Home
HOME DIGGS FORUMS GALLERY WALLPAPERS VIDEOS REVIEWS RECIPES KIDS CORNER New GAMES POLLS CLASSIFIEDS YELLOW PAGES ARTICLES MY SPACE
  
   Register     Login  
Ads

Your Ad Here
Menu
Movies
Women
Recent Albums


<< Newer Older >>
on 2006/7/2 6:37:36


By organising the annual Bollywood Masala Indian Film Festival for the second successive year in Brisbane, the capital of the Queensland state is showing symptoms of becoming the latest Australian city to catch Bollywood fever.

The Brisbane event is screening four of Festival patron Yash Chopra's movies.

"Indian films have come a long way with their technical advances, while retaining the core of Indian values and emotions which are the basic diet for viewers of Indian films," Indian film patriarch told the Courier Mail newspaper.

"What is gratifying is that while some of these films are different and made for mature audiences, they are all ingrained with human values and emotions. This is what makes the world go around," Yash Chopra added.

The Bollywood film festival in Brisbane is now considered an integral and important part of the local cinema calendar as it is being organised for the second year in running.

The timing of the aptly-named Masala Film Festival has coincided with the screening of the Hrithik Roshan starrer 'Krrish' in a number of Queensland cinemas.

Seven Indian films are to be shown in the festival being organised by Mitu Lange of MG Distribution.

Siddarth Anand's 'Salaam Namaste' is likely to attract largest chunk of Queenslanders. Others films being shown at the Brisbane festival include 'Parineeta', 'Swades', 'Bunty Aur Babli' and 'Veer Zaara'.

The Melbourne-based company has made name in the recent years for organising making of a number of Indian television serials, films and advertisements in Australia.

The Southern, and larger, counterparts of Brisbane - Melbourne and Sydney are already considered serious contenders for the unofficial title of overseas capital of spicy Indian movies.

While Melbourne, which hosted the making of 'Salaam Namaste', is the venue of an international photographic exhibition on Indian movies; Sydney would soon witness the making of the largest Indian film outside India.

source:Hindu

Related Stories:

  • Bollywood film fest in Brisbane
  • 'Salaam Namaste' to attract Queenslanders
  • International award for Navia Nair!
  • Singh Is Kinng` to be screened at Toronto film fest
  • South Asian Film Fest is more about peace than glitz
  • Irfan Khan at Cannes with Angelina Jolie
  • Pune International Film Fest from Jan. 10
  • Amol Palekar directs an English film for the first time
  • Venice veterans jump ship
  • Shefali clueless about honour at Tokyo film fest
  • Manoj Bajpai wants to get versatile
  • Suneil Shetty unveils Mumbai flavours in mega food fest
  • Saawariya to be screened at Mahindra-IAAC film fest
  • Bollywood’s Elvis wannabe
  • New Orleans sings praise as Neville Brothers finally reunite
  • Karan Johar's dream guest list exposed
  • Bollywood bets Rs 140 cr with winter blockbusters
  • Dale judges at biggest inter-collegiate BMM festival of the year
  • Spanish Film Fest at Thiruvananthapuram.
  • Sivan's next focusses on militancy in Kashmir
  • Latest News
  • 'Raaz ' to release January 2009
  • Former Miss India Tanushree Dutta, whose career has not seen a good run at the b
  • Hijack: New Movie Of Old Formula
  • Zinta basks in "Heaven on Earth" glow
  • Darr!
  • I'm not copying Bipasha: Rituparna
  • Can Vidya ever look sexy?
  • Madhuri Dixit keeps PIA passengers entertained
  • Did Ishmeet really Drowned?
  • Daler Mehndi's first SUFI album "BISMILLAH"
  • Jagjit Singh Launched the Music of Sat Sri Akal
  • Lara: The water baby
  • Vishal-Shekhar created magic in 'Bachna ae Haseeno'
  • I'm a sucker for speed, says Zayed Khan
  • Ranbir and Deepika scared of signing films together
  • Printer Friendly Page Send this Story to a Friend
     
    The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
    Poster Thread



    Sponsored Links





    Copyright Content © 2004 by Bharat Waves  |   |