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Aashiqui 2 Movie

Cast n Crew Director Mohit Suri Producer Bhushan Kuman Mukesh Bhatt Krishan Kumar Story By Shagufta Rafiq Starring Aditya Roy Kapur Shraddha Kapoor Shaad Randhawa Music Mithoon Jeet Ganguly Ankit Tiwari Releasing Date April 26, 2013 Language 140 Minutes Story-Line The film opens by showing a large crowd waiting for Rahul Jaykar (Aditya Roy Kapur) – a successful musician whose career is waning because of his alcohol addiction – to perform at a stage show in Goa. After nearly completing an song, he is unexpectedly interrupted by Aryan (Salil Acharya) during his performance, Rahul fights him, stops his performance, and drives to a local bar. He meets Aarohi (Shraddha Kapoor), a bar singer who idolizes Rahul. After noticing Aarohi looking at a photograph of Lata Mangeshkar in the bar, he a

Ek Tha Tiger Movie

Directed By --Kabir Khan Produced By --Aditya Chopra Screenplay By --Kabir Khan,Neelesh Misra Stroy By --Aditya Chopra Starring --Salman Khan,Katrina Kaif,Ranvir Sheroy,Girish Karnad Music By --sohail Sen Budget --750 Million Box Office --3.1 Billion Language --Hindi ek tha tiger -movie poster Story-Line An agent code-named "Tiger" (Salman Khan) – India's top spy and an officer of the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) – is conducting a mission in northern Iraq. Tiger is forced to kill one of his own men who has defected to Pakistan's spy agency Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). He subsequently kills many ISI agents in his escape. Tiger returns to India and reports to his boss, Shenoy (Girish Karnad), in New Delhi. He is immediately sent on a mission to Dublin to observe a scientist of Indian origin,Professor Anwar Jamaal Kidwai (Roshan Seth), who teaches at Trinity College and is suspected of sharing his findings with the Pakistan defence establishment. Fellow

Maximum Movie Review

Maximum is a case of too much blood and blabber being wasted on a tale that has been flogged to death to such an extent that it is probably now a veritable carcass rotting in the Bollywood sun. Maximum lacks the nuanced detailing and the urgent pacing that should have automatically sprung from a theme yanked out of the internal files of a highly politicised police force. Living up to its title, the film had raised hopes of a new dawn. Maximum falls way short: it does not turn out to be a morning bright and sunny enough to spread all-round cheer. Sadly, the effort is maximum, the impact not quite so.