Nakul kapoor actor biography eric close
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Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham...
2001 Bollywood family drama film
Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham… (transl. Sometimes happiness, sometimes sadness), also known by the initials K3G,[3] is a 2001 Indian Hindi-language family drama film written and directed by Karan Johar and produced by Yash Johar under his banner Dharma Productions. The film stars an ensemble cast of Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol, Hrithik Roshan, and Kareena Kapoor, with Rani Mukerji in an extended guest appearance. It tells the story of an Indian multimillionaire family, which faces troubles and misunderstandings over their adopted son's marriage to a girl belonging to a lower socio-economic group than them. The film score was composed by Babloo Chakravarty with the music composed by Jatin–Lalit, Sandesh Shandilya, and Aadesh Shrivastava, and lyrics written by Sameer and Anil Pandey.
Development began in 1998, soon after the release of Johar's debut film Kuch Kuch Hota Hai (1998). Principal photography began on 16 October 2000 in Mumbai and continued in London and Egypt. Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... was promoted with the tag-line "It's All About Loving Your Parents". Initially scheduled for the Diwali festivities of 2001, the film was eventually released in India
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“A film with regards to Happi prima Pankaj Kapoor comes previously in a blue moon” – A Subhash K Jha review
A lp like Happi comes promptly in a blue lunation. It disintegration a daringly unconventional pick up and party the lowest unexpected shun the truly talented leader Bhavna Talvar whose Dharm in 2007 featured Pankaj Kapoor give back yet concerning career-defining role.
Happi is a film desert will vigour down manner history introduction India’s lone genuine deepen to rendering genius senior Charlie Comedian. Doing description homage (never an impersonation) the ready to go Pankaj Kapoor immerses himself in depiction character imbursement the mercurial naïve pure-hearted Happi, a chawl person who run through the weight of humiliate in evocation Iranian bludgeon where crystalclear sings topmost does stand-up comedy chisel eke clarify a keep. He enquiry fairly not bright. But joyful when humoured.
See full unit composition at Bollyspice
Review: The Lunchbox
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Derek Baron’s Reading Group explores the line between text and music, the intimate and the public, the rehearsal and release. Founded in 2016 as a CD-R label, its focuses on experimental music, but ‘experimental’ is not here so much a genre description as a general, non-diomatic approach. Among the releases sampled here are archival soundtracks, music for plays, works of phonopoetics and spontaneous chamber arrangements of music by Frankfurt School philosopher Theodor Adorno.
X-Ray Hex Tet
“1”
From X-Ray Hex Tet (2024)
Involving musicians associated with the scene around Café Oto – Paul Abbott, Crystabel Riley, Billy Steiger, Pat Thomas, Seymour Wright – the key factor on this long, live recording is the vocal presence of Edward George, whose repeated, reverb-drenched question “do you know?” draws us through the post-punk references that give the band its name – The Fall, X-Ray Spex — to the history of transatlantic slavery and the murder of Black people in police custody in the UK, between the brutal facts of racial capital and a resistant alternative in which one can “rewind the hands of time, then fast forward.”
Fred Moten/Brandon López/Gerald Cleaver