Showing posts with label nayanatara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nayanatara. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

ME REFUSING TO DO A FILM WITH CHIRANJEEVI? I SHOULD BE MAD: NAYANATARA SETS THE RECORD STRAIGHT






Nayanatara is one of the prettiest actresses in the South. And she has done some really wow roles both in Tamil and Telugu. The young would die for a body like hers. And anyone who is popular is inevitably dragged into controversies. But, fortunately, her affair with Simbu has faded away from the public memory, though traces of it are still visible in the Tamil gossip magazines.

But one controversy that she has been silent about for some time now is her reported refusal to do a film with Chiranjeevi, which is currently underway. But now, the actress speaks up and explains it was a figment of gossipmongers' fertile imagination. Says she, "My career in Telugu cinema is still in its formative years. I'm aware of my position in the industry and Chiranjeevi's larger-than-life status. How can I refuse an offer to act with him? The fact is that nobody has still approached me with such an offer! If indeed an opportunity comes my way in the future, I will be the happiest girl to act against the megastar."

So, that puts to rest all the nagging voices, I suppose.

Friday, June 15, 2007

RAJNIKANTH AND NAYANATARA SING AND DANCE THEIR WAY TO GLORY IN SIVAJI: THE BOSS





SHRIYA IS RAVISHING IN SIVAJI: THE BOSS


It was a double bonanza for Shriya Saran in Sivaji: The Boss. For, she gets instant recognition in Tamil film industry, where she is relatively new and also revives her flagging fortunes in the Telugu film industry. Shriya plays the role of a good-hearted village belle in the film. And she plays it to perfection. And she has some livewire scenes with Rajnikanth, where not only comedy but also pathos is revealed. What more, the film has some of the best songs and Shriya being the heroine, gets to hog the limelight in all of them barring one, where Nayanatara gets to swing her hips with Rajnikanth. And Shriya, we must say, is absolutely ravishing in the film. She gets to wear different costumes, display different body languages, and simple wows the audiences with all of them. What adds charm to her role is the way Shriya matches step for step a la Sridevi in the songs: Aaku chatu pinde tadise (from Vetagadu), Nee kallu chebutunnayi nanu preminchanani (Premabhishekam), and Abbabee tiyyanee debba (Jagadeka Veerudu, Atiloka Sundari) which were recreated for fun effect in Sivaji. While Rajnikanth stole the limelight in these songs, Shriya didn't lag behind either. The theatres were inundated with whistles when the duo stepped in tune to the songs.
Hope her career which is taking a nosedive will look up to the skies with Sivaji.

YOU CAN'T STOP THE RAJNI JUGGERNAUT! SIVAJI ROLLS ON MAJESTICALLY INTO THE AUDIENCES' HEARTS



If wishes were horses, Rajnikanth would ride off to the Himalayas and take sanyas. Seriously. We're not joking. For the expectations from him are so mindbogglingly huge, that even if gives the best of the best hits, it is not enough. The discriminating audience and the critics want even more. A superlative verdict. A perfect work of art. But, sadly, only plastic things are perfect, while living things look good with their little imperfections.
Take, for example, Sivaji: The Boss, which was released with much fanfare today. It has all the ingredients, and in the right doses, to call it a superhit. But, no, the critics, say, the first half is a little slow, the dialogues are a little drab, A R Rahman's background music is unimpressive, and there is no punch in Rajni's dialogue delivery. What crap! These are the same guys who will have names for a perfect piece of art like the Taj Mahal, too.
Like all his earlier films, Rajnikanth seeks to play the good samaritan to the core. And so, this NRI, who earns loads and loads of money, Rs 250 crore to be precise, wants to spend it on charity by constructing hospitals and educational institutions to offer quality education to the poor and the needy -- all for free.
But will the education mafia allow him to do that? Definitely, not. Because it will deal a deathly blow to their money making institutions. So headed by Suman, the godfather of the education mafia, they gang up to ensure that his plan is nipped in the bud. And how do they do it? With the help of politicians and the bureaucracy. Director Shankar, in his own unique style, exposes the corruption that is eating away the innards of our political system and lays bare the politician-bureaucrat nexus.
Shankar paints a realistic picture of how anyone who wants to do good in the society, however big or mighty he might be, without whetting the appetites of the ruling class, is bound to end up like paupers. It is only the blood-sucking, power-hungry, money-minded people who survive in the country. And this explains why the politician-bureaucrats-contractors nexus still rules the country. So, Rajnikanth too loses his all in his attempt to provide social infrastructure. Predictably, the interval follows.
How Rajnikanth picks up the gauntlet and gives the bad guys a taste of their own medicine is the crux of the remaining part of the story. And, once the curtains go up after the interval, the film picks up momentum with the Rajni's trademark quips, witty dialogues and his unique mannerisms. And director Shankar rivets our attention with gusto. And only a director of his calibre could have been able to pull off an impossible coup as Sivaji: The Boss.
The film has the right mix of entertainment with Shreya oozing the much-needed oomph to make the audiences go bonkers. She looks great and exudes an aura that will be remembered in the South Indian film circles for some time to come.
Like all his films, Rajnikanth has a too has a cool dialogue in Sivaji, too. And that is COOL. And when he says it in his typically naughty way to taunt the baddies, it is a sight to watch. The way Rajni plays on the chewing gum is hilarious and drives the fans crazy.
Rahman delivers a classy concoction and some of the songs, especially the one starring Nayanatara is bound to be popular.
A COOL movie to the core, if it sags in its enthusiasm, it is only because you are watching it with blinkers on: that is the expectations, I've been talking ablout. And if you go to watch Sivaji with such an attitude, you are bound to make it a miserable experience. Otherwise, it is a wonderful film by all standards. Don't miss it for anything in the world.
That guy Vivek will have you in splits. And when he is in Rajni's company, which he always is throughout the movie, it is a double treat. And for the critics, I have only one advice. Go take a walk!!


If you haven't watched Sivaji, watch the trailer at least, it is fun

Sunday, May 20, 2007

MORE HEADLINES OF THE DAY

* Dubai Seenu, starring Ravi Teja and the sultry siren Nayanatara, to release on June 8

* Allari Naresh to act as villain in his next film

* Venu Madhav's Bhukailas is releasing on May 25

* The audio CDs / cassettes of director S V Krishna Reddy's film Bahumati are out

* Shooting of director Shankar's new film Kalasala gets underway '

* Rajeev Kanakala bags a new film as hero

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Vedika, new bakra in Simbu's trap?

Muni came and went and it has failed to excite any meditative comment from the Telugu film fans. Like good corporate employees they took the brief of the title too seriously and decided to keep far away from the film like the munis of yore. Lawrence, hero-director of the film, went to town on all the TV channels, who bent over backwards to offer their precious telecast time, but he didn't manage to cut any ice. So sad. But the heroine, Vedika, has made the most from her exposure on the promos and the talk shows. She has bagged a couple of films in Tamil and Telugu. And, wait before you can say aaaaah! she has been going gaga over Simbu. Now don't ask me who Simbu is. The same guy who caused nightmarish moments to Nayanatara with his sadistic behaviour. Poor Vedika doesn't seem to know about Simbu-Nayanatara episode. She calls him a 'genius' and goes to great lengths to explain how 'intelligent' and 'smart' he is. And how in just a week she was able to 'connect' to him with aplomb. Seems another love story is in the offing for Simbu, who desperately needs to cling to someone to forget his old ladylove.

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