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Star-studded Coolie unleashes trailer on August 2

Star-studded Coolie unleashes trailer on August 2

Muscat Daily5 days ago
Chennai- Sun Pictures is back with another action-packed blockbuster that is sure to not roll back on its punches as Rajinikanth's highly-anticipated Coolie is said to release a film trailer this August, and fans can't wait to see it in theatres this weekend.
Stars like Rajinikanth, Aamir Khan and Nagarjuna are expected to reunite onscreen for their first official trailer while viewers can take a peek at some shots of some of the other A-list celebrities that make up this film's cast. Yes, this includes Sathyaraj, Upendra, Soubin Shahir and Shruti Hassan. Film-goers can keep their eyes peeled for some intense and dramatic action sequences and stellar performances all throughout the upcoming movie.
With an estimated budget of 400mn rupees and an acclaimed director like Leo and Vikram 's Kanagaraj at the helm of this project, this project is shaping up to be one of the most anticipated Indian movies of this year.
With the attention-grabbing poster and catchy film tunes such as 'Monica', 'Powerhouse' and 'Disco' which have gained a lot of attention on social media these last few months, audiences are excited to see what the trailer reveals about the overall tone of the movie.
Set to release on August 14, trading blows with another equally-anticipated project like War 2 at the box office, its time to grab our buckets of popcorn and see if this film truly has the potential to become a trailblazer of modern Tamil cinema, as industry insiders claim it to be.
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Filmmakers try to cash in on India-Pakistan battle
Filmmakers try to cash in on India-Pakistan battle

Observer

time2 days ago

  • Observer

Filmmakers try to cash in on India-Pakistan battle

Mumbai - Indian filmmakers are locking up the rights to movie titles that can profit from the patriotism fanned by a four-day conflict with Pakistan, which killed more than 70 people. The nuclear-armed rivals exchanged artillery, drone, and air strikes in May, after India blamed Pakistan for an armed attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir. The fighting came to an end when US President Donald Trump announced a surprise ceasefire. Now, some Bollywood filmmakers see an opportunity to cash in on the battle. India tagged its military action against Pakistan 'Operation Sindoor', the Hindi word for vermilion, which married Hindu women wear on their foreheads. The name was seen as a symbol of Delhi's determination to avenge those widowed in the April 22 attack in Kashmir's Pahalgam, which sparked the hostilities. Film studios have registered a slew of titles evoking the operation, including: 'Mission Sindoor', 'Sindoor: The Revenge', 'The Pahalgam Terror', and 'Sindoor Operation'. "It's a story which needs to be told," said director Vivek Agnihotri. "If it were Hollywood, they would have made 10 films on this subject. People want to know what happened behind the scenes," he told AFP. Agnihotri struck box office success with his 2022 release, "The Kashmir Files", based on the mass flight of Hindus from Kashmir in the 1990s. - Coloured narratives - The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party gave that film a glowing endorsement, despite accusations that it aimed to stir up hatred against India's minority. Since Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi took office in 2014, some critics say Bollywood is increasingly promoting his government's ideology. Raja Sen, a film critic and screenwriter, said filmmakers felt emboldened by an amenable government. "We tried to wage a war, and then we quietened down when Trump asked us to. So what is the valour here?" Sen told AFP of the Pakistan clashes. Anil Sharma, known for directing rabble-rousing movies, criticised the apparent rush to make films related to the Pahalgam attack. "This is herd mentality... these are seasonal filmmakers, they have their constraints," he said. "I don't wait for an incident to happen and then make a film based on that. A subject should evoke feelings and only then cinema happens," said Sharma. Sharma's historical action flick "Gadar: Ek Prem Katha" (2001) and its sequel "Gadar 2" (2023), both featuring Sunny Deol in lead roles, were big hits. In Bollywood, filmmakers often seek to time releases for national holidays like Independence Day, which are associated with heightened patriotic fervour. "Fighter", featuring big stars Hrithik Roshan and Deepika Padukone, was released on the eve of India's Republic Day on January 25 last year. - Anti-Muslim bias - Though not a factual retelling, it drew heavily from India's 2019 airstrike on Pakistan's Balakot. The film received mixed-to-positive reviews but raked in $28 million in India, making it the fourth highest-grossing Hindi film of that year. This year, "Chhaava", a drama based on the life of Sambhaji Maharaj, a ruler of the Maratha Empire, became the highest-grossing film so far this year. It also generated significant criticism for fuelling anti-Muslim bias. "This is at a time when cinema is aggressively painting Muslim kings and leaders in violent light," said Sen. "This is where those who are telling the stories need to be responsible about which stories they choose to tell." Sen said filmmakers were reluctant to choose topics that are "against the establishment". "If the public is flooded with dozens of films that are all trying to serve an agenda, without the other side allowed to make itself heard, then that propaganda and misinformation enters the public psyche," he said. Acclaimed director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra said true patriotism is promoting peace and harmony through the medium of cinema. Mehra's socio-political drama "Rang De Basanti" (2006) won the National Film Award for Best Popular Film and was chosen as India's official entry for the Golden Globe Awards and the Academy Awards in the Best Foreign Language Film category. "How we can arrive at peace and build a better society? How can we learn to love our neighbours?" he asked. "For me that is patriotism."

A Designer Was Ready for India's Fashion Moment
A Designer Was Ready for India's Fashion Moment

Observer

time4 days ago

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A Designer Was Ready for India's Fashion Moment

In June, Kartik Kumra was confronted, for the first time in his life, with a scrum of reporters. His brand, Kartik Research, had just made its runway debut at Paris Fashion Week, showcasing a collection of soft-edged clothing infused with the visual language of India. A pair of beige hand-spun pleated linen pants were spruced up with floral embroidery swirling around the ankle of one leg. And a black blazer was transformed with a flash of gold Banarasi silk peeking through the lapel. It just so happened that Kumra's show had taken place in the middle of a season in which India seemed to be on the mood board of the luxury fashion world. Prada sent models down its menswear runway in footwear that closely resembled Kolhapuri sandals. A few days later, at the Louis Vuitton menswear show, the brand's creative director, Pharrell Williams, re-created the ancient Indian game of Snakes and Ladders as a set for his show. After Kumra's show ended, the assembled reporters peppered him with questions. 'What did you think of the LV show?' he recalled them asking during a recent interview. 'What about the Prada show?' It became abundantly clear to Kumra, 25, that India's sartorial choices were being repackaged as trendy. And that his brand had found itself at the center of that moment. Even having a presence at Fashion Week, alongside what he called 'the big guys,' was once unthinkable for Kumra, who started his brand four years ago in his college dorm room as he studied economics at the University of Pennsylvania. At that time, he had no experience in fashion or design. But his brand's ability to reframe Indian crafts in the context of Western fashion has attracted a loyal — or, as Kumra described it, 'sticky' — following and prepared him for the mainstream spotlight. His work has been seen on Kendrick Lamar, Stephen Curry, Brad Pitt, Riz Ahmed, Lewis Hamilton and Paul Mescal. When the brand released a limited run of embroidered Converse sneakers in May, the shoes sold out almost immediately. In 2023, Kumra's brand was a semifinalist for the coveted LVMH Prize for Young Fashion Designers. Kartik Research is now stocked in 70 locations around the world, including Mr Porter and Selfridges. Next spring, it will arrive at Harrods in London. Kumra will also introduce a line of womenswear at Bergdorf Goodman in March. 'Next season, India is not going to be the reference for them,' he said, referring to companies like Prada and Louis Vuitton. 'But this is our thing. We built a business on it and we're going to keep doing it.' A few weeks after his show in Paris, at the brand's new brick-and-mortar store in the busy Dimes Square neighborhood in New York City, Kumra was manning the floor. In one corner stood a classic Indian straw daybed. On the wall, there was a painting of Hindu mythology. A live cricket match — India versus England — was streaming on his laptop. A single rack of clothes ran the length of the store. Each garment had made its way through an 'independent universe of small makers,' Kumra said. 'The real experts — the master embroiderers, weavers, printers.' Their work isn't scalable, nor can you find their phone numbers online. To work with them requires building on-the-ground relationships. A white shirt on the rack, for example, was handmade by a man in the state of Gujarat, using what is known as bhujodi weaving. That weaver noticed, during one of Kumra's visits to his workshop, that Kumra was wearing handloom denim pants. 'He was like, 'Oh, let me connect you to my handloom denim guys,'' Kumra said. 'And I went and visited them — they were a couple hours away — and now they make our denim pants.' Piece by piece, Kumra has built a network of artisans who aren't easily accessible. That gives Kumra a leg up on brands that parachute in and wax poetic about Indian craft for a season or two, said Julie Ragolia, a New York-based stylist and consultant who became a mentor to Kumra through a program called Mr Porter Futures. Kumra, who grew up in New Delhi, had a fervent interest in fashion and streetwear as a consumer long before conceiving Kartik Research. Through college and high school, he would resell sneakers. He admired the work of Dries Van Noten, and he was, like so many teenagers, a Supreme enthusiast. He also enjoyed sketching and doodling. When COVID shuttered universities in 2020, Kumra, who had an internship in finance lined up, decided instead to spend his free time in New Delhi putting together a business plan. His mother shuttled him around the country to meet with artisans. Some of the money he earned from reselling sneakers — roughly $5,000 — became the startup capital for what was then Karu MFG — 'karu' is the Sanskrit word for 'artisan,' and 'MFG' is short for 'manufacturing.' He cold-called factories and found one, on the brink of closing as a result of the pandemic, that agreed to create 22 garments for him. 'The look book cost 1,000 bucks — a friend shot it, and we got models for 200 bucks,' he said. 'The location was free, it was 10 minutes away from my house.' Kumra then jumped into the Discord channel of 'Throwing Fits,' a podcast for menswear enthusiasts, to share his designs and solicit feedback. 'I was just really blown away — this young guy was a fan of us, but when we saw his work we were becoming a fan of him,' said one of the podcast's hosts, Lawrence Schlossman. 'I actually remember my first piece of feedback was just like drop the MFG.' By the time Kumra returned to Philadelphia to finish his degree in 2022, he was running a full-blown business. A stylist messaged him one night about one of his cardigans: 'Yo, Kendrick's wearing it.' As in the Pulitzer Prize-winning rapper. That was the first time, in Kumra's recollection, that his friends realized he wasn't lying about having started a brand. As he builds Kartik Research, Kumra is not taking a salary. His mother still helps out, working on the finance and accounting side. It was just in the last year that Kumra hired two designers. In a cheeky acknowledgment of the heightened interest and momentum around Indian fashion, Kumra's own inspirations, and how, he said, work from there could one day be considered 'globally aspirational,' the Kartik Research show in Paris in June was accompanied with a look book. Its title? 'How to Make It in India.' —NYT

Star-studded Coolie unleashes trailer on August 2
Star-studded Coolie unleashes trailer on August 2

Muscat Daily

time5 days ago

  • Muscat Daily

Star-studded Coolie unleashes trailer on August 2

Chennai- Sun Pictures is back with another action-packed blockbuster that is sure to not roll back on its punches as Rajinikanth's highly-anticipated Coolie is said to release a film trailer this August, and fans can't wait to see it in theatres this weekend. Stars like Rajinikanth, Aamir Khan and Nagarjuna are expected to reunite onscreen for their first official trailer while viewers can take a peek at some shots of some of the other A-list celebrities that make up this film's cast. Yes, this includes Sathyaraj, Upendra, Soubin Shahir and Shruti Hassan. Film-goers can keep their eyes peeled for some intense and dramatic action sequences and stellar performances all throughout the upcoming movie. With an estimated budget of 400mn rupees and an acclaimed director like Leo and Vikram 's Kanagaraj at the helm of this project, this project is shaping up to be one of the most anticipated Indian movies of this year. With the attention-grabbing poster and catchy film tunes such as 'Monica', 'Powerhouse' and 'Disco' which have gained a lot of attention on social media these last few months, audiences are excited to see what the trailer reveals about the overall tone of the movie. Set to release on August 14, trading blows with another equally-anticipated project like War 2 at the box office, its time to grab our buckets of popcorn and see if this film truly has the potential to become a trailblazer of modern Tamil cinema, as industry insiders claim it to be.

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