Thursday, 23 April 2026

Jeans: Shankar’s Ambitious 1998 Tamil Blockbuster with Stunning Aishwarya Rai: A Hit in Tamil, Flop in Hindi

 

In the spring of 1998, Tamil cinema witnessed one of its most extravagant productions to date with the release of Jeans, a Tamil-language romantic comedy written and directed by the visionary S. Shankar. 

Premiering on April 24, 1998, the film arrived as a high-stakes gamble, boasting a then-record budget of approximately ₹20 crore. Produced by Ashok Amritraj and Dr. Murali Manohar (with Sunanda Murali Manohar), it aimed to blend family drama, romance, and globe-trotting spectacle in a story centered on identical twins and the complications of arranged marriages. 

The cast featured Prashanth in a dual role as the brothers Viswanathan and Ramamoorthy (also referred to as Vishu and Ramu in some contexts), with Aishwarya Rai essaying the dual parts of Madhumitha and Vaishnavi. Supporting players included legendary Malayalam actress Lakshmi, Radhika Sarathkumar, Nassar, Senthil, and Raju Sundaram. A.R. Rahman composed the memorable soundtrack, while Ashok Kumar’s cinematography captured lavish sequences, including one extravagant song reportedly filmed with visuals evoking the seven wonders of the world—a technical feat that underscored Shankar’s reputation for pushing cinematic boundaries in Tamil cinema. 

At the time of release, Aishwarya Rai, was 24 turning 25—a fresh face transitioning from modeling and her 1994 Miss World crown into acting. This marked one of her earliest major screen roles following her debut in critically acclaimed, Iruvar (1997), which met a lukewarm response by the audiences. Her co-star Prashanth, was also around 24-25 during filming; he reportedly cleared his schedule for the project, committing exclusively despite forgoing other offers. 

The chemistry (or lack there of!) between the leads did not work for the Hindi belt audiences - the two never worked together again after the film's release. 

Jeans proved a significant commercial success in its original Tamil version, particularly in Tamil Nadu, where it enjoyed extended theatrical runs, completing 100 days in multiple centers. It performed robustly in overseas markets like Malaysia [with its massive Tamil-speaking diaspora] as well, benefiting from strong anti-piracy measures at the time. The film’s scale, Rahman’s music, and the novelty of its international filming locations helped it recover its hefty investment through theatrical earnings, satellite rights, and ancillary revenue, cementing its status as a blockbuster in the South Indian market. 

However, the Hindi-dubbed version, released the same year under the same title, met with a markedly different fate. It underperformed at the Mumbai box office and failed to replicate the Tamil success nationally, drawing limited interest from Hindi-speaking audiences despite the considerable star power of a young Aishwarya Rai, fresh off the fame of her Miss World crown. 

This regional disparity highlighted the challenges of cross-language dubbing and audience preferences in 1990s Indian cinema, where cultural and linguistic nuances often determined a film’s pan-Indian reach. For Aishwarya Rai, Jeans served as a pivotal launchpad in the South. Though her performance drew mixed early reviews in some quarters, the film’s Tamil triumph boosted her visibility, paving the way for subsequent successes in both South and Hindi industries. 

More than 25 years later, Jeans remains a nostalgic touchstone for its audacious production values and the emergence of one of Indian cinema’s most enduring international stars. It exemplified Shankar’s knack for marrying commercial entertainment with technical innovation, even as it illustrated the uneven terrain of dubbed releases across India’s diverse markets. Before widespread digital streaming, the film’s theatrical journey underscored both the strengths of regional cinema and the hurdles of broader linguistic crossover. 

Aishwarya Rai and Prashant in the Tamil hit Jeans (1998)


28 years ago today, the Tamil film Jeans was released. 

An entertaining but essentially superficial film, it was rather shocking that Jeans went to the Oscars as an entry from India for Best Foreign Picture nominee. A decision almost universally ridiculed by critics.  

Only the music, costumes and dances of Aishwarya Rai stand out. And the visual spectacle of a summer release meant for box-office success, not critical acclaim. The Tamil version was a smash hit, the poorly dubbed Hindi version tanked. 

Released on 24 April 1998, Aishwarya Rai was 24 when she shot the film. Dazzling. Her tepid but trying performance was eclipsed by how staggeringly beautiful she looked in every costume in the film. 

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Aishwarya Rai in Hamara Dil Aapke Paas Hai

 Aishwarya Rai in Hamara Dil Aapke Paas Hai

The simple salwaars, the monochrome saris, Aishwarya Rai looked so stunning in this hit film. The simpler the outfit, the more stunning she looks. The razzle dazzle of designer duds work against her natural, God-given beauty. All those heinous red-carpet gowns at Cannes and wild array of flak and criticism she got for it tapered down when she wore traditional Indian attire that enhanced her looks and didn't distract from 'the face' of Indian cinema. 

Note how much she was appreciated at her first Cannes appearance wearing the mustard-sari designed by Neeta Lulla, and her last appearance wearing a white Manish Malhotra. Note how much praise she got for her simplicity in the first part of Taal and her no-make up look in Chokher Bali... 


Sunday, 19 April 2026

Twitter says its Aishwarya Rai and Abhishek Bachchan's 19th anniversary!

On 20 April 2007, Bollywood's most photogenic couple got hitched after a decade of friendship, films and fulfilling the fantasies of a billion. 

It was the wedding of the decade - made all the more enticing as the press was not privy to most of the functions. Till date, only a handful of images have ever leaked online - including a notoriously fake pic that went viral - as tabloids could not go to print without a picture. 

The power couple seems to have stood the test of time, not letting gossip, rumours of breakups and patch ups galore, affect them in any way in public. Silence is indeed golden - as are these two! I mean just look at 'em! 



 

Mamta Kulkarni: A Legend in her own mind. No where else.


Question: Has the Indian actress and sex symbol of the 1990s in Bollywood, Mamta Kulkarni ever been nominated, let alone won a Best Actress award?

Answer: In a word; No! 

In recent public appearances on TV shows, the notorious Indian celebrity -- calling her an actress is a stretch -- Mamta Kulkarni has been hyping her own past and calling herself a 'legend'. Clearly, we have varying definition of the term. 

Mamta Kulkarni has never been nominated for a Best Actress award (such as Filmfare Award for Best Actress or similar major categories for lead performances). Reliable sources like her ardent fan pages, IMDb awards section, and Filmfare-related records consistently show her only recognized nomination and win was the Filmfare Award for Lux New Face of the Year (now known as Best Female Debut) in 1994 for her performance in her debut film, Aashik Aawara. This was a debut/new face award, not a Best Actress category, and is usually handed out to photogenic newbies and non-actors the likes of Twinkle Khanna, Ananya Panday and the infamous Ms Kuklarni.  

There are no records of nominations for Filmfare Best Actress (or equivalents like Screen Awards, IIFA, etc.) in her career, which spanned the early to mid-1990s with films like Karan Arjun, Sabse Bada Khiladi, and China Gate. She may have had box-office successes and danced with controversy with her bold interviews and semi-nude magazine covers, but the now-retired actress has never been a serious contender despite proclaiming to the media that she had a greater following than Madhuri Dixit. 

In another word; Delulu. 

Now aged 54, the infamous actor appears in front of the media having eschewed cinema for religion, but several critics have noted that she's using religion to mask some serious allegations. She can try to camoflage her crimes with saffron drapes, but the long arm of the law is eventually going to reach her.  

Saturday, 18 April 2026

Aishwarya Rai in Taal

Subash Ghai thought he found the perfect muse in Madhuri Dixit - but really, it was the perfection of Aishwarya Rai in Taal. It's all been downhill after... 


 

Friday, 17 April 2026

Beauty Queens from India: Aishwarya Rai, Sushmita Sen, Diana Hayden and Yukta Mookhey







Sushmita Sen won the Miss Universe 1994, while Aishwarya Rai was Miss World, then in 1997 Diana Hayden (who also won multiple subtitles including Miss Photogenic) and then in 1999, the tallest of them all... Yukta Mookhey. 

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Rakhee and Aishwarya Rai


 


Raakhee Gulzar's last Hindi film was Dil Ka Rishta (2003), where she played Aishwarya Rai's mother (Tia's mom). Her absolute last film before a long hiatus from regular acting was the Bengali movie Shubho Mahurat (also 2003), for which she won the National Film Award for Best Supporting Actress. She largely stepped away from films after 2003 (with only sporadic Bengali projects much later, like Nirban in 2019 and Aamar Boss in 2025).

What most of new gen doesn't recognise or understand, Raakhee was considered one of the great beauties of Indian cinema - who was also a phenomenal actress. Shoort, moon-faced, and with that signature husk and dialogue delivery, Raakhee - now age 78 - has won several major awards over her career, with the most consistently cited major wins being her two National Film Awards, three Filmfare Awards. She finally was awarded the Padma Shri (India's fourth-highest civilian honour) in 2003 for contribution in the field of Arts. 

Ash had mentioned that she wanted to work with Raakhee as her mother said there was a resemblance between the two - we didn't see it back then, but thanks to Instagram and other social media handles, you can find, rare, vintage postcards of Raakhee from the early days and she was indeed a striking Bengali beauty. 

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Iconography: Rekha in Utsav: Iconic curvacious Indian beauty

Rekha, 30, in Utsav. Leena Daru did the memroable costumes and accessories for the leading lady

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

The iconic blue prom dress on Jaya Prada: Stylist Edit Peak 80s fashion and accessories


The iconic blue prom dress on Jaya Prada: Stylist Edit Peak 80s fashion and accessories. A look so memorable, one look and instantly ya know its from Sharaabi for that incredible song De de pyar de by the aincredible Asha Bhosle. 

Jaya Prada was 22 and Sharaabi was one of the biggest hits of 1984 - however, it was Amitabh Bachchan's towering, award-winning performance that people mostly remember. Unlike Sridevi or Rekha back then, Jaya Prada didn't get as many title or double roles to bolster her Bollywood career. She was often the perfectly lovely accessory to the leading man, she did a few memorable dances (a flawless dancer and so gracefu) but never did that many impactful films in Bollywood. Her collabs with legendary K Vishwanath were incredible, but didn't always translate to great box-office. 

Once called the most perfect face in Indian cinema - by Satyatjit Ray no less, we still think she was incredible but her full potential was rarely tapped. 



Sunday, 12 April 2026

Aishwarya Rai: Now and Then

Aishwarya Rai in Ritu Kumar from the early 90s to wearing Manish Malhotra recently. Stunning then, stunning now.

Stunning Aishwarya Rai, 19, with designer Ritu Kumar, the OG classic Indian designer who placed her power, influence and currency on Indian textiles and fabrication. She worked with Ash from the early days, focusing on the classic Indian beauty that she is. 

RIP Aasha Bhosle: Singing legend passes at age 92

Take away the songs of Lata Mangeshkar and Aasha Bhosle from Indian cinema, you take away the soul of Bollywood. Aasha Bhosle sang about 20 songs for Sridevi, and just 10 for Madhuri Dixit. But what songs! .

RIP Aasha Bhosle. 

Saturday, 11 April 2026

AI pics of Aishwarya Rai Bachchan trending on social media: AI Slop



 

Aishwarya Rai's AI pics... not a fan of fakes and the halogenic, hallucination aspects of fake imagery and the false premise and trickery of it... 

Friday, 10 April 2026

Aishwarya Rai with Sunil Shetty (aka Suneil Shetty) in (shelved) film Hum Panchi ek Daal Ke (1997)

Aishwarya Rai with Sunil Shetty (aka Suneil Shetty) in (shelved) film Hum Panchi ek Daal Ke which began shooting back in 1997!

Its funny that the two films Ash and Sunil Shetty worked on as leads never completed filming (the other being Radheshyam Sitaram). - considering both were and are utter professionals. Director Shashilal K. Nair famously stated in interviews that unlike Manisha Koirala, if the call time for a shot was 8am, Ash would be ready at 7.30, costume and makeup ready for camera. Manisha was notoriously late during her busy phase. 

The gentle giant Sunil Shetty was also known to be on time and professional - so what went wrong with the making of the film? Funds? Mishaps? Timetable conflicts?! All the above and then some including a notorious incident where in an accident, the film camera fell into the river! 

There ware several images of Aishwarya Rai in dance costume on set looking staggeringly beautiful - and we all know she's the most graceful dancer - pity we'll never see those songs and dances and clips... 

The Tulu speakers did appear in one released film, the ill-fated Umrao Jaan. 

Thursday, 9 April 2026

Aishwarya Rai in Hamara Dil Aapke Paas Hai

Aishwarya Rai in Hamara Dil Aapke Paas Hai

 


 Above: Film director Satish Kaushik with Aishwarya Rai on set


Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Aishwarya Rai's first Gladrags cover

Gladrags, 1992

 

Gladrags' obsession with light-skinned light-eyed beauties goes far back. Its most famous model and successful print edition featured Indo-Canadian export Lisa Ray. Young Aishwarya Rai was also featured on Gladrags covers early on  - and they weirdly took credit for her launch when she had already appeared in ads and other magazine covers... In the above image, Ash was just 18! When Lisa Ray first appeared on the cover of Gladrags, she was 19. For many aspiring models, the publication gave them opportunity, a kickstart for their portfolio and wherever it took them.  

Gladrags evaporated from newsstands when Maureen Wadia abandoned her once pet-project when age and poor health caught up with her. Without her propelling the magazine, it faltered and crashed on newsstands. Gone without a bang, but a whimper...    

Lisa Ray in Galdrags

TBH Gladrags was an editorial mess... it didn't know what it wanted to be; feature prominent Western stars and gossip or feature more Indian articles and interviews. It featured a lot of young, new aspiring male and female models, and has an archive of images of people who became, eventually, really famous. It was a great portfolio for young photographers, makeup artists and stylists to showcase creative, often sensual and very sexy, portfolios. Some of the shots of women, and on occasionally men, were very clutch-my-pearls gasp shocking... but are completely tame compared to the Insta thot shots that contemporary models are revealing today. Gladrags could have become as relevant today as it was back then, as till date it is/was a great launch pad for female and male models. It was often a steppingstone for several people who became stars, both big and small, who weren't nepo babies, who didn't get opportunities by the gatekeepers of media.

A quick, semi deep-dive; Gladrags was a Mumbai-based fashion and lifestyle magazine (also functioning as a men's magazine with swimsuit features of scantily clad women) published by the Wadia Group. Founded and edited by Maureen Wadia (wife of industrialist Nusli Wadia), the magazine was launched in the early 1990s (around 1989–1991) primarily to support promotional efforts for Bombay Dyeing. In January 2019, the official Instagram account celebrated "30 years of Gladrags," ipso facto pointing to a launch around 1989! 

At its peak, it was a platform for fashion, modeling, and glamour content, and became well-known for its associated beauty pageants as the magazine organized the annual Gladrags Manhunt and Megamodel Contest (starting in 1994), which served as a major launchpad for many Indian models who later became Bollywood actors, supermodels, and celebrities. It included regional selections, grooming/training, and swimsuit rounds, with winners often featured on the magazine cover and gaining visibility for modeling or film careers.

Notable stars whose careers were launched or significantly boosted through Gladrags contests (winners or prominent participants):John Abraham — Winner of Gladrags Manhunt 1999; went on to a successful Bollywood career.

Dino Morea — Manhunt winner 1995; Bollywood actor and model.

Aditi Gowitrikar — Megamodel winner 1996; actress and model.

Zulfi Syed — Manhunt winner (1996–97); model/actor.

Muzamil Ibrahim — Manhunt winner 2003; model who walked hundreds of shows.

Sidharth Shukla — Participated (runner-up in 2004); later became a popular TV actor and Bigg Boss winner.

Others: Arjun Rampal (prominent model associated with the era), Rajat Bedi (first Manhunt winner 1994), Aanchal Kumar, Koena Mitra, Mugdha Godse, Candice Pinto, and many more who became supermodels or entered films, finding success or failing to make an impact, they got their foot in at notoriously difficult Bollywood and its perilous gatekeepers. 

Gladrags has a far more ambiguous relationship with the outspoken Lara Dutta — Winner of Gladrags Megamodel 1995 (at age 16); later Miss Universe 2000 and who went on to become a fine Bollywood actress. Lara Dutta sued Gladrags in early April 2005 (case filed in the Bombay High Court), as Dutta filed a copyright infringement suit against Gladrags (specifically its managing editor Maureen Wadia). as they were using her old photographs and images without her permission on hoardings, posters, and promotional material for their upcoming supermodel contest. She alleged this violated her copyright over her own images, but there was also an underlying grievance that Gladrags had not promoted her adequately after her win and were still claiming credit for her later success (she went on to win Miss Intercontinental 1997 and Miss Universe 2000), while exploiting her pictures for their branding. The articulate, sharply intelligent Ms Dutta won; the court ruled in Lara Dutta’s favour within a week or so (around 12–13 April 2005). The Bombay High Court ordered Gladrags to immediately stop using Lara Dutta’s pictures on their hoardings and promotional materials. 

It was a quick victory for Lara on the issue of unauthorized use of her photographs, and the matter was widely reported in 2005 as “Lara Dutta wins Gladrags battle.”  The civil copyright case focused on image rights rather than a long-drawn dispute, and there is no record of major financial compensation or further escalation. However, the incident highlighted early awareness around image rights and celebrity control over their photographs in the Indian entertainment industry, especially for models and pageant winners associated with contests like Gladrags. Gladrags was restrained from using her images; and rightfully so. The way they promoted the men, Ray or Rai, was very different from how they projected and promoted Lara. Well, in essence, they didn't - until it was convenient to do so. 

Gladrags will sadly be forgotten soon unless its funded richly for a comeback. The contest it created is credited with discovering and launching dozens of Indian models and stars in the 1990s–2000s, helping shape the Indian fashion and entertainment industry during its boom. It also expanded to Mrs. India, Little Miss & Master contests. While not every winner became a massive Bollywood star, it provided early breaks to numerous faces who dominated ramps and screens. 

There is no clear public information on an exact final print edition or official discontinuation date for the magazine. Contests were held as late as 2016–2017 (with winners like Ansh Duggal and others announced), but it seems like a dead end like other print media... Cine Blitz, Showtime, Stardust and other remnants of pop culture ink. 

Like many print magazines in the 2010s–2020s, Gladrags likely faced declining print circulation and transitioned or scaled back significantly. No specific "last issue" date (e.g., year or month) is widely documented in available sources. The launchpad of many is sadly buried six-feet under. 

Lisa Ray crowns Aishwarya Rai during one of the rounds at the Miss India pageant