John Abraham : Working in action films is like doing an item song for me

Actor John Abraham returns in a new action avatar in the gangster drama Mumbai Saga. He says performing an action scene, to him, is like doing an item song, and adds that he likes working in mass-oriented films because the mass audience has shaped his career.

“For some actors, they love dancing. For me, the action is my dance. It’s like an item song to me,” said John.

The trailer of Mumbai Saga has released and going by the three-minute clip John will engage in heavy-duty action in the Sanjay Gupta film, co-starring Emraan Hashmi, Suniel Shetty, Jackie Shroff, and Kajal Aggarwal. The film also features Prateik Babbar, Rohit Roy, Anjana Sukhani, and Gulshan Grover. John portrays a gangster who aspires to rule Bombay while Emraan is cast as a cop who wants to kill John and win prize money of Rs 10 crore. The film is set for a theatrical release on March 19.

How does he manage to come up with a different kind of action in every film? “It’s tough because I feel like my bones are breaking but I try to do different activities in different films. This film has raw action. In this film, my character has a conflict with Emraan’s character. It’s a gangster film and we are showing what has happened in reality.”

The action in Mumbai Saga is quite removed from his stunts in his other upcoming film, Attack, he noted.

“In Attack, we are doing very different futuristic action. It’s difficult but I enjoy this space,” John informed.

Talking to the media at the trailer launch of Mumbai Saga, John spoke of his slant at doing mass-oriented films. “I think you must do films that relate to the mass audience and not just a few people who are sitting in a fancy theatre. I saw what Manya Surve (his character in Shootout At Wadala) did for me and Sanjay (Gupta). So, this kind of film is relatable with a large section of the audience,” he said.

“When you go to the interiors of India, they really remember these characters. I think every actor has a fantastic and memorable character, so I feel when you make films; you should make them for the people. We are scared of criticism on the internet and the biggest cuss word in my life at least is that I am scared of the word ‘trend’. I want to stay away from this trend business,” he added.

Bhumi: Can’t imagine how career would shape up without ‘Dum Laga Ke Haisha’

Bhumi Pednekar is currently shooting for Badhaai Do in Rishikesh, where she shot for her first film, the 2015 release Dum Laga Ke Haisha, six years ago. She says her debut film will always be a milestone in her life and she cannot imagine how her career would have shaped up without it.

“Dum Laga Ke Haisha is truly a milestone moment of my life and I can’t imagine how my career would have shaped up without it,” she said.

She said it is a coincidence that she was shooting at the very same location for her upcoming film.

“It was such a coincidence that I shot at the same location again for Badhaai Do. The house which was my first ever location, for my first film, was used for Badhaai Do. I was so nostalgic. What were the chances that after six years, I would be at the same place!” Bhumi said.

“I was super nostalgic that I was actually at the locations where I shot DLKH. I was actually standing at the same spot where I gave my first shot ever in life as an actor. I remember we had done about 11 takes for this and I was so nervous. That is where Bhumi the actor was born,” she added.

Bhumi feels she loudly told the industry that she meant business as an actress with her first film.

“Dum Laga Ke Haisha gave me an identity as an actress and enabled me to tell the world that I was different. I was hungry, I was ambitious, and that I would take incredible risks to carve my legacy in the Hindi film industry. Today, when I look back at my debut, I’m filled with gratitude towards everyone who ensured that I do my best.”

The actress credits the entire team of her first film for inculcating confidence in her as an artist.

“Right from (casting director) Shanoo (Sharma), Adi (producer Aditya Chopra) sir, (producer) Maneesh Sharma, (director) Sharat Katariya and even (co-star) Ayushmann (Khurrana) — everyone believed in me and that gave me so much confidence to go out there and present myself as an artist. Dum Laga Ke Haisha is and will always be a film from which I harness confidence to take on more risks, to experiment constantly and present myself new on-screen every single time,” said Bhumi.

Supriya Pilgaonkar: I was destined to be an actor

Actress Supriya Pilagaonkar will soon be seen in the show Janani. Twenty-seven years into her career, she surprises you by saying she never planned to be an actor.

“I am extremely grateful to people who have given me immense love and respect, which I may not even deserve. I am in touch with myself 24×7 as a person and actor because of my profession. I don’t know what to say about career and success but I feel lucky that while there are so many actors, who didn’t get the chance, I always say that God has been kind to me and should be kind to everyone else also,” Supriya says.

“I never planned it or set out to be an actor. It just happened to me. So many people come to act, leave their homes behind. I never did anything like that. So, when I see that them, I feel so special and blessed. Maybe I was cut out to be an actor and I feel I was also destined to be an actor. I have nothing but gratitude towards people who I have met in my journey as an artist,” she adds.

Supriya is married to actor-filmmaker Sachin Pilgaonkar and their daughter Shriya is also establishing herself as an actress. Although it is part of a family of artists, Supriya prefers leaving work on the set and becomes like any other homemaker once she is home.

“I go to my job like a nine to five job. I work passionately and then when I come back home, I am a homemaker but I can see that in my daughter a lot. She is a very passionate person. My husband is the child of the industry and has been working ever since he was four or five. My daughter has taken after him. He has taught this passion to my daughter. That is why I say that everything that has happened in my life was planned from up above,” added the actress, who has regaled the audience with her roles in “Tu Tu Main Main”, “Radha Ki Betiyaan Kar Dikhayengi” and “Sasural Genda Phool” among numerous other shows.

Kangana accuses Twitter of shadow banning her account

Actress Kangana Ranaut on Saturday accused the microblogging platform Twitter of shadow banning her account. Kangana says the Twitter management is scared of her but can’t suspend her and hence the shadowban.

“I am shadowbanned cos chacha @jack and his promoters of free speech @Twitter team is scared of me, they can’t suspend me but they can’t even let me keep exposing them every day, I am not here to catch followers or promote myself I am here for the nation and that hurts them,” Kangana tweeted on Saturday.

Earlier on Friday, Kangana took a jibe at her rumored ex-boyfriend Hrithik Roshan. The actress reacted to a news piece on Twitter that says: “#HrithikRoshan to Appear Before Mumbai’s #CrimeBranch on February 27 to Record Statement in Case Against #KanganaRanaut.”

Reacting to this, Kangana tweeted: “Duniya kahan se kahan pahunch gayi magar mera silly ex abhi bhi waheen hai usi modh pe jahan yeh waqt dobara laut ke nahi jane wala (No matter where the world has moved on but my silly ex is still standing there where time will never return).

Bollywood still links women’s beauty to fair skin: AI

For Bollywood, beautiful women have fair skin, according to an Artificial Intelligence (AI)-based computer analysis which reveals that conception of beauty has remained consistent through the years in the film industry centered in Mumbai.

The automated computer analysis was led by Indian-origin researchers at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in the US.

The research revealed that babies whose births were depicted in Bollywood films from the 1950s and 60s were more often than not boys; in today’s films, boy and girl newborns are about evenly split.

In the 50s and 60s, dowries were socially acceptable; today, not so much.

The researchers, led by Kunal Khadilkar and Ashiqur KhudaBukhsh of CMU’s Language Technologies Institute (LTI), gathered 100 Bollywood movies from each of the past seven decades along with 100 of the top-grossing Hollywood moves from the same periods.

They then used statistical language models to analyze subtitles of those 1,400 films for gender and social biases, looking for such factors as what words are closely associated with each other.

“Most cultural studies of movies might consider five or 10 movies,” said Khadilkar, a master’s student in LTI.

“Our method can look at 2,000 movies in a matter of days.”

For instance, the researchers assessed beauty conventions in movies by using a so-called cloze test.

Essentially, it’s a fill-in-the-blank exercise: “A beautiful woman should have BLANK skin.”

A language model normally would predict “soft” as the answer, the researchers noted.

But when the model was trained with the Bollywood subtitles, the consistent prediction became “fair”.

The same thing happened when Hollywood subtitles were used, though the bias was less pronounced, said the study.

To assess the prevalence of male characters, the researchers used a metric called Male Pronoun Ratio (MPR), which compares the occurrence of male pronouns such as “he” and “him” with the total occurrences of male and female pronouns.

From 1950 through today, the MPR for Bollywood and Hollywood movies ranged from roughly 60 to 65 MPR.

Looking at words associated with dowry over the years, the researchers found such words as “loan,” “debt” and “jewelry” in Bollywood films of the 50s, which suggested compliance.

By the 1970s, other words, such as “consent” and “responsibility,” began to appear. Finally, in the 2000s, the words most closely associated with dowry — including “trouble,” “divorce” and “refused” — indicate noncompliance or its consequences.

“All of these things we kind of knew,” said KhudaBukhsh, an LTI project scientist, “but now we have numbers to quantify them. And we can also see the progress over the last 70 years as these biases have been reduced.”

The findings were presented at the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence virtual conference earlier this month.

Siddharth Nigam, Rits Badiani appear in new romantic song ‘Chup’

Actors Siddharth Nigam and Rits Badiani appear in the music video of the new song Chup, which was launched on Friday. The song is sung by Vikas Kumar.

“I love being a part of music videos. The very thought of conveying a story through a song is beautiful. ‘Chup’ is a song that is very close to my heart. It talks about two people in love but one gets carried away by the glamorous life in a big city. I hope the audience loves the track as much as we do. It’s the first time that Rits and I are working together and it was just so amazing,” said Siddharth.

The track is written by Raj Fatehpur and composed by Sunny Vik. The low-beat soundtrack has a blend of a new age and mellow vibe.

Rits, known for her part in the film “Airlift” added: “It is not every day that you get to be a part of beautiful, melodious and heart-wrenching songs. I am truly grateful to be a part of Chup. It has now become one of my favorite songs.”

Ravi Dubey: Creative space is facing the social media bubble

While almost every other TV actor has lately been lamenting how social media following is dangerously becoming the sole parameter for getting work on the small screen, Ravi Dubey and Nia Sharma hope the bubble will burst soon.

“I think this numbers game on social media is crap. I keep seeing that on audition alert groups, messages get circulated that casting directors are looking for actors with a certain number of followers on Instagram and Twitter. But we are not social media influencers, we are actors. Right now the creative space is facing the social media bubble,” Ravi told IANS.

Nia added: “I think social media does not help in the life of an actor in terms of fetching work, as oppose to what people think. Social media has only enabled us to show our real side beyond what our audience watches us on screen. It is just an opportunity to interact with fans. If someone thinks that an actor can be cast based on how hot they look and the image they have posted, it is a disillusion. An actor should remain an actor based on the work experience they have, and the skill set they have.”

The two actors appear on Jamai 2.0 Season 2, which also features Vin Rana, Sudhanshu Pandey, and Priya Banerjee along with Achint Kaur. The show streams on ZEE5.

‘The Married Woman’ director Sahir Raza: Cinema shouldn’t be moulded by anyone’s morality

A kissing scene in the trailer of the upcoming series The Married Woman has become a topic of discussion on social media. Series director Sahir Raza feels makers should be given the freedom to make the content they want to.

The series is about women and the choices they make and showcases the conditions levied on them by society. The director says that it is sad that such topics are still considered “controversial”.

“I feel that it’s sad that we have to use the word ‘controversial’ for this concept. I feel like shows like these should be made for every format. Cinema shouldn’t be molded by anyone’s morality. This is why controversy exists. I feel that love should not be put into any kind of box,” he says.

Talking about why he came on board with the project, Sahir says: “This series is a beautiful project. It is based on Manju Kapur’s book. The story that has been woven is fabulous. I am really glad that (series producer) Ekta (Kapoor) and everyone agreed to let me be part of the project. The first six episodes of the series were already written when I joined. It is such a different concept that most people would fall in love with it even when they read it on paper. That’s what happened to me.”

He adds: “We have taken the backdrop of the book and the character and adapted it to our story. The show adds a lot of external situations and drama within the lines of the character.”

Starring Monica Dogra and Riddhi Dogra, the series will air on ALTBalaji and ZEE5.

Shahid Kapoor’s portrait of mush in close-up

Actor Shahid Kapoor on Friday posted a picture with wife Mira Rajput kissing on the cheek, and the fans are not surprisingly gushing.

“Feeling the love,” wrote the actor along with the picture.

Fans posted glowing compliments in the comments section, many wished Shahid “happy birthday” because February 25 was his special day.

Some, like this user, had a witty reaction: “Bhai dil se bura lagta hai bhai plz bhai single logon ka khyal rakha karain”

Shahid has started shooting for Raj and DK’s action thriller web series, which marks his debut in the web world.

The actor also has the much-awaited film “Jersey” lined up. The film is scheduled for a Diwali release in November. The date has also been confirmed for the release of the Akshay Kumar-starrer “Prithiviraj”, thereby setting up one of the big clashes at the box office this year.

Ridhi Dogra: Was eagerly waiting to showcase I can carry big project on my shoulders

Actress Ridhi Dogra was waiting for a big project to come her way, and she says her wish has come true with the upcoming web show, The Married Woman, which casts her in the title role.

“The biggest reason I said yes to the project was that I was eagerly waiting for an opportunity to showcase that I can carry a big project on my shoulders,” Ridhi told IANS.

“When I heard it is called ‘The Married Woman’ and I would be playing the married woman I did not look left or right. I didn’t think twice. I have been waiting as an actor to just be able to show what I can do,” she added.

The Married Woman is based on author Manju Kapur’s bestseller novel of the same name, and also features Monica Dogra, Imaad Shah, Divya Seth Shah, Nadira Babbar, and Suhas Ahuja.

The series has been directed by Sahir Raza and will air on ALTBalaji and ZEE5.