Thursday 17 June 2021

Celebrating Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam: Trending online















 

Released 22 years ago today on 18 June 1999, Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, Aishwarya Rai's fourth film catapulted her to the stratosphere - from newcomer to Number One - in a gigantic leap. 

She's beyond breathtaking in the film. 


Wednesday 16 June 2021

Sunil Shetty and Aishwarya Rai in the 90s



Athiya Shetty mentioned that she went to her dad's film sets and just sat and stared at Aishwarya Rai all day. Sonakshi Sinha in an interview with Karan Johar said, had she been on the sets of Taal - she'd end up just looking at her all day. 

People forget, 90s Aishwarya was the definitive 8th wonder of the world! I mean, Just. Look. At. Her.


Thursday 10 June 2021

TBT: TOP TEN MOVIE magazine covers of ALL TIME: Bollywood stars, legends, thespians, icons, controversial movers and shakers of Mumbai

After an online chat with pioneering film magazine editor Dinesh Raheja, who helmed MOVIE magazine with such erudite and informed precision, topped with skillful visual story-telling, here's looking back at the best Bollywood film magazine covers of ALL-time! In fact, for my money's worth, the best film magazine India ever produced; MOVIE. 

A fan favourite of Indian cinema buffs, it was also a magazine all Mumbai film stars willingly picked up and made time for - especially if/when they knew it might be a potential cover shoot with a novel twist.  

Celebrities went to the MOVIE magazine office to chat with fans (not to beat up writers, cough cough Dharmendra! Saif Ali Khan! - we remember all!!!). They experimented with looks, they stripped down for controversial covers, they spoke at length about sensitive matters, they knew they wouldn't be misquoted and they knew they wouldn't have to deal with amateurs boring them with inane q's about alleged affairs, speculative dalliances or anything that made for ill-mannered retinue of queries. 

MOVIE magazine was fun, informative, it had a bird's eye view of where the audience was heading, it heard the beats from the pulse of the cine-going nation. It let Madhuri Dixit know that Juhi Chawla was breathing down her neck with a box-office triumph of Darr and an award-winning turn at Hum Hai Rahi Pyar Ke. But what really set the tone and allerted all that chirpy Chawla had reached the pinnacle, a whopping majority of votes as a fan-favourite in MOVIE magazine's annual opinion poll issue. 

In fact, the annual opinion poll issues were the most anticipated editions of the year - no less than an award  for any star, if they topped the pyramid with the highest percentage of votes. The annuals were collector's items, the photo essays were no less than modern art. The late greats - Gautam da, Jagdish Mali - famed Indian photographers all contributed and put their stamp on the magazine with glossy portraits of the most beautiful faces of Indian cinema. 

Before remakes were popular, it brought Amitabh Bachchan and Rajesh Khanna together for an Anand reunion - in print. When an unbecoming tragedy occurred with the death of 19-year-old Divya Bharti, they pulled together a commemorative issue that was both respectful and factual - editing out all speculation and deleting all bat-shit conspiracy theories. The team had a refreshing take for film journalism in India, facts, not just biased opinions, informed reportage, not just reams of gossip columns.   

When the magazine dwindled down with the unceremonious exit of Raheja (and Jitender Kothari), a rich chapter of recorded Bollywood history closed. 

For a nostalgic jog down memory lane, here's a retrospective of the Top Ten bestselling MOVIE magazine issues. 

Starting off with simply the best of Bollywood; Sridevi and Aamir Khan;






Above Left: Pooja Bhatt painted by Ana Singh for MOVIE magazine's March 1995 cover. 
Above Right: Annie Leibovitz shot Demi Moore nude - but covered in a painted three-piece suit, published in August 1993. 



"We rarely used stock pics and I would be present to ensure that pics were executed as I had visualised them. The photographers I worked regularly were Jagdish Mali, Rakesh Shrestha and Gautam Rajadhakshya,"  Dinesh Raheja






"Sridevi in a golden turban - in fact I did six to seven covers with Sridevi and all were runaway successes!"







Tuesday 8 June 2021

Rekha


The ageless wonder; Rekha. 

Last of the true blue celebrities; a stunning actress with an equally fascinating off-screen life. The person and persona as different as can be, born to fame. 

Monday 7 June 2021

Raakhee Gulzar by Gautam Rajadhyaksha


Raakhee Gulzar by Gautam Rajadhyaksha. 

One of the many exquisite portraits in the mighty tome Faces by Gautam Rajadhyaksha. 

At age 73, she's far from the madding crowds of Mumbai and film city. As one of the most acclaimed actresses of her time, her legacy is engraved in the annals of Bollywood.