Filmmaker Arun Vaidyanathan's Achchamundu Achchamundu has been selected for screening at the 33rd Cairo International film festival. Starring Prasanna, Sneha, John Shea in the lead roles, the movie already made rounds in international film festivals like Garden State film festival, Shanghai International film festival and Digital cinema film festival, Japan. The movie is shot entirely in USA and produced by Ananth Govindan, Asma Hashmi, Ramzan Govindan, Hashmi, Srinivasan, Lakhani and Srinivasan. Arun Vaidyanathan recently received Media guild award for creating public awareness on Child sex abuse. The filmmaker says, recognition in an international film festival always makes the entire team happy. I was so excited when Achchamundu played in Shanghai with Chinese subtitles and the entire Chinese audience gave a fantastic response
Showing posts with label actress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label actress. Show all posts
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
After 12 rejections, Stone bagged 'Basic Instinct'
Hollywood superstar Sharon Stone has revealed that she got the role of Catherine Tramell in' Basic Instinct'after 12 actresses had rejected it before her.
The 51-year-old actress had campaigned eight months for the 1992 role after her manager stole the script from a secretary's desk, reported New York Post.
" After 12 actresses turned down the role, it was finally mine," Stone told her Hamptons Film Festival fans at the Bay Theater in Sag Harbor.
The actress also revealed that she wore an Armani pantsuit and a sheer blouse with no bra underneath to the audition for the role just to prove that she had no problem with nudity. Stone also admitted that although she wasn't shy when Paul Verhoeven filmed her leg-crossing scene, but she was shocked at the first preview, when the audience gasped.
Shilpa faces a new law suit in London
Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty has been sued for 6 million pounds by the former boss of her newly acquired restaurant chain, on grounds of unfair dismissal.
Jamal Hirani, 42, founder of fast-food chain 'Tiffinbites' is claiming that he was forced out to make way for the star and had earlier filed a lawsuit in an industrial tribunal claiming more than 1.5 million pounds, reported London Evening Standard online.
He has now filed a 6 million pounds lawsuit in High Court, based on the 30 per cent of the firm he previously owned. Hirani alleges that he was forced out by colleagues in a process that led to the firm closing and opening under a new name, the V8 Gourmet Group.
" They manufactured false accusations against me. This ultimately was my company and I have been removed. I understand that since I have left Shilpa Shetty has invested in the business,"said Hirani.
Shetty, 34 who became a household name in Britain after winning the reality show' Celebrity Big Brother', recently became the company's co-chairwoman after she and fiance Raj Kundra paid 6 million pounds to buy a 33 per cent stake in it.
Monday, October 12, 2009
Cricketer Sreeshanth and actor Lakshmi Rai
This pictures may be and seems to be little old. but, nevertheless worth watching if youre first timer and not a bad idea if you already seen it.
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Ladaki film Overshadow Hindi films in Ladakh
A still from 'Las Del' a superhit Ladaki movie
Around every corner in this distant Himalayan district of India, someone is in the movies. Bureaucrats and Buddhist monks write screenplays, taxi drivers and cops play villains and heroines, and the superstar actress gets paid $1,000 a movie.
Ladakhi films première to packed crowds in the capital, Leh, in an auditorium just off the polo field. Then they head to the villages, shown with LCD projectors and portable speakers. In this northern nook ofIndia bordering China and Pakistan , Bollywood no longer holds sway.
The film industry here emerged right about the time, early in this decade, that cellphone towers and tourists saturated this once-isolated community. Ladakhis quickly put 21st-century social media toward preserving a traditional culture they felt was under siege.
"The young generation nowadays are influenced by the Western people – what they eat, how they dress," says Dorjay Khanang, a former soldier and one of the founders of Ladakh Vision Group, the region's original film studio. "Through these films, we are saying we have our own culture and tradition from ancient times in Ladakh."
Their brand of traditional movies turned out to be wildly popular.
"Traditional," explains Mr. Khanang, means using Ladakhi language and clothes. Modern roads and vehicles are nowhere to be seen. But portraying a Shangri-la that was can be a challenge.
"There are only a few places we can shoot," says Tashi Dawa, a local filmmaker, "because everywhere there are electric wires, cell towers, and greenhouses."
For a recent "blockbuster," titled "Las-Del" ("Karmic Connection"), Mr. Dawa explains how an electricity pole got in the way of a bucolic scene. Their solution? Cover it in Buddhist prayer flags.
There's a tinge of irony in the backlash against modern technology, since ultramodern digital video and movie-editing software made this regional film industry possible. Outside filmmakers say some of the Ladakhi films are starting to show high production values.
Last year, for example, the Ladakh Vision Group bought a 30-foot film crane. It enabled them to stage a scene in "Las-Del" in which a boy, girl, and horse topple off a cliff.
"People in the theater got up and shouted; some people didn't want to look. They hadn't experienced such a [realistic] scene in Ladakhi film," says Dawa. "After seeing the movie, many people said to me: 'This time you did a very difficult job – you climbed on trees.' I said, 'No we used a crane.' And they said, 'What's a crane?' "
Change is rippling through the thin air of Leh town, which is 12,000 feet above sea level. The number of tourists has more than quadrupled since the turn of the century, to 74,000 last year.
Only 115,000 people actually live in the district of Ladakh, mostly in villages nourished by glacial runoff and watched over by medieval monasteries. Cellphone towers are no more than five years old; satellite TV is another newcomer.
But after an initial invasion of English and Hindi songs, films, and pop culture, it's once again Ladakhi songs that are played in the taxis and the hotels.
"There is this massive insecurity that Ladakh culture is disappearing," says Shabani Hassanwalia, codirector of a new documentary, "Out of Thin Air," about the Ladakhi film industry. "They basically feel everything opened up too quickly to foreigners and foreign ideas."
The violence ofHollywood does not resonate with the pacifist Buddhist traditions here. Indian cinema, meanwhile, barely reflects this corner of India – rarely casting mountain peoples whose looks place them more in harmony with Tibet than with Delhi .
"Our eyes are smaller and noses smaller – our features are different. Maybe Bollywood people wouldn't like to take us," says Stanzin Namdol, the leading Ladakhi actress who was paid a record $1,000 for her role in "Las-Del." Shy little girls now come up to her and ask for autographs, quickly hiding behind someone else after handing up the pen and paper.
Ladakhis naturally want to see people like themselves on the silver screen, says Ms. Hassanwalia. They also want to see their Ladakhi values on display.
"In Ladakh, the family structure is very strong, and everybody celebrates together," says Hassanwalia. "So movie-watching is a family experience, and they believe that Bollywood is becoming racier and racier, and so you can't watch it as a family any more."
Ladakh cinema actually marks a return to Bollywood's roots.
For their rupees, audiences expect to shed some tears over lovers thwarted by parents because of caste, class, or ethnic divides. Stunning mountain scenes form the backdrop for song-and-dance interludes.
Even the rare comedy reflects innocence. A former Buddhist monk, Thinlay Norbu, wrote a comedy script in the wee hours before 3:30 a.m. prayers. The funniest scene, he explains, is when two thieves try to escape on a donkey and fall down.
Six months ago, Mr. Norbu says, monastery politics grew unbearable for him, and he cast off the crimson robes in favor of sunglasses, jeans, and a Dockers denim shirt.
"Before, I was a monk, so I couldn't write love-story scripts," says Norbu. Now he's met a girl named Tajin. "I am already in love, and through this experience, I find it easy to express myself and to write the script."
At a local film shoot two lovers, running hand in hand through a barley field, find a spot they think will be safe for smooching. But no sooner do they sit down than a farmer pops up from a hole in the ground. The lovers feign surprise.
"Tikh hai! Good!" shouts director Tundup Dorjay, pleased that on this second take, actress Sonam Spaldon followed his advice about how to act frightened.
He takes out an old Philips tape deck and presses "play," replacing the pastoral sounds of yak bells with sugary Indian singsong. Ms. Spaldon launches into her dance routine – but Mr. Dorjay soon steps in to demonstrate, swaying his hips while bending his knees like a downhill skier.
Like most actors in Ladakhi films, Spaldon has no experience.
"She's got a pretty face, and she's interested in acting, and if someone is interested in something, we have to get them involved," says Dorjay.
The plot of this yet-untitled film involves an orphan girl who has inherited both a lot of property and a scheming aunt as her guardian. The aunt tries to marry off the girl to a bad man in order to steal her property, but the girl instead breaks taboos by falling for a poor Tibetan boy instead.
"This kind of story is happening in many places," says Rigzin Dhondup, the actor who plays opposite Spaldon. "Some of the parents watching the film – maybe they will change their mind and be better toward their children."
Such romantic taboos are receding somewhat from Bollywood scripts aboutIndia 's dizzying urban liberalization and its quest for riches. But such themes remain central in rural Indian life.
"Bollywood now is increasingly about urbanIndia ," says Hassanwalia, the documentary filmmaker. "In fact, it is almost entirely about urban India because we have multiplexes and that's where the paying audience is."
But there's some money in the makeshift theaters here to support an indigenous industry. Tickets run about a dollar, depending on the venue. Popular movies might run for a month in the 250-seat capacity Leh theater, then continue in the countryside. Then there are CD and DVD sales in the local markets several years after the film's release.
Out of the roughly 28 films made since the industry began in 2003, about six or seven made money, figures Dawa.
It cost Ladakh Vision Group $30,000 to produce "Las-Del." It will make a "good profit," the group says, thanks to its being dubbed into Tibetan – that will broaden its audience. But any profits will be plowed back into equipment upgrades and charity, they say.
"We cannot make a big-budget film here. If we make a really good film, it is likely to go over budget," says Tsering Angdus, a cofounder of Ladakh Vision Group whose day job is public relations for the government. "If we have a good budget and new equipment, we could go for a film of international standards."
The perception of big profits is making it harder to stay under budget.
Dawa recounts a recent run-in with a farmer midway through a shoot in the farmer's field. He demanded $20 for the time the crew spent on his land – then insisted they finish shooting and pay him another $20. And while the actors at Dorjay's shoot all worked free of charge, some actors now ask for thousands of dollars – despite having zero experience.
The creeping commercialization does provide new jobs for local youths – and encouragement to aspiring filmmakers worldwide.
Hassanwalia says that it was at once exciting and humbling to have just graduated from film school, only to see a group of untrained amateurs making technically advanced films with an old PC and some manuals downloaded from the Internet.
"We were very inspired by them," says Hassanwalia. "And now people who watch [our] film say, 'If they can do it, we can do it.' "
Around every corner in this distant Himalayan district of India, someone is in the movies. Bureaucrats and Buddhist monks write screenplays, taxi drivers and cops play villains and heroines, and the superstar actress gets paid $1,000 a movie.
Ladakhi films première to packed crowds in the capital, Leh, in an auditorium just off the polo field. Then they head to the villages, shown with LCD projectors and portable speakers. In this northern nook of
The film industry here emerged right about the time, early in this decade, that cellphone towers and tourists saturated this once-isolated community. Ladakhis quickly put 21st-century social media toward preserving a traditional culture they felt was under siege.
"The young generation nowadays are influenced by the Western people – what they eat, how they dress," says Dorjay Khanang, a former soldier and one of the founders of Ladakh Vision Group, the region's original film studio. "Through these films, we are saying we have our own culture and tradition from ancient times in Ladakh."
Their brand of traditional movies turned out to be wildly popular.
"Traditional," explains Mr. Khanang, means using Ladakhi language and clothes. Modern roads and vehicles are nowhere to be seen. But portraying a Shangri-la that was can be a challenge.
"There are only a few places we can shoot," says Tashi Dawa, a local filmmaker, "because everywhere there are electric wires, cell towers, and greenhouses."
For a recent "blockbuster," titled "Las-Del" ("Karmic Connection"), Mr. Dawa explains how an electricity pole got in the way of a bucolic scene. Their solution? Cover it in Buddhist prayer flags.
There's a tinge of irony in the backlash against modern technology, since ultramodern digital video and movie-editing software made this regional film industry possible. Outside filmmakers say some of the Ladakhi films are starting to show high production values.
Last year, for example, the Ladakh Vision Group bought a 30-foot film crane. It enabled them to stage a scene in "Las-Del" in which a boy, girl, and horse topple off a cliff.
"People in the theater got up and shouted; some people didn't want to look. They hadn't experienced such a [realistic] scene in Ladakhi film," says Dawa. "After seeing the movie, many people said to me: 'This time you did a very difficult job – you climbed on trees.' I said, 'No we used a crane.' And they said, 'What's a crane?' "
Change is rippling through the thin air of Leh town, which is 12,000 feet above sea level. The number of tourists has more than quadrupled since the turn of the century, to 74,000 last year.
Only 115,000 people actually live in the district of Ladakh, mostly in villages nourished by glacial runoff and watched over by medieval monasteries. Cellphone towers are no more than five years old; satellite TV is another newcomer.
But after an initial invasion of English and Hindi songs, films, and pop culture, it's once again Ladakhi songs that are played in the taxis and the hotels.
"There is this massive insecurity that Ladakh culture is disappearing," says Shabani Hassanwalia, codirector of a new documentary, "Out of Thin Air," about the Ladakhi film industry. "They basically feel everything opened up too quickly to foreigners and foreign ideas."
The violence of
"Our eyes are smaller and noses smaller – our features are different. Maybe Bollywood people wouldn't like to take us," says Stanzin Namdol, the leading Ladakhi actress who was paid a record $1,000 for her role in "Las-Del." Shy little girls now come up to her and ask for autographs, quickly hiding behind someone else after handing up the pen and paper.
A picture of the highest paid ladaki actress Stanzin Namdol
Ladakhis naturally want to see people like themselves on the silver screen, says Ms. Hassanwalia. They also want to see their Ladakhi values on display.
"In Ladakh, the family structure is very strong, and everybody celebrates together," says Hassanwalia. "So movie-watching is a family experience, and they believe that Bollywood is becoming racier and racier, and so you can't watch it as a family any more."
Ladakh cinema actually marks a return to Bollywood's roots.
For their rupees, audiences expect to shed some tears over lovers thwarted by parents because of caste, class, or ethnic divides. Stunning mountain scenes form the backdrop for song-and-dance interludes.
Even the rare comedy reflects innocence. A former Buddhist monk, Thinlay Norbu, wrote a comedy script in the wee hours before 3:30 a.m. prayers. The funniest scene, he explains, is when two thieves try to escape on a donkey and fall down.
Six months ago, Mr. Norbu says, monastery politics grew unbearable for him, and he cast off the crimson robes in favor of sunglasses, jeans, and a Dockers denim shirt.
"Before, I was a monk, so I couldn't write love-story scripts," says Norbu. Now he's met a girl named Tajin. "I am already in love, and through this experience, I find it easy to express myself and to write the script."
At a local film shoot two lovers, running hand in hand through a barley field, find a spot they think will be safe for smooching. But no sooner do they sit down than a farmer pops up from a hole in the ground. The lovers feign surprise.
"Tikh hai! Good!" shouts director Tundup Dorjay, pleased that on this second take, actress Sonam Spaldon followed his advice about how to act frightened.
He takes out an old Philips tape deck and presses "play," replacing the pastoral sounds of yak bells with sugary Indian singsong. Ms. Spaldon launches into her dance routine – but Mr. Dorjay soon steps in to demonstrate, swaying his hips while bending his knees like a downhill skier.
Like most actors in Ladakhi films, Spaldon has no experience.
"She's got a pretty face, and she's interested in acting, and if someone is interested in something, we have to get them involved," says Dorjay.
The plot of this yet-untitled film involves an orphan girl who has inherited both a lot of property and a scheming aunt as her guardian. The aunt tries to marry off the girl to a bad man in order to steal her property, but the girl instead breaks taboos by falling for a poor Tibetan boy instead.
"This kind of story is happening in many places," says Rigzin Dhondup, the actor who plays opposite Spaldon. "Some of the parents watching the film – maybe they will change their mind and be better toward their children."
Such romantic taboos are receding somewhat from Bollywood scripts about
"Bollywood now is increasingly about urban
But there's some money in the makeshift theaters here to support an indigenous industry. Tickets run about a dollar, depending on the venue. Popular movies might run for a month in the 250-seat capacity Leh theater, then continue in the countryside. Then there are CD and DVD sales in the local markets several years after the film's release.
Out of the roughly 28 films made since the industry began in 2003, about six or seven made money, figures Dawa.
It cost Ladakh Vision Group $30,000 to produce "Las-Del." It will make a "good profit," the group says, thanks to its being dubbed into Tibetan – that will broaden its audience. But any profits will be plowed back into equipment upgrades and charity, they say.
"We cannot make a big-budget film here. If we make a really good film, it is likely to go over budget," says Tsering Angdus, a cofounder of Ladakh Vision Group whose day job is public relations for the government. "If we have a good budget and new equipment, we could go for a film of international standards."
The perception of big profits is making it harder to stay under budget.
Dawa recounts a recent run-in with a farmer midway through a shoot in the farmer's field. He demanded $20 for the time the crew spent on his land – then insisted they finish shooting and pay him another $20. And while the actors at Dorjay's shoot all worked free of charge, some actors now ask for thousands of dollars – despite having zero experience.
Director Tundup Dorjay and Cinematographer Rinchin Namgial at work.
The creeping commercialization does provide new jobs for local youths – and encouragement to aspiring filmmakers worldwide.
Hassanwalia says that it was at once exciting and humbling to have just graduated from film school, only to see a group of untrained amateurs making technically advanced films with an old PC and some manuals downloaded from the Internet.
"We were very inspired by them," says Hassanwalia. "And now people who watch [our] film say, 'If they can do it, we can do it.' "
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Rakhi Sawant's mother evicted from Big Boss 3
Item girl Rakhi Sawant’s mother Jaya has been badmouthing her female co-participants in “Bigg Boss” ever since she was evicted from the popular reality TV show.
“The girls didn’t behave well with me at all. They used to talk in English in front of me despite knowing that I don’t understand the language and then used to make fun of me and laugh at me, I didn’t like it at all,” Jaya, who was the first to make an exit from the third season of “Bigg Boss” Friday, told IANS over telephone from Mumbai.
She was quick to point out two incidents when the women, especially Shamita Shetty, Tanaaz Currim, Poonam Dhillon and Aditi Govitrikar sniggered at her and disrespected her on the show, where she was locked up with 12 celebrity participants.
“Once I had to ask the audience to vote for me. So Vindu (Vindu Dara Singh) told me I should sit in front of the camera and ask for votes in Marathi. And when I did so, these girls just started laughing. Later, they said that it seemed like I was chanting – ‘Bhaaji lelo, bhaaji lelo’ (Buy vegetables). That time I started crying,” Jaya said.
Jaya, who worked as a nurse earlier, says she specifically faced a problem with actress Tanaaz Currim.
“On one of the days when we were all having food, Tanaaz asked everyone if anyone wanted a chapati. I said ‘I want two’. She gave me one and then when I went and asked her for another one, she shouted at me and asked me to go and sit at the dining table. She then gave the chapati to her husband (Bakhtiyaar Irani). I felt very hurt,” she mainained.
However, Jaya said the males in the “Bigg Boss” house were extremely sensitive to her needs and addressed her as “Mummy”.
“Rohit (Verma) always helped me and spoke to me like a son and so did Vindu. They took care of all my needs. But the girls were too much,” she said and added that the women didn’t even leave warm water for her to take a bath.
She is also upset that she couldn’t completely achieve her aim behind participating in the show – convincing her daughter Rakhi to reconcile with her.
“I came on the show for Rakhi – so that she forgets all differences and comes back to me. I don’t even know why she stopped talking to me. But I will keep trying as long as I can. Rest, I can only wish the best for my daughter.
“I hope Jesus blesses her with whatever she needs in life,” she added.
Jaya was the only non-celebrity contestant on the show, where she didn’t fail to hold back her melodramatic ways. She shed tears, danced and sang, much to the amusement of the other house members.
“The girls didn’t behave well with me at all. They used to talk in English in front of me despite knowing that I don’t understand the language and then used to make fun of me and laugh at me, I didn’t like it at all,” Jaya, who was the first to make an exit from the third season of “Bigg Boss” Friday, told IANS over telephone from Mumbai.
She was quick to point out two incidents when the women, especially Shamita Shetty, Tanaaz Currim, Poonam Dhillon and Aditi Govitrikar sniggered at her and disrespected her on the show, where she was locked up with 12 celebrity participants.
“Once I had to ask the audience to vote for me. So Vindu (Vindu Dara Singh) told me I should sit in front of the camera and ask for votes in Marathi. And when I did so, these girls just started laughing. Later, they said that it seemed like I was chanting – ‘Bhaaji lelo, bhaaji lelo’ (Buy vegetables). That time I started crying,” Jaya said.
Jaya, who worked as a nurse earlier, says she specifically faced a problem with actress Tanaaz Currim.
“On one of the days when we were all having food, Tanaaz asked everyone if anyone wanted a chapati. I said ‘I want two’. She gave me one and then when I went and asked her for another one, she shouted at me and asked me to go and sit at the dining table. She then gave the chapati to her husband (Bakhtiyaar Irani). I felt very hurt,” she mainained.
However, Jaya said the males in the “Bigg Boss” house were extremely sensitive to her needs and addressed her as “Mummy”.
“Rohit (Verma) always helped me and spoke to me like a son and so did Vindu. They took care of all my needs. But the girls were too much,” she said and added that the women didn’t even leave warm water for her to take a bath.
She is also upset that she couldn’t completely achieve her aim behind participating in the show – convincing her daughter Rakhi to reconcile with her.
“I came on the show for Rakhi – so that she forgets all differences and comes back to me. I don’t even know why she stopped talking to me. But I will keep trying as long as I can. Rest, I can only wish the best for my daughter.
“I hope Jesus blesses her with whatever she needs in life,” she added.
Jaya was the only non-celebrity contestant on the show, where she didn’t fail to hold back her melodramatic ways. She shed tears, danced and sang, much to the amusement of the other house members.
Friday, October 9, 2009
Swathi to pair Vikram in Selvaraghavan’s film
Swathi's Telugu television show by name 'Colors' earned her the pet name 'Colors Swathi'. Her debut film in Telugu 'Adavari Maatalaku Ardhale Verule' directed by Selvaraghavan proved that she is an actress of fine mettle. Impressed by her performance, Selva was keen to cast her in his Tamil flick and her work in Subramaniapuram further strengthened his thoughts on this. Now, sources close to Selva aver that Swathi will be the leading lady for his next assignment with Cheeyan Vikram. If this works through, Swathi is definitely on a right track in her career.
Nayanthara will soon be seen in Kannada films
Crazy star Ravichandran gets the credit of bringing beauties from the other states to Kannada. He has introduced Juhi Chawla, Kushboo and recently Namitha into Sandalwood. The latest one to enter this line-up is our Keralite hottie- beauty Nayantara! Ravichandran is introducing her to Kannada audience through his forthcoming movie Kichaka. The buxom beauty who enthralled almost the entire South India is ready to mesmerize Karnataka too. Actor, director and producer V Ravichandran is acting opposite Dr. Jayapradha for the first time in his career. Jayapradha is also playing an important role in this film whereas Ravichandran will play a dual role as a father and son. The film has story and screenplay by actor-cum-director Mohan. Produced by Munirathna, Kichaka will start rolling from October 18th
Sandhya successful journey continues
Sandhya has successfully completed five years in film industry. It is because of the support of my directors, producers, fans and last but not the least, my family members, says the actress, who started her journey with Kadhal in 2004. Sandhya is currently acting in films like Irumbu Kottai Murattu Singam, Odipolama and Nootrukku Nooru in Tamil. Buzz is that she is all set to sign on the dotted lines for two more movies. I am eagerly expecting the release of Kannada movie Aptha Rakshaka, which is a sequel to the blockbuster 'Aptha Mithra' (Chandramukhi in Tamil).
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Salary war is gripping the Kollywood heroines
Gone are those days when heroines used to earn a little, compared to the heroes. We hear that Trisha took home 80 lakhs for a Tamil movie and 1.10 crore for Telugu after paying the income tax last year. The next highest paid girl was Nayantara who earned 70 lakhs for Tamil and 85 lakhs for Telugu. Though Shriya came in later, the girl also demanded 85 lakhs. Till last July, it was Trisha who was the No.1 in the Industry but the white beauty Tamannah has pushed her down now. The latest hot news we hear from the production house of Vijay’s 50th film Sura is that Tamannah is paid 90 lakhs. Shocking news that adds fuel to this salary issue is from Kamal’s office. Birdies say that there are a lot of possibilities for Tamannah to be roped in for the Mysskin-Kamal project that is on cards. And so, the girl’s salary might touch a crore’s mark very soon!
Bipasha not part of Ravan cast
Sources have it that Mandodari’s character seemed using much space in the movie and more dominating than the other leading ladies, Aishwarya Rai and Priyamani, in the movie. Meanwhile, Bips is really upset over the news and said, I am sad... but it’s better than having my role chopped or totally edited... when lot of effort had gone to work out the role for this guest character. However, the director’s publicist stated that he did not want to any injustice to her role and he would see that they both work together next time. So one has to wait for sometime to see whether this dusky beauty is really off the movie or not. For, it is said that either Mandodari’s character will remain in the movie or Bips will be replaced
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