Thursday, October 21, 2010

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Watch Bigg Boss Season 4 21st October 2010 Online Free | Colors Tv Online Big Boss 4 21st-Oct-2010 Free

Watch Bigg Boss Season 4 21st October 2010 Online Free Colors Tv Online Big Boss Season 4 21st-Oct-2010 Free Big Boss season 4 is finally on air.This established reality show kick started on the channel Colors last night i.e. Sunday.It’s been a week now since Salman Khan and Bigg Boss 4 went on air. And, we are having mixed feelings about the show, for sure. First things first, the opening episode was a downer. Though Salman tried to pep up the proceedings with his goofy antics and candid humour, it still left us cold. To make matters worse, the 14 contestants were not who we had expected, certainly not after the kind of names (read Rajesh Khanna, Sangeeta Bijlani, Bhagyashree, Saurav Ganguly etc) that did the media rounds. Daku ‘haseena’ (well, not quite) Seema Parihar or Bunty ‘beep beep’ Chor certainly didn’t make the cut!

The host of this TV show, Salman Khan received all the fourteen contestants amidst much fanfare in his trademark bindass style.

These are the fourteen contestants who are slated to be a part of this season 4

Big Boss season 4 Participants

Aanchal Kumar: Aanchal works as a model but it was her alleged relationship with cricketer Yuvraj Singh that got her a place in this show.

Abbas Azmi: Abbas works as a lawyer. He earned fame after he fought the case of Ajmal Kasab, the key-accused in the Mumbai attacks.

Ashmit Patel: He is an actor by profession and the sibling of actress Amisha Patel.

Begum Nawazish Ali: This is an alias name taken by Ali Saleem who is the host as well as a scriptwriter of a well-known talk show in Pakistan.

Bunty chor: The infamous thief who is rumored to have more than 500 cases running on him and is considered the inspiration behind the movie Oye Lucky Lucky Oye.

Hrishant Goswami: He works as a model and won the Gladrags Manhunt 2004.

Manoj Tiwari: He acts in Bhojpuri movies.

Rahul Bhatt: The hot handsome hunk son of the Bollywood film maker Mahesh Bhatt.

Sakshi Pradhan: Sakshi won the MTV reality show, SplitsVilla season 2. She got into a controversy due to an alleged MMS.

Sameer Soni: Sameer is a well-known TV actor and an established model. He also made it big by plating the role of a gay designer in the Bollywood blockbuster Fashion.

Sara Khan: Sara is the beautiful and shy TV actress.

Seema Parihar: Seema is a dacoit who was in the Beehar area of Chambal for around 18 years. There are many cases against her still running in the court.

Shweta Tiwari: Shweta is a well-known TV actress who has recently separated from her husband, Raja Choudhary.

Veena Malik: Veena is a Pakistani model and former girlfriend of Pakistani cricketer Mohammed Asif. She was in the news recently during the Pakistani spot fixing scandal.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Online Watch Alvin and the Chipmunks The Squeakquel Hollywood Movie Free Trailer Preview

Alvin and the Chipmunks The Squeakuelus Hollywood Movie 2009

Alvin and the Chipmunks The Squeakuelus Movie Review :

In 2007, "Alvin and the Chipmunks," a global phenomenon to generations of fans, became a live action/CGI motion picture event with a contemporary comic sensibility. In the holiday season blockbuster, which grossed over $350 million worldwide, songwriter Dave Seville transformed singing chipmunks Alvin, Simon and Theodore into pop sensations -- while the out-of-control trio laid waste to Dave’s home, wreaked havoc on his career, and turned Dave’s once-orderly life upside-down.

Before you could say, "Alvinnnnn!!!" talks began about a new "Alvin and the Chipmunks" movie. Not content to rest on their laurels, the 'Munks are preparing yet another "first": There have been many great movie sequels. There have even been prequels. Now, get ready for the world's first "Squeakquel," in which Alvin, Simon and Theodore finally meet their match – and maybe more – in the newly arrived female trio, The Chipettes.

Alvin and the Chipmunks The Squeakuelus Movie Preview :

Call it a Christmas miracle, albeit a minor one: "Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel" isn't entirely awful.

In fact, for its young (or merely immature) target audience -- your average fourth-grader -- this sequel to the 2007 feature about an animated trio of squeaky-voiced singing rodents is a fair sight better than the original.

That's not saying a lot, admittedly. The first film held essentially the same appeal as a party balloon filled with helium. Sure, it makes people sound funny, just like fur-ball protagonists Alvin, Theodore and Simon, in fact. As in the earlier film, they're voiced by Justin Long, Jesse McCartney and Matthew Gray Gubler, in a CGI version of the novelty musical act created by Ross Bagdasarian in 1958. But how far can you go with that one joke?

Fortunately, there's a bit more of an actual story here, with the introduction of three female chipmunks, voiced by talented comedians Christina Applegate, Amy Poehler and Anna Faris (though you'd never recognize them from their computer-enhanced, adenoidal whines). Known as the Chipettes, this distaff singing trio serves as both music-industry rivals to and love interests for the "boys," as Alvin and his brothers are known. Reprising his role as evil record executive Ian Hawke, David Cross lends the movie a distinctly goofy edginess -- a gift for Mom and Dad, presumably. At one point, Cross's character takes a full-frontal hit in the groin from an errant toy motorcycle.

Such is the level of humor in a movie whose biggest laugh comes from a scene in which one of the chipmunks is trapped under a blanket with his flatulent human caretaker (Zachary Levi). Levi's character, Toby, is a last-minute fill-in for the chipmunks' more familiar ward, Dave (Jason Lee), who's forced to sit out much of the film in a body cast after a particularly nasty, chipmunk-induced accident.

Director Betty Thomas ("The Brady Bunch Movie") manages all of this middlebrow mayhem with a suitably light touch. "Fantastic Mr. Fox," it's not. But as talking animal movies go, this "Squeakquel" just squeaks by.

Alvin and the Chipmunks The Squeakuelus Movie Details :

Release Date: December 23, 2009
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Director: Betty Thomas
Screenwriter: Jon Vitti, Jonathan Aibel, Glenn Berger
Starring: Jason Lee, Justin Long, David Cross, Matthew Gray Gubler, Jesse McCartney, Anna Faris, Christina Applegate, Amy Poehler, Zachary Levi
Genre: Comedy, Family

Alvin and the Chipmunks The Squeakuelus Movie Trailer Online :


Online Watch The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus Hollywood Movie Free Trailer Preview

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus Hollywood Movie
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus Movie Review :
As far as filmmaking snags go, the death of your lead actor is a pretty major deal. Such untimely departures usually result in the scrapping of the whole project, but when the filmmakers plough on, the results get interesting: a cardboard cutout of Bruce Lee in The Game of Death, the not-so creative use of outtakes in The Trail of the Pink Panther, the masterfully awful Plan 9 From Outer Space from the legendary Ed Wood…

It had to happen to Terry Gilliam of course. As a filmmaker, Gilliam has earned a reputation for not merely courting disaster but positively wooing it, as captured in the Making and Breaking Of A Film documentary Lost in La Mancha a few years ago. Still, there was no way he could have anticipated Heath Ledger’s death during the making of his latest movie, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus – but this was one project that couldn’t and shouldn’t have been left unfinished.

Doctor Parnassus (Christopher Plummer) is an ancient medicine man who treks through modern London with his travelling show, the ‘Imaginarium’, and his troupe of performers: the diminutive Percy (Verne Troyer in a one-off role where he isn’t the butt of Mike Myers gags), the merry Anton (Andrew Garfield) and his restless daughter Valentina (model Lily Cole, her wide-set eyes scanning the pages of a homes magazines in wonder). The group puts on a show that takes audience participation to a whole new level: punters are invited to pass through Doctor Parnassus’s mirror into a fantasy-land hewn from the stuff that dreams are made of. Their own dreams, that is.

After one of their late-night performances, Doctor Parnassus is compelled to renegotiate an old wager with the Devil, who wears a bowler hat and goes by the moniker of Mr. Nick (Tom Waits, perfectly cast): the first to seduce five souls will win the soul of Valentina on her sixteenth birthday. Soon after they strike the new deal, the travelling players chance upon Heath Ledger’s character, Tony – his first appearance in the film is laced with chilling irony – a man in a dapper white suit who seems to have lost his memory but may have dark secrets of his own.

This is a story that only Gilliam could tell. It is closest in spirit to The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (whose screenwriter Charles McKeown also co-writes here): a visually sumptuous fantasy with surrealist landscapes, Botticelli-inspired nudity, occasional bursts of Looney Tunes logic, Monty Python lunacy (especially the sudden appearance of the giant head of an English bobby), and a climactic sequence straight out of Alice in Wonderland. It’s a feast for the eyes where the courses just keep on coming.

But does it make sense? Gilliam’s work, which tends to be made on his own terms, is convoluted at the best of times – even when his actors do him the courtesy of staying alive during the production. It comes as something of a surprise then that The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus actually holds together pretty well, despite having been reconfigured in the eleventh hour. Yes, there are different incarnations of Tony – played by Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Colin Farrell – but this device turns out to make sense beyond Doctor Parnassus’s looking-glass. It’s also a lot of fun. Johnny Depp is, as usual, impeccable, his Keef Richards-cum-Jack Sparrow gait immediately recognisable as he hops Disney cartoon lily pads in another inspired blue-screen sequence – and his resemblance to Ledger here is rather striking, it must be said.

The character of Tony, and his role in the story, could be tidier. All eyes will naturally be on Ledger’s last performance, and it’s a shame that it’s a bit of a loose end in this tapestry. Some of the extended flights of fancy will test the patience of the average filmgoer too – this is far from being a conventional piece of cinema, and not everyone will be fond of the Jungian dreamscapes conjured up here.

Still, for those who’ve been barracking for Gilliam, the Don Quixote of the industry, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus is ample proof that he’s riding tall once again. It’s a dazzling piece of work, made all the more remarkable by the real-world events that conspired against it. In this way, it’s a story, on more than one level, of the triumph of the imagination

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus Movie Details :
Release Date: December 25, 2009 (NY, LA; expansion: January 8)
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Director: Terry Gilliam
Screenwriter: Terry Gilliam, Charles McKeown
Starring: Heath Ledger, Christopher Plummer, Tom Waits, Lily Cole, Andrew Garfield, Verne Troyer, Johnny Depp, Colin Farrell, Jude Law
Genre: Drama, Fantasy

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus Movie Trailer Online :

Online Watch Sherlock Holmes Hollywood Movie Free Trailer Preview

Sherlock Holmes Hollywood Movie

Sherlock Holmes Movie Review :

It's become a central truth of American filmmaking that audiences will watch Robert Downey Jr. doing pretty much anything, and when he's having as much fun as he is as the magnetic center of Sherlock Holmes, there's no choice but to be swept along for the ride. Effectively remaking the original Pirates of the Caribbean as a Victorian London caper, Guy Ritchie combines his kinetic direction with the limitless charms of Downey Jr and Jude Law to come up with terrific entertainment that's equal parts brains and brawn, American recklessness and English manners. In short, it's a blast.

The movie is structured essentially as an adventure romance, as Holmes (Downey Jr.) and Watson (Law) try to break up and, through crooked schemes and explosions and near escapes, realize by the end how much they mean to one another after all. At the beginning Watson is preparing to move out of 221b Baker Street, with plans to propose to pretty and proper Mary (Kelly Reilly) and leave the detective business entirely. Holmes, bored and hilariously jealous, attempts to sabotage Watson's engagement and also draw him back into the game, now that an old closed case has suddenly reopened.

Months earlier Watson and Holmes put away Lord Blackwood (Mark Strong), an aristocrat who murdered five people via some kind of dark arts ceremony. Watson himself supervised Blackwood's hanging, but when he appears to have risen from the dead, everyone from the police to a secret cabal wants to know how he did it. Blackwood and his legion of followers have plans for world domination via drinking potions and other hocus pocus, while Holmes goes about finding Blackwood in the only way he knows how-- using his "not inconsiderable knowledge" and foolproof logic. Meanwhile, Holmes's old flame Irene Adler (Rachel McAdams) is back in town, a criminal beauty working secretly for a shadowy boss with a penchant for fancy weaponry. Adler pops up from time to time to help Watson and Holmes in their investigations, and it's clear to the audience that she'll throw a wrench in things even when Holmes hasn't quite gotten there.

Dipping into chemistry and pentagrams and the earliest forms of electricity, the plot is all over the place, and I'm not entirely certain I understand how it all fit together in the end. But the story really just provides a vehicle for the action and the fantastic character interactions, one of which delivers slightly better than the other. While some action setpieces, like a fight at a shipyard and the final race against the clock, are brilliantly structured, the fight choreography gets chopped up into bits, with Ritchie cutting too quickly for the audience to see a punch or a kick all the way through. The editing often works directly at odds with Downey Jr.'s physicality, as he throws in a funny movement or a particularly sweet punch, only to see it lost entirely to needless slo-mo and quick cuts.

Then again, all that Ritchie noodling works great in Holmes's investigation scenes, allowing him visual flashbacks to all the clues that led him to his conclusions and avoiding the dreadful slowness that comes with most mystery-solving monologues. Miraculously the audience is right there with Holmes even during his most out-there epiphanies, and the equally out-there camerawork pays off well in making this period piece feel unstuffy, but also not gimmicky. He's helped immensely by Hans Zimmer's loose, wily score, one of the best action movie scores I've heard in years.

When Ritchie holds the camera relatively still and lets all of the actors play off each other, there's nothing better. Eddie Marsan is hilarious as the frustrated Inspector Lestrade, and Strong's Blackwood makes for a great intellectual equal against Holmes, but when Downey Jr. and Law are together the screen lights up so brightly it could catch fire. Bantering like Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell or trading off punches in a fight, the two actors have rarely looked so self-assured or in synch with an onscreen partner. Watson and Holmes squabble over clothes and the dog, tend one another's wounds and protect one another from injury, and generally make the best action-adventure duo since Indy and Marion. The one downside to all this energy between the boys is that Adler is sold short, flitting in and out of the plot seemingly at random, and rarely getting much out of Sherlock beyond a stolen kiss or two. McAdams is excellent and fiery in the role, but it seems much of her part was trimmed in order to make more room for Downey Jr. and Law. But oh, what a consolation prize that is.

As the movie winds down it begins to brazenly set up a sequel, and given the manifold adventures of Holmes and Watson that Arthur Conan Doyle wrote, it's hard to imagine two heroes better suited to a modern franchise. There are surely simpler Holmes stories to tell that won't get so bogged down in plot, and maybe there's a way to let the brains beat out the brawn next time, at least if the fights are going to stay so incomprehensible. But keep this iteration of Watson and Holmes together, and we're likely to follow them anywhere .

Story:
Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson (Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law) have officially wrapped up their last case together by capturing Lord Blackwood (Mark Strong), a madman responsible for the death of five women in his dabblings with black magic. After Blackwood is tried and hung, he seemingly returns from the dead, so the duo have to continue their partnership to solve the case. Then Holmes' ex-girlfriend Irene Adler (Rachel McAdams), a jewel thief and criminal in her own right, seems to somehow be involved in the case.

Sherlock Holmes Movie Detail :
Release Date: December 25, 2009
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: Guy Ritchie
Screenwriter: Michael Johnson, Anthony Peckham, Guy Ritchie
Starring: Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, Rachel McAdams, Mark Strong, Eddie Marsan, Kelly Reilly

Genre: Action, Adventure, Mystery
Sherlock Holmes Movie Trailer :