends, the lot of them. The soundtrack is a playlist comprising period-appropriate tunes and Eighties New Wave and post-punk. (Les Paul and Mary Ford, meet Tears for Fears!) Per usual, the writer-director mixes in non-professionals who look like they’ve stepped straight out of a Weegee portfolio with a supporting cast you’d swear was assembled via Mad Libs. Seriously, name another ensemble that boasts Fran Drescher, Tyler, the Creator, Penn Jillette, cult filmmaker Abel Ferrara, NBA hall of famer George Gervin, and Shark Tank‘s Kevin O’Leary? There’s one person who’s truly channeling Safdie’s grindset obsessions, however, and arguably stands head and slim shoulders above the rest. Timothée Chalamet has played troubadours and sociopaths, chocolatiers and cannibals, messiah figures and broken-hearted boy-wonders. You wouldn’t think a motormouth jerk who’s really the Michael Jordan of ping-pong would be a bespoke role for the star, yet the role fits him like a customized backless jumpsuit. It’s not hard to believe his Mauser could make a fellow shoe salesman liberate the store safe easier with his patter than the pistol in his hand; Marty’s gift of gab is even more aggressive than his serve. The guy’s an aspiring pro athlete but a professional grifter, putting the confidence back into “con artist.” Gwyneth Paltrow in Marty Supreme.A24 Of course this nebbish with the rat mustache will talk his way into both the Ritz and the pants of a faded movie star (Gwyneth Paltrow, reminding you how good she was before Goop became her full-time gig), the ultimate seduction by chutzpah. Of course he’ll win over journalists with proto-edgelord pull quotes — “I’m gonna do to Klutsky what Auschwitz couldn’t!” he exclaims, regarding a Hungarian rival; it’s OK though, Mauser says, because he’s also Jewish and “Hitler’s worst nightmare” — and piss off the powers that be. Of course he’ll refuse to kowtow to a fountain-pen magnate (O’Leary), a.k.a. the actress’ husband, then humiliate himself before the tycoon in order to accomplish his goals. Of course he’ll get his married neighbor (I Love LA‘s Odessa A’zion) knocked up, then co-opt her into his schemes. Of course he’ll bilk Long Island rubes out of their dough with a fellow table tennis ace (Tyler) and turn a hotel disaster involving a gangster (Ferrara) and an M.I.A. dog into an extortion plan. You know the fable about the scorpion and the frog? Marty’s the one with the stinger. Everybody else is simply waiting to get stung. Chalamet doesn’t just lean in to Marty’s less-than-stellar qualities; he turns them into pluses, pitching them as part of the DNA that will allow Mauser to eventually stage something akin to a comeback. You can feel some of the Complete Unknown star’s own reputational baggage being used to good advantage here — not just the inherent confidence that occasionally speed-reads as arrogance, but the striving, the constant need to prove himself, the sort of let-it-blurt attitude that finds the artist formerly known as Lil’ Timmy Tim pining in public to be one of the greats. The irony is that this role bursting with equally naked yearning gets him that much closer to actually demonstrating why he might make that wish come true. It’s the sort of performance that feels like early Pacino or Dustin Hoffman, all twitches and vibrations and seeming like he’s in a constant state of motion even when standing still. And it fuses so well with what we, the viewer, think we know about Chalamet that it begins to blur the boundary in the best possible way. In other words, Marty Supreme is a testament to the Men Who Would Be King, both the fictional and nonfictional ones. The real regent here, however, is the one actually calling the shots. Josh Safdie would likely cop to identifying with Mauser not wisely but too well; game usually does tend to recognize game. To say

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EXCLUSIVE: Shabana Azmi joins the cast of Awarapan 2; to be seen in a pivotal role in the Emraan Hashmi-starrer

Entertainment Awarapan 2 is surely one of the highly awaited films of 2026, thanks to the craze and popularity of the first part. Moreover, lead actor Emraan Hashmi’s star power got a boost recently with a cameo in The Ba***ds Of Bollywood. And now, the excitement for Awarapan 2 has gone many notches higher as Bollywood Hungama has learned that none other than Shabana Azmi has joined the star cast. EXCLUSIVE: Shabana Azmi joins the cast of Awarapan 2; to be seen in a pivotal role in the Emraan Hashmi-starrer A source told Bollywood Hungama, “Shabana Azmi has come on board for Awarapan 2. The role is apt for her and she was more than happy to bag the coveted part. It’s an interesting and powerful creative decision by producer Vishesh Bhatt that significantly intensifies the film’s emotional core and conflict. Interestingly, this marks Shabana Azmi’s first-ever collaboration with Vishesh Films.” The source also said, “Also, Awarapan 2 marks her first on-screen pairing with Emraan Hashmi, creating a new and formidable dramatic tension audiences have never seen before. Moreover, the casting is in sync with the trademark Bhatt storytelling ethos — anchored in strong performances, morally complex characters, and emotionally charged drama.” However, not much is known about Shabana Azmi’s character at this point. The source said, “All the details remain tightly under wraps. The makers are expected to officially reveal it in a few weeks. Nevertheless, with Shabana ji’s entry, Awarapan 2 now boasts of a unique star combination — Emraan Hashmi, Shabana Azmi and Disha Patani — with more cast additions also expected to surprise audiences.” Awarapan 2 is directed by Nitin Kakkar of Filmistaan (2014) fame. The film had a long schedule in Bangkok, Thailand and as per reports, the makers plan to wrap up the shoot by January 2026. The film is on track for its release on April 3, 2026. With Shabana Azmi coming on board, Awarapan 2 is no longer just a much-awaited sequel; it is now positioned as a prestige thriller that blends scale with soul and solid performances. Also Read: Emraan Hashmi and Disha Patani to wrap action and song scenes in 40-day Bangkok schedule for Awarapan 2: Report More Pages: Awarapan 2 Box Office Collection Tags : Awarapan 2, Bollywood, Bollywood News, Disha Patani, Emraan Hashmi, Exclusive, Netflix, Netflix India, News, OTT, OTT Platform, Shabana Azmi, The Ba***ds of Bollywood, Web, Web Series BOLLYWOOD NEWS – LIVE UPDATES Catch us for latest Bollywood News, New Bollywood Movies update, Box office collection, New Movies Release , Bollywood News Hindi, Entertainment News, Bollywood Live News Today & Upcoming Movies 2025 and stay updated with latest hindi movies only on Bollywood Hungama. Read More

EXCLUSIVE: Shabana Azmi joins the cast of Awarapan 2; to be seen in a pivotal role in the Emraan Hashmi-starrer Read More »

EXCLUSIVE: Siddhant Chaturvedi on leading the biopic of legendary filmmaker V Shantaram, “It’s a great responsibility and an honour”

Entertainment Indian cinema witnesses a defining announcement today as Siddhant Chaturvedi reveals the first look poster of his most challenging and ambitious role yet — legendary filmmaker V. Shantaram — in the upcoming biographical drama titled V. Shantaram. Bollywood Hungama was the first one to share the news last month about Siddhant playing the character of the legendary filmmaker in the film. EXCLUSIVE: Siddhant Chaturvedi on leading the biopic of legendary filmmaker V Shantaram, “It’s a great responsibility and an honour” The newly released poster presents Siddhant in a striking, era-specific look that mirrors the intensity, vision and creative rebellion associated with V. Shantaram. From the posture to the gaze to the fierce creative energy, Siddhant has absorbed Shantaram’s aura so completely that the line between actor and icon feels almost blurred. The transformation marks a major milestone in Siddhant’s career as he steps into the life of a filmmaker, who shaped the language of Indian cinema across decades. Speaking about taking on the role, Siddhant Chaturvedi said in an exclusive quote: “It’s a great responsibility and an honour to be stepping into the shoes of an iconic filmmaker who revolutionised Indian cinema for generations to come.” V. Shantaram traces the extraordinary journey of the auteur — from the silent-film era to the evolution of sound and colour — highlighting his pioneering storytelling, fearless innovation and enduring cultural impact. The film is written and directed by Abhijeet Shirish Deshpande, and presented by Rajkamal Enterttainment, Camera Take Films and Roaring Rivers Productions. It is produced by Rahul Kiran Shantaram, Subhash Kale and Sarita Ashwin Varde. With this announcement and poster reveal, Siddhant Chaturvedi signals a powerful turn in his trajectory as he brings to life one of Indian cinema’s most influential visionaries. Also Read: EXCLUSIVE: Tamannaah Bhatia signs Siddhant Chaturvedi-starrer Chitrapati V Shantaram Tags : Abhijeet Shirish Deshpande, Biopic, Bollywood, Bollywood News, Filmmaker, First Look, Legend, News, Poster, Reveal, Siddhant Chaturvedi, V Shantaram BOLLYWOOD NEWS – LIVE UPDATES Catch us for latest Bollywood News, New Bollywood Movies update, Box office collection, New Movies Release , Bollywood News Hindi, Entertainment News, Bollywood Live News Today & Upcoming Movies 2025 and stay updated with latest hindi movies only on Bollywood Hungama. Read More

EXCLUSIVE: Siddhant Chaturvedi on leading the biopic of legendary filmmaker V Shantaram, “It’s a great responsibility and an honour” Read More »

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