Sunday, April 30, 2017

Eminem takes New Zealand political party to court

WELLINGTON: Rapper Eminem launched court action against New Zealand´s ruling political party on Monday, accusing it of using an unlicensed version of his hit "Lose Yourself" in a campaign advert.

Lawyers for the US artist told the High Court in Wellington that he never gave the National Party permission to use the song, which featured in the 2002 movie "8 Mile".

Barrister Garry Williams said National breached the copyright of Eight Mile Style, Eminem´s publisher, by using the tune in a 2014 election television commercial.

Williams said the Detroit rapper´s hit was "iconic", having won an Academy Award, two Grammys and critical acclaim.

He said that meant rights to the work were "enormously valuable" and were strictly controlled by the publisher, which had rarely licensed them for advertising purposes.

Williams said the song, which topped the charts in 24 countries, dealt with "the idea of losing yourself in the moment and not missing opportunities in life".

"That´s why the song appeals to both the public and those who wish to influence the public by using it in advertising," he said.

No details were immediately revealed of what damages Eminem was seeking.

National´s lawyers are set to argue the tune they used, "Eminem-esque", was a generic track that was part of a library bought from production music supplier Beatbox.

They are expected to contend that any copyright infringement was accidental.

The conservative party´s campaign director Steven Joyce dismissed Eminem´s claim when the row erupted in 2014.

"We think it´s pretty legal, I think these guys are just having a crack," he told reporters at the time.

The judge-only hearing is scheduled to take six days.

Metallica replaces cover band's stolen gear

A Metallica cover band distraught after its equipment was stolen has been able to return to stage after a gift from surprise benefactors -- the metal legends themselves.

Blistered Earth, a four-piece band from Spokane, Washington that covers Metallica classics and emulates the group's headbanging look, said a trailer with all its gear was snatched after a show last week in Portland, Oregon.

After two days, the band -- which lost three guitars, two bass guitars and a drum-kit plus an array of amplifiers and pedals -- said everything had been replaced.
"Sometimes when bad things happen it really brings out the best in people," Blistered Earth wrote on Facebook.

James Hetfield "and the rest of the guys in Metallica (thanx guys) have seen fit to replace our equipment. Thank you guys!!"

There was no immediate word from Metallica. The band on May 10 begins in Baltimore an extensive tour of North America and Europe after completing a leg in Latin America.

'Furious 8' charges ahead to outpace 3 new releases

Universal's "The Fate of the Furious" continued to dominate the North American box office over the weekend, easily fending off three newcomers at home while also passing the $1 billion mark worldwide, industry data showed Sunday.

The eighth installment in the high-octane series starring Vin Diesel and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson took in an estimated $19.4 million for the three-day weekend, website Exhibitor Relations reported. The film has grossed $192.7 million domestically in its three weeks out.

"Fate," directed by F. Gary Gray, has stayed strong after a huge global opening. In the movie, termed a "dazzling action spectacle" by Variety, Diesel's character is coerced by the cyberterrorist played by Charlize Theron to turn against his own team.

The next three films topping the North American box-office list are all new releases.

Pantelion's "How to be a Latin Lover," a comedy starring Salma Hayek, Rob Lowe, Kristen Bell and Mexican actor Eugenio Derbez, took in an estimated $12.0 million for the weekend despite showing on relatively few screens.

"Baahubali: The Conclusion" is a sequel to a 2015 film also starring Prabhas, Rana Daggubati, Anushka Shetty and Tamannaah Bhatia. An epic fantasy of murder, love and royal intrigue, the film was produced by Arka Mediaworks. Only the third Indian film to be released in Imax format, it took in $10.1 million, also on a relatively small number of North American screens.

STX Entertainment's "The Circle," starring Tom Hanks and Emma Watson (who also stars in "Beauty and the Beast," still in wide release), takes on the issues of privacy, paranoia and Silicon Valley ethics in a near-future world. The film, based on a book of the same name by Dave Eggers -- who co-wrote the screenplay -- earned $9.3 million for the weekend.

In fifth place, still performing strongly in its fifth week, is DreamWorks animation "The Boss Baby," which took in $9.1 million. The tale of rivalry between infants and puppies features Alec Baldwin as the voice of the tie-wearing baby-in-chief.

The industry is now awaiting the domestic release next weekend of "Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2," which took in an estimated $101.2 million internationally this weekend and is expected to outperform the original "Guardians" blockbuster, website BoxOfficeMojo.com reported.

Rounding out the current top 10 were:

"Beauty and the Beast" ($6.4 million)

"Going in Style" ($3.6 million)

"Smurfs: The Lost Village" ($3.3 million)

"Gifted" ($3.3 million)

"Unforgettable" ($2.3 million)

George Michael fans host public memorial service

George Michael fans on Sunday paid their last respects to the late British pop star at a public memorial service they organised themselves.

Hundreds of fans from around the world attended the service at a church in Bushey, on the northwest edge of London, where Michael went to secondary school and met his Wham! bandmate Andrew Ridgeley.

The service featured some of his best-known hits including "Jesus to a Child" and "Wake Me Up Before You Go Go".
It was followed by a wake at The Three Crowns pub, where Wham! were formed.

The singer was found dead at his home on December 25. He was 53.

His funeral took place in private on March 29 at Highgate Cemetery in north London and was not announced to fans until it was over.

George Michael Appreciation Group founder Tracey Wills organised Sunday's public event.

"I have always been a fan and I decided that I was going to do something for him because he has done so much for everyone else," she said.

"George left such a mark on a lot people and I felt like we needed to do something for him. The fans needed somewhere to grieve.

"I put this together for George, for the fans. I wish his family were here to be able to see this."

Michael's cause of death was dilated cardiomyopathy with myocarditis and fatty liver, according to senior coroner for Oxfordshire Darren Salter.

Dilated cardiomyopathy, which can be caused by substance abuse, affects the heart's ability to pump blood due to the muscle becoming enlarged and weakened. Myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart wall.

Born Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou to a Greek Cypriot father and English mother in north London in 1963, Michael shot to fame with Wham! and sold more than 100 million records.

Springsteen recounts struggle to live outside bliss of rock songs

NEW YORK: Bruce Springsteen recently talked about his struggle to live in the real world rather than inside the lyrical songs he has composed over his 40-year career.

The Born to Run musician, who revealed in a 2016 memoir that he had struggled with depression, called rock songs "three minutes of bliss and life compressed".

He told a Tribeca Film Festival audience during a conversation about his career that he had sometimes seen his music "as a life preserver and as a safe space – you think you can live there".

But Springsteen, 67, said that no artist could live only within his art.

"At the end of the day it's just your job and just your work and life awaits you outside of those things. ... So that took me a long time to learn that lesson – thanks Patti – and it was a tremendous struggle for me," he added, referring to his wife of 25 years, Patti Scialfa.

Springsteen spoke of his early days in music in New Jersey, buying his first guitar at age 15, and being a "stone-cold draft dodger" during the Vietnam War – a period that informed much of his writing, including one of his best known but most misunderstood songs, Born in the U.S.A.

Springsteen said he had come to terms with people misinterpreting the 1984 song as patriotic. It was played, without his permission, during Donald Trump's rallies during the 2016 US presidential election.

In rock songs, he said, "People hear the music, the beat, then they hear the chorus, and if they have the time or the inclination, maybe they get into some of the verses."

"That's the way the political rock and roll ball bounces. It's one of those things," Springsteen said.

Katrina Kaif shares hilarious morning selfie on her Instagram account

Bollywood actress Katrina Kaif took the Instagram by storm the moment she debuted on the app.

Without any surprise, the Jagga jasoos actress crossed one million followers on the app within 24 hours.

The beautiful actress has shared three pictures until now which are hard to ignore.

Recently, she shared a very beautiful picture of herself where she looked like an adorable sleeping beauty.

The actress captioned the picture by saying, "This is me in the morning .... #iwokeuplikethis .... (or maybe ...)

 

This is me in the morning .... #iwokeuplikethis .... (or maybe ...)

A post shared by Katrina Kaif (@katrinakaif) on

But, there is a twist.

When you swipe the picture, you will see the hilarious and never-seen-before look of Katrina.

In the picture, Kaif is seen looking shocked into the camera with messy hair.

She posted the picture with a caption that said, "Just kidding... This is more like it #thankgodforfilters"

Hilarious! Isn't it?

Saturday, April 29, 2017

WATCH: Shahid Kapoor dances with daughter Misha in adorable video

Bollywood actor Shahid Kapoor is one of the best dancers in Bollywood who never leaves a chance to entertain his fans.

Shahid Kapoor has been sharing pictures of his daughters on his Instagram which has always left the internet fall in love with her.

Recently, Shahid Kapoor shared a video on his Instagram where he can be seen dancing with his daughter Misha.

The video looks adorable in which Shahid is dancing to the tunes of Michael Jackson, and little Misha is matching him step by step.

Shahid Kapoor and Delhi girl Mira Rajput got married in March 2015 and Misha was born in August 2016.

Check the cute video below!

 

#worlddanceday #havefeetwilldance #mj dance is in your blood.

A post shared by Shahid Kapoor (@shahidkapoor) on

Cast of 'The Godfather' reunite for emotional 45th anniversary

NEW YORK: Al Pacino was considered too short, Marlon Brando was required to do a screen test, and director Francis Ford Coppola was almost fired.

The director and cast of The Godfather reminisced on Saturday in a 445th-anniversaryreunion in New York about the trials, perseverance, and inspiration that resulted in the Oscar-winning Mafia movies.

Coppola, Pacino, Robert De Niro, Diane Keaton, James Caan, Talia Shire, and Robert Duvall watched back-to-back screenings of The Godfather (1972) and The Godfather: Part II (1974) along with an audience of 6,000 on the closing night of the Tribeca film festival.

"I haven't seen these movies for years," Coppola said. "I found (watching) a very emotional experience. I forgot a lot about the making of it and thought about the story, and the story used a lot of family and my personal stuff."

The two films won nine Oscars and their tale of how an orphan from Sicily emigrated to the United States at the turn of the 20th century and formed the Corleone crime family became movie classics. But the film had a less than auspicious start. Coppola recalled that Hollywood studio Paramount wanted to set the movie in the 1970s and make something "cheap and quick".

Coppola was almost fired several times and met stiff resistance to the casting of both Pacino as Michael Corleone and Brando as the titular Godfather.

Brando, who died in 2004, had made several box-office flops after a stellar career in the 1950s and had a reputation for being difficult.

"I was told (by studio executives ) that having Brando in the film would make it less commercial than having a total unknown," Coppola said.

The studio later agreed "if Marlon will do a screen test and do it for nothing and put up a million dollar bond that he wouldn't cause trouble during the production".

Brando created the rasping voice, jowly cheeks, and oiled hair for Corleone in the screen test. Yet three weeks into shooting, there was more trouble.

"They (the studio) hated Brando. They thought he mumbled and they hated the film...It was very dark," said Coppola. Brando went on to win an Oscar for his performance.

Newcomer Pacino had to screen test "countless times" for the role of Michael, the college-educated son who takes charge of the Corleone business of casinos, gambling, and racketeering. Studio bosses though he was too short and wanted to cast Robert Redford or Ryan O'Neal.

Yet Coppola persevered because "every time I read the script, I always saw his (Pacino's) face, especially in the scenes in Sicily".

Pacino said he originally wanted the part of the hot-headed son, Sonny, and thought Coppola "was really nuts" about wanting him to play Michael.

"I thought this is either a dream or a joke...and then started the whole trial of them not wanting me and Francis wanting me," Pacino recalled. The film launched his career as one of the most honoured actors of his generation.

Luck played a part in the creation of some of the most memorable scenes in the two films. The revelation by Corleone's wife Kay (Keaton) that she had aborted their baby because of horror over her husband's criminal activities was suggested by Talia Shire (Connie).

And the cat Brando cradles in the opening scene of The Godfather, making for a stark contrast with his intimidating presence, was a last-minute addition.

"I put that cat in his hands. It was the studio cat. It was one take," said Coppola.

Shah Rukh Khan’ impresses all with ‘Lungi Dance’ during TED Talk

Bollywood's King Khan left no stone unturned to impress the audience during his first ever Ted Talk in Vancouver, Canada.

He is reportedly the first Bollywood actor to have given a TED Talk.

The actor also did his famous 'Lungi Dance' from Chennai Express to entertain the audiences.

 

 

The superstar started the talk with an "Indian style Namaste".

 

Earlier, the superstar had entertained the audiences with a performance with actually lungis.

 

His fans also showered him with love by sharing his best quotes.

Katrina, Ranbir click first selfie post-breakup

Bollywood diva Katrina Kaif and heartthrob Ranbir Kapoor are probably the most talked about couples in the Indian film industry.

While the two have reportedly moved on but rumours suggested the pair pushed a show's producer to extra lengths just so they could avoid one another.

Contrary to the rumours, actress Sayani Gupta, who has starred in movies such as Fan and Jolly LLB 2, shared a selfie with the two actors on Instagram from the sets of their upcoming movie, Jagga Jasoos.

Sayani wrote, "To mark the debut of the goddess on Instagram.. here's a blurry memory (thanks to Ranbir) post wrap! @katrinakaif Welcome aboard! @jaggajasoosdisney."

 

In the picture, both Katrina and Ranbir are a treat and look comfortable with one another.

Katrina has recently made a debut on Instagram and received a warm welcome by her friends and close associates such as Salman Khan.

Oxford University names rehearsal room after Rahat Fateh Ali Khan

Britain's Oxford University has announced to name one of its rehearsal rooms to honour Pakistani musician Ustad Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, making him the first South Asian artist to receive such a tribute.

In this regard, Oxford University's Faculty of Music has arranged a concert on May 25, wherein the famed singer will bring to stage the magic of the 600-year-old qawwali tradition. The event is geared to raise funds for the aforementioned department's work and will be held in the institute's Sheldonian Theatre, according to the university's website.

The Fusion Project – comprising Oxford University's students – will join Rahat Fateh Ali Khan in the concert to perform original compositions created by its lead singer Rushil Ranjan.

Qawwali, a major part of the subcontinent's music scene, is known as the rhythm of Muslim Sufi saints. Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, having being mentored by the 'King of Qawwali' Ustad Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, has made it one of his life goals to spread the genre and Pakistan's name throughout the world.

Moreover, Rahat Fateh Ali disclosed that he will be gifting his late uncle and legendary musician Ustad Nusrat Fateh Ali's harmonium to the university. It is hoped that the importance of the tradition of qawwali will garner much more prominence once the room is officially named after Rahat Fateh Ali Khan.

On the development, Music Faculty Board chairman Professor Michael Burden said, "The music of Rahat Fateh Ali Khan is a force on the international scene, and we are extremely grateful to the student group – The Fusion Project – for involving us in the event."

Rahat Fateh Ali has time and again sold out entire shows in his tours in US, Europe, and the Middle East.

Friday, April 28, 2017

Dark political vision comes true in new Gorillaz album

Creating the latest album of his virtual band Gorillaz, Damon Albarn had what he considered a dark, sci-fi vision -- Donald Trump as president of the United States. Then it came true.

"I wanted to make a kind of science fiction record. But more a social fiction, sort of anticipation," said the Britpop icon best known as the frontman of Blur.

"There were several options and I chose the worst case scenario," he told AFP over a meal on a visit to Paris. "I wanted to make a social fiction record, but reality hit."

Gorillaz has been an outlet for Albarn's more experimental side, breaking free from guitar pop to explore trippy, futuristic sounds. Created in 2001, Gorillaz is a virtual band with four fictional members -- 2D, Murdoc, Russel and Noodle.

The real-life, but behind-the-scenes, members are Albarn and the comic book artist Jamie Hewlett, who has matched the music with an elaborate visual representation that includes cartoon videos.

Preparing "Humanz," the group's fifth album which came out on Friday, Albarn started in 2015 by imagining the United States ruled by Trump, then considered a reality television celebrity with little chance of landing the world's most powerful job.

"I did not believe Trump would be president, but I wanted to imagine what would happen," Albarn said.

Joyful and painful

Albarn reached out for American voices to create the album, including Mavis Staples, the classic R&B singer and civil rights activist, as well as hip-hop pioneers De La Soul, the rapper Pusha T and the innovative R&B artist Kelela.

With an underlying chaos that evokes the film scores of Ennio Morricone, of whom Albarn is an admirer, "Humanz" also has songs co-written by artists ranging from electronic legend Jean-Michel Jarre to fellow Britpop star Noel Gallagher.

"I kinda wanted it to be something urgent, and joyful and painful at the same time," Albarn said of the album, which transformed into an exploration of the reaction to Trump's shock victory.

"Hallelujah Money," a trip-hop-infused single with the powerful voice of Mercury Prize-winning singer Benjamin Clementine, attacks the power of money without naming the president directly, although the video showed an elevator in a representation of his Trump Tower home.

The song gives way to an antidote in the album's final track, "We Got the Power," a call to love and unity.

"It's a simple answer, I know, but it is probably the truth, especially now," Albarn said of the closing song.

"You know I can't resent the people who made this choice," he said, referring both to supporters of Trump and, in his own country, the narrow majority that voted to pull Britain from the European Union.

You're gonna be dead

Albarn is passionate when discussing Brexit, saying, "You can't imagine how depressing it is for us."

"It's hard to express how angry I am," he said.

"People who voted Brexit, as with American people who voted for Trump, are people who don't travel," he said. "They're blind! Genuinely blind! They genuinely think that closing borders and becoming nationalistic is a really good idea."

"I don't want the next generations to grow up having less access to the world," he said. "We're a little island. A little island must be open."

"The people who voted for this are the old. What are you doing? Voting for your grandchildren's future? You're gonna be dead in 10 years! Dead!"

His anger subsided as he gazed down at a plate that had just been put in front of him. On it were two soft-boiled eggs surrounded by slices of smoked salmon on a bed of arugula.

"I have never seen eggs presented like that in my life. Have you?" he said with a laugh.

"It's quite artistic -- science fiction," he said. "I should have stated a story with that."

Qandeel Baloch biopic: ‘No comments for now,’ says Saba Qamar

Social media networks regardless of its ups and downs offer fans of celebrities a game of guesses, and Saba Qamar's Instagram account is no different.

The actress, who debuted in the Pakistani TV industry in 2005, has been posting a flurry of pictures showing her dolled up in vivid-coloured clothes and equally bright sunglasses… which leads us to think that something's a-cooking in the stewpot!

"Really, who told you that?" she asked when Geo.tv spoke to her over the phone.

Of course, your Instagram posts, Saba! Let's see what she has posted so far.

Sporting a turquoise jacket and round, white shades

 

 

On the sets of #sabaqamar #Khi #characterrole #biopic #megaproject

A post shared by Saba Qamar (@sabaqamarzaman) on

Red specs and torn jeans

 

 

Work hard in silence,let success make the noise!  #sabaqamar #characterrole #Biopic #khi #rebel

A post shared by Saba Qamar (@sabaqamarzaman) on

Huge… like YUGE black sunglasses

 

 

Pani phenk dun gi #Sabaqamar #khi #friends #offday

A post shared by Saba Qamar (@sabaqamarzaman) on

Is that tattoo similar to that of Qandeel's?

 

 

Good night 

A post shared by Saba Qamar (@sabaqamarzaman) on

 

Oh and oh, the Lux Style Award winner was also seen with Indian film actress Pooja Bhatt and rocker Ali Azmat recently.

 

 

Off to Khi #sabaqamar #Aliazmat #poojabhatt

A post shared by Saba Qamar (@sabaqamarzaman) on

 

Are Bhatt and Ali Azmat in on this project too? Who knows?

"I guess you gotta wait till May 12 to see what all the hype is about," says Qamar and so we shall.

Hindi Medium – Qamar's Bollywood debut movie – comes out on May 12.

Rishi Kapoor slams young generation stars for skipping Vinod Khanna's funeral

Bollywood actor Rishi Kapoor who is quite famous for his straight forward and blunt style has recently slammed the new generation stars.

The Amar Akbar Anthony star and a close friend of Vinod Khanna shared a series of angry tweets as no young star of Bollywood attended Vinod's funeral.

The Kapoor and Sons actor didn't hesitate to thrash the stars for their absence and tweeted in anger.

The actor not only showed his disappointment at the film fraternity for attending the funeral in such small numbers but also called 'Chamcha' to those who attended Priyanka Chopra's birthday bash in large numbers night before the death of Vinod Khanna.

Rishi Kapoor earlier shared a picture of him with Vinod Khanna as a tribute to the departed actor.

He captioned the picture with, "Remembering the good times with you, Vinod. Thank you for being my friend.

Katrina Kaif officially joins Instagram, shares first picture

Bollywood actress Katrina Kaif has mostly been a private person as she has always distanced herself from social networking platforms.

The actress, who only recently made her Facebook debut a few months ago, jumped on the social media bandwagon and joined the photo-sharing app Instagram to connect with her fans. Check her account here.

While officially joining Instagram, Kat also shared a perfect moment from her "happy place".

The Jagga Jasoos actress was dressed in a breezy, white beach dress looking like a dream as she poses casually for the camera.

She captioned the picture saying, "New beginnings ... coming from my happy place #helloinstagram."

Katrina captioned the picture saying, "New beginnings ... coming from my happy place #helloinstagram."

 

 

The star is already on her way to reaching 1 million followers on the first day.

 

 

We are looking forward to seeing more breathtaking pictures of the actress in the near future.

Thursday, April 27, 2017

There are aliens out there says director Ridley Scott

"Alien" creator Ridley Scott said Thursday that he was convinced that there are aliens out there -- and one day they will come for us.

The veteran director said he believed in higher beings as he prepared to release the sixth episode of the sci-fi horror series, "Alien: Covenant", next month.

"I believe in superior beings. I think it is certainly likely. An expert I was talking to at NASA said to me, 'Have you ever looked in the sky at night? You mean to tell me we are it?' That's ridiculous.

"The experts have now put a number on it having assessed what is out there. They say that there are between 100 and 200 entities that could be having a similar evolution to us right now.

"So when you see a big thing in the sky, run for it," he joked.

"Because they are a lot smarter than we are, and if you are stupid enough to challenge them you will be taken out in three seconds."

"Alien: Covenant" the second of the prequel films, is set in 2104 on board a spaceship carrying 2,000 cryogenically frozen colonists to a distant planet when they chance upon an uncharted paradise.

But their voyage soon turns into a gory nightmare that makes "Alien'"s original "chestbuster" scene seem tame in comparison.

Hideous beyond belief

The "neomorph" aliens in the new film are based on the goblin shark "which has a jaw which hinges in two ways. It's scary, hideous beyond belief actually," Scott said.

The 79-year-old British-born director -- who was also the brains behind "Blade Runner" -- said he never tired or scaring people out of their skins.

"When I did the first 'Alien' I had to get a sense of responsibility because the reaction to the kitchen ("chestbuser") scene with John Hurt was beyond anything I expected -- and it was not good," he told AFP.

"But the film was very successful because people are perverse."

He said he could not believe the terror he had created when he went to see people watching the film. "Everybody was half underneath the seat watching by the time you get to the kitchen scene. There was a woman underneath the seat with her husband holding her. I said this is not healthy."

Scott, however, claimed that he was unshockable.

"Nothing scares me. I have a 9mm (pistol)," he said.

"If there is a problem I tend to close down into calm. When you walk in in the morning on a film and 600 people turn and all look at you, that is scary," he said.

"Alien: Covenant" has a religious subtext, the director insisted.

He said he was "agnostic", but this did not stop him making a film about Moses, "Exodus: Gods and Kings", in 2014.

"Either religion is the greatest trick played on mankind. Or it is not, and that poses some great questions, and this film is a great context for those," he said.

Scott, who was knighted in 2003, is about to make a film about the Battle of Britain during World War II, when the Royal Air Force fought off the German Luftwaffe.

"Alien: Covenant" opens across the world from May 10.

Veteran Bollywood actor Vinod Khanna had roots in Peshawar

PESHAWAR: Veteran Indian actor Vinod Khanna, who died on Thursday at the age of 70 in Mumbai due to protracted illness, had roots in Peshawar.

"Late Vinod Khanna was the son of Mehr Chand Khanna, a prominent businessman and former minister in Congress party.

He was born in Peshawar on October 6, 1946 at Sardar area in Cantonment jurisdiction," Muhammad Ibrahim Zia, a known film historian from Peshawar said.

A local media agency delegation went to inquire after the health of the top Indian film industry legend, Dilip Kumar, who also belonged to Peshawar they had a meeting with Vinod Khanna in New Delhi, who was very happy over reunion with people of his birth place(Peshawar).

Mehr Chand Khanna, father of Vinod Khanna, was a well off person of Peshawar and had migrated to India in 1947. At the time of migration, Vinod Khanna was an infant, but he had love for his birth city.

In the late 1990s during a function held in Dubai, Vinod Khanna had announced on the stage with pride that he was a 'Peshawari.

The ancestral home of Vinod Khanna was intact and presently in use of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chapter of APWA (All Pakistan Women's Association).

During the meeting with Vinod Khanna,the delegation presented him gifts including 'Peshawar Chappal' (sandals) and traditional dress, which he accepted very happily.

They also presented a copy of his book, Peshawar Key Funkar (Artists of Peshawar), to the legend star.

The book gives detailed history of big screen actors who belonged to Peshawar and worked in different film industries during the last 100 years.

Shakeel Waheedullah, General Secretary Cultural Heritage Council KP, was also part of the delegation which met the Indian actor in 2014. "During his autograph, Vinod Khanna had extended his good wishes to people of Peshawar and expressed desire to visit his ancestral city," he stated.

'Vinod wanted to visit Peshawar to see his home and area where his parents and forefathers used to dwell', Shakeed added.

He said he had also sent a request at official level for his visit to Pakistan, especially Peshawar, but his visit was not finalised.

Shakeel said the Cultural Heritage Council would soon hold a reference in memory of late Vinod Khanna to pay homage and to apprise the people of Peshawar that the Indian film legend belonged to their city.

Vinod Khanna started his film carrier in 1968 and performed in more than 140 films.

His best performance was in films like `Mere Apne, Mera Gaon Mera Desh, Imtihaan, Inkaar, Amar Akbar Anthony, Qurbani, Dayavaan and Jurm.

He also showed his debut in politics and was elected as memberof parliament from Gurdaspur in 1997 on Bharatiya Janta Party (BJP) ticket.

In July 2002, he was made Union Minister for Culture and Tourism.

A recent picture of Vinod Khanna, showing him seriously ill, left his fans in shock.

He was suffering from advanced bladder carcinoma and died on Thursday.

Farhan Saeed, Shreya Ghoshal’s song ‘Thodi Der’ becomes instant hit

It seems that getting off the market comes with glad tidings. It was only a while back that actor and singer Farhan Saeed tied the knot with Urwa Hocane and now his latest hit 'Thodi Der' for Bollywood film 'Half Girlfriend' has become a record-breaker.

Farhan's latest song, for which he not only lent his vocals but personally composed too, reached four million views in just one day.

The song is a revamped version of an earlier tune by Farhan in Punjabi.

Along with the Pakistani singer, the reigning queen of Indian playback singing Shreya Ghoshal also lent her vocals to the song.

Arjun Kapoor and Shraddha Kapoor play the lead roles in 'Half Girlfriend,' which is based on the novel of the same name by Chetan Bhagat.

The movie will release worldwide on May 19, 2017.

Life of veteran Bollywood actor Vinod Khanna in Pictures

Veteran Bollywood actor Vinod Khanna famous for his charming personality and powerful acting passed away after battling cancer.

The Amar Akbar Anthony actor worked in over 100 movies and gave major hit movies to the Bollywood.

Let's have a look at some of the pictures from his life!

 

 

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Veteran Indian actor Vinod Khanna passes away at 70

MUMBAI: Popular Indian actor Vinod Khanna passed away on Thursday.

According to sources, the artiste was suffering from cancer.

Read more: Shocking pictures of Vinod Khanna in weary condition go viral

He was 70 years of age at the time of his death.

The actor had worked in over a 100 movies.

Earlier in the month, pictures of the veteran Indian actor went viral on the internet, leaving fans in shock. 

 

This is what Katrina Kaif has said about Salman Khan

It is always said that Katrina Kaif has a soft corner for Salman Khan.

Katrina Kaif who was introduced in the Bollywood industry by Salman Khan actually seems a huge fan of him.

Katrina Kaif talks about working with Salman Khan again in Tiger Zinda Hai after a gap of five years.

While speaking to Indian media when Kaif was asked how is it working with Salman, the actress replied, "I have known Salman for so many years now. After shooting with him for a long time, you miss his flamboyance and his fun side. He has a great sense of humour and flamboyance. He has a way of living life, where a great energy buzzes around him. It comes as a force and flood when you come back to the set with him. He has an amazing aura and warmth around him."


 

Katrina is currently working with Salman Khan in Tiger Zinda Hai which is directed by Katrina's best friend Ali Abbas Zafar.

Salman and Katrina have worked together in films like Ek Tha Tiger, Partner, Yuvvraaj, Maine Pyaar Kyun Kiya? among others.

She is teaming with Khan after a gap of five years for Tiger Zinda Hai.

Surrealism Revisited with Shakil Saigol

KARACHI: Somewhere between dream and reality resides the latest series of large-scale paintings by seasoned artist Shakil Saigol to embody the true essence of the title specified for it as it opens for view at Canvas.

Allowing all pieces to take shape intuitively and independently without forcing their development under one particular theme, thought or medium, the subjects he paints as always remain intensely personal.

 Each painting a portrayal of a person from his life or at times of himself, Saigol through the abundantly detailed vastness of his landscapes of these recent works dares the viewer to explore a world both strange and familiar at the same time.

With reality and fantasy merging and often crossing each other in a labyrinth of surrealist elements, the sixteen works currently on display at the gallery create hyper-realistic, dreamlike visions that are windows into a strange world beyond waking life.

Saigol, unleashing his mind from the boundaries of rationalism, any particular thought, reason or even medium, is ecstatic about the freedom that he has enjoyed while creating the current body of work. Letting his imagination take over, each painting is thematically disconnected adds the artist who is also delighted that his two granddaughters are the new muses in some of the paintings on display at the gallery.

As a self-taught artist who walked out of the family business in his late forties to pursue his passion, his skills are exceptionally refined says the curator Sameera Raja.

Unveiling his first solo show in Lahore in 1991 at the age of 47, Raja is appreciative of the artist's consistent eagerness to learn new skills to reinvent his works over the years.

The current series resonating many elements of his previous works, is in fact a retrospective of the last two decades, she observes.

Saigol has been exhibiting locally and internationally for over 3 decades and his works are part of prestigious collections worldwide.

His current solo show titled 'Surrealism Revisited with Shakil Saigol' at Canvas Gallery will continue till May 4th.

Oscar-winning 'Silence of the Lambs' director dies

Jonathan Demme, the Oscar-winning director of "The Silence of the Lambs" whose four-decade career spanned a staggering array of work from romantic comedy and rock music to hard-hitting documentaries, died Wednesday. He was 73.

Demme passed away in New York surrounded by his family after a battle with cancer, his publicist announced. He will be laid to rest in a private funeral.

He remains best known for the smash-hit 1991 horror-thriller starring Anthony Hopkins as serial killer Hannibal Lecter and Jodie Foster as FBI agent Clarice Starling. The movie was box office gold and a dazzling critical success.
It swept the 1992 Academy Awards, winning five Oscars including best picture, best actor for Hopkins and best actress for Foster.

"I am heart-broken to lose a friend, a mentor, a guy so singular and dynamic you'd have to design a hurricane to contain him," Foster wrote in a statement.

Hopkins said he was shocked. "He was one of the best, and a really nice guy as well who had such a great spirit. Every day being with him was a high five."

The director's success with "Silence of the Lambs" gave Demme the commercial springboard to direct "Philadelphia" in 1993, a ground-breaking Hollywood blockbuster that won Tom Hanks his first Academy Award for playing a gay lawyer fired for contracting HIV and fighting for justice.

Critics say the movie changed the way Hollywood portrayed the AIDS crisis and revolutionized mainstream film's portrayal of gay and lesbian characters.

Grandest of men

Demme's most recent feature film was the less well received "Ricki and the Flash," starring Meryl Streep as a divorced mom who ditches her family to follow her dream of rock-n-roll stardom before a crisis compels her to return.

"Jonathan passed away early this morning in his Manhattan apartment, surrounded by his wife, Joanne Howard, and three children," Demme's publicist said in a brief statement. He died from complications from esophageal cancer.

His death prompted warm tributes for a deeply respected director, praised for his compassion and creativity, as well as recognized for highlighting causes such as the plight of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, and impoverished Haiti.

"Jonathan taught us how big a heart a person can have, and how it will guide how we live and what we do for a living," Hanks said. "He was the grandest of men."

Streep said Demme had been "a big-hearted" man who fully embraced "people in need -- and of the potential of art, music, poetry and film to fill that need."

Born on February 22, 1944 on Long Island, New York, Demme went to high school in Miami and briefly studied chemistry at the University of Florida in the hope of becoming a veterinarian.

It was after flunking science that he turned to writing movie reviews and got a publicity job at a film company. He later met director Roger Corman, who asked if he could write a screenplay.

"I fell backwards into it almost," he said of his career in an interview with National Public Radio in 2007.

Documentary love

Demme directed a total of 20 feature films and 12 documentaries, not to mention innovative concert movie "Stop Making Sense" and music videos, chalking up a raft of writing and production credits. Much of his work had a political or social edge.

Besides thrillers, romantic comedies and a farce about the wife of a mobster, his real love was for documentaries. Subjects included Nelson Mandela, former president Jimmy Carter, and Bruce Springsteen.

"I'm not really in the business of making fictional films and I'm drawn to ones that I consider to be special and exciting in a certain way, and in the meantime I'll be perfectly happy just to make documentary after documentary," he told NPR.

But there were also flops.

His 1998 movie "Beloved" starring Oprah Winfrey and based on the Toni Morrison novel about a slave visited by the spirit of her dead daughter, bombed.

There were also lackluster reviews for his 2004 remake of "The Manchurian Candidate" starring Streep and Denzel Washington, set in the 1990-1991 Gulf War.

In 2013, the Americans For Immigrant Justice charity announced that it was honoring Demme with an award for decades of tireless work on behalf of Haitian refugees and vulnerable immigrants.

In place of flowers, Demme's family requested donations to the Florida-based charity.

Video of Turkish artist singing 'Dil Dil Pakistan' goes viral

The video of a Turkish singer Noor Yelmaz singing the famous Vital Signs song Dil Dil Pakistan has gone viral.

Yelmaz, holding a guitar, can be heard singing a slow version of the song in a voice characteristic of an indie artist.

Earlier the Turkish duo Emirhan Özdemir and ağrı Hakan Eser had become quite a sensation for singing Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's 'Afreen Afreen' and Junaid Jamshed's songs in a tribute to the deceased artist.

Sonu Nigam on Azaan row: "No need to fuel this anymore"

It seems that Indian singer Sonu Nigam is finally done with the ongoing Azaan controversy.

Sonu Nigam sparked outrage among people especially Muslims in India after he criticised the use of loudspeakers in mosques.

The singer has now asked people to get over the issue and move on.

 

Earlier this week, the singer shared a recording of the Azaan on his social media account where he captioned the recording with "Good Morning India".

 

The Kal Ho Naa Ho singer was slammed by various celebrities after he shared a controversial post on his Twitter account and ultimately shaved his head as accepting a challenge.

The Indian singer has also been talking unfavourably about, in general, the religion-related material being broadcast over microphones and "forced religiousness" in the past weeks.

Amidst controversy, Sonu Nigam posts recording of Azaan on his Twitter account

It seems that Indian singer Sonu Nigam is not done with creating controversy or maybe he likes the limelight he is receiving through it.

Sonu Nigam who sparked outrage among people especially Muslims in India after he criticised Azaan and called it 'gundagardi', is now up with another thing.

Sonu Nigam has now shared a recording of Azaan on his social media account where he captioned the recording with "Good Morning India".

The Kal ho naa ho singer was slammed by various celebrities after he shared a controversial post on his Twitter account and ultimately shaved his head as accepting a challenge.

The Indian singer has been talking unfavourably about, in general, the religion-related material being broadcast over microphones and "forced religiousness" in the past weeks.

Disney unveils official release date of Star Wars: Episode IX

If you're Star Wars fan, this news is must be for you.

Disney has announced that Star Wars: Episode IX would fly in the theaters on May 24, 2019. 

So there will be no Star Wars for Christmas in 2018 and 2019.

It'll be the first main trilogy Star Wars film to debut at that time of year, which marks the beginning of the America's summer box office season.

Directed by Colin Trevorrow, the film will close out the third Star Wars trilogy.

No cast members have been announced for this Star Wars sequel up till now.

The announcement on StarWars.com didn't come with any official details about the sci-fi sequel quite yet, but we may be getting some more on this project quite soon.