Saturday, 24 December 2011

PLAYERS


PLAYERS



Songs:-

Director:Abbas Burmawalla,Mustan Burmawalla
Music Director:Pritam Chakraborty
Movie Cast:Abhishek Bachchan,Sonam Kapoor,Bobby Deol,Bipasha Basu,Neil Nitin Mukesh,Omi Vaidya,Sikander Kher,Johny Lever,Vyacheslav Razbegaev,Aftab Shivdasani,Vinod Khanna

Rightclick on the Song Title and select “Save Target As…” or “Save Link As…” to download the song.

 Players TracklistFormat
Music ArrowJis Jagah Pe KhatamMP3 Format
Music ArrowKyun Dooriyan (Jhoom Jhoom Ta Ja)MP3 Format
Music ArrowHo Gayi TunMP3 Format
Music ArrowBuddhi Do Bhagwaan (Charlie’s Song)MP3 Format
Music ArrowDil Ye Bekarar Kyun HaiMP3 Format
Music ArrowKyun Dooriyan (Jhoom Jhoom Ta Hun Main)MP3 Format
Music ArrowDil Ye Bekarar Kyun Hai (Reprise)MP3 Format
Music ArrowJhoom Jhoom Ta Hun Main (Film Version)MP3 Format
Music ArrowJis Jagah Pe Khatam (Remix)MP3 Format
Music ArrowDil Ye Bekarar Kyun Hai (Remix)MP3 Format

Saturday, 17 December 2011

Mission impossible 4


Mission Imposssible 4




Mission Impossible 4 shooting, which stars Tom Cruise, Anil Kapoor, Jeremy Renner and Paul Patton will be shot in Mumbai. Though the Hollywood's Top Gun actor may not fly down to India, his double will be seen chasing our Bollywood's Mr India star  Anil Kapoor.

Mission Impossible 4-Ghost Protocol will be shot in South of Mumbai, which would be Anil Kapoor's maiden proper Hollywood movie, apart from his series of Hollywood stints like 24 (UK's TV Series) and Slumdog Millionaire.

Sources suggest that the shooting will be mostly of action sequences, which would be shot in outdoors and that also will include a car chase scene. The movie is salted for December release.

A source says, “On Sunday, body double of Tom Cruise and the heroine were spotted driving a specially designed BMW SS01 for the film through the by lanes of Bora Bazar situated opposite CST railway station."

The source from the film's unit says, "Unfortunately none of the main actors of the film including Tom Cruise and Anil Kapoor will be shooting on location here in India. The unit will be traveling to Bangalore after completing the Mumbai schedule within a few days."

Tom Cruise and Anil Kapoor have already shot the interior portions of Mumbai and Bangalore in Dubai and Vancouver which will be later matched with the sequences shot in India.



Anil Kapoor has been signed to an important role in one of the biggest film series of Hollywood, Mission: Impossible 4 (MI4), according to media reports.
Mission: Impossible 4 will be filmed in Dubai among other cities.

Tom Cruise

Along with Anil Kapoor and Tom Cruise, Girl with the Dragon Tattoo star Michael Nykvist, Jeremy Renner, Paula Patton, Ving Rhames and Simon Pegg are also said to be starring in the film.

The source said, "Anil got the confirmation this week that he's starring in MI4. Though his role is a tight secret at this point of time, it's an important one nonetheless.

MI4 adds another international feather to Anil's cap after he landed a role in Oscar winning Slumdog Millionaire followed by US TV series 24, one of the most watched television series in USA.

Anil Kapoor said: "At this point of time, I can only say that I have been contacted for Mission Impossible 4 and I have said yes to the role."
Sources said that the actor has been asked to be tight-lipped about the role by the Hollywood studio.




Wednesday, 14 December 2011

Adventure in Henderland


Adventure in Henderland



Cast

Akiko Yajima- Shinnosuke "Shin-Chan" Nohara
Miki Narahashi - Misae Nohara
Keiji Fujiwara - Hiroshi Nohara
Mari Mashiba - Toru Kazama
Teiyū Ichiryūsai - Masao Sato
Tamao Hayashi - Nene Sakurada
Chie Satō - Bo-chan
Yuriko Buchizaki - Topema Mappet
Hideyuki Tanaka - Joma
Hōchū Ōtsuka - Makao
Shinpachi Tsuji - Cre G. Mad
Toshio Furukawa - Su Noman Pa
Sanae Miyuki - Chokirin Basta
Yumi Takada - Yoshinaga-sensei
Michie Tomizawa - Matsuzaka-sensei
Rokurō Naya - Encho-sensei
Sōichirō Hoshi - Prince Gorman


Shinnosuke and his classmates at Futaba Kindergarten go to an amusement park known as Henderland in Gunma Prefecture. Shin-chan is separated from his group and learns the dark secrets of the amusement park when he befriends a living marionette who entrusts to him a magical set of playing cards. Magical and dark forces are set upon Shin-chan and his family by the lords of the park and he must use the power of the cards and the inner strength and determination of himself, his family, and an unexpected group of friends to save the day.


Crayon Shin-chan first appeared in a Japanese weekly magazine called Weekly Manga Action, which is published by Futabasha. The anime Crayon Shin-chan has been on TV Asahi since April 13, 1992, and on several television networks, worldwide.
 Many of the jokes in the series stem from Shin-chan's occasionally weird, unnatural and inappropriate use of language, as well as from his inappropriate behavior. Consequently, non-Japanese readers and viewers may find it difficult to understand his jokes. In fact, some of them cannot be translated into other languages. In Japanese, certain set phrases almost always accompany certain actions; many of these phrases have standard responses. A typical gag involves Shin-chan confounding his parents by using the wrong phrase for the occasion; for example, saying "Welcome back!" ("おかえりなさい" "okaeri nasai") instead of "I'm home!" ("ただいま" "Tadaima") when he comes home. Another difficulty in translation arises from the use of onomatopoeic Japanese words. In scolding Shin-chan and attempting to educate him in proper behaviour his parent or tutor may use such a phrase to indicate the correct action. 

Many of the jokes in the series stem from Shin-chan's occasionally weird, unnatural and inappropriate use of language, as well as from his inappropriate behavior. Consequently, non-Japanese readers and viewers may find it difficult to understand his jokes. In fact, some of them cannot be translated into other languages. In Japanese, certain set phrases almost always accompany certain actions; many of these phrases have standard responses. A typical gag involves Shin-chan confounding his parents by using the wrong phrase for the occasion; for example, saying "Welcome back!" ("おかえりなさい" "okaeri nasai") instead of "I'm home!" ("ただいま" "Tadaima") when he comes home. Another difficulty in translation arises from the use of onomatopoeic Japanese words. In scolding Shin-chan and attempting to educate him in proper behaviour his parent or tutor may use such a phrase to indicate the correct action. 

Often through misinterpreting such a phrase as a different, though similar sounding phrase, or through interpreting it in one sense when another is intended, Shin-chan will embark on a course of action which, while it may be what he thinks is being requested of him, leads to bizarre acts which serve only to vex his parents or tutors even more. This is not restricted to onomatopoeic words, since almost any word can become a source of confusion for Shin-chan, including English loan-words, such as mistaking "cool" for "pool" ("That's pool!" or "プールだぞ! (Pu-ru da zo!)" for "That's cool!").
Some other humorous themes which are repeated in the series are of a more universal nature, such as gags based on physical comedy (such as eating snow with chopsticks) or, as a child, unexpectedly using adult speech patterns or mannerisms.

 But even there, many of the gags may require an understanding of Japanese culture and/or language to be fully appreciated; for example, his infamous "Mr. Elephant" impression, while being transparently obvious as a physical gag, also has a deeper resonance with contemporary Japanese culture since it references the popular Japanese children's song "Zou-san" (ぞうさん). Shin-chan regularly becomes besotted with pretty female characters who are much older than him, and an additional source of humor is derived from his child-like attempts at wooing these characters, such as by asking them (inappropriately, on several levels) "Do you like green peppers?" (ピーマン好き?). He continually displays a lack of tact when talking to adults asking such questions as "How many people have you killed?" to tough looking men or, "When are you going to die?" to elderly people.
During the beginning of the series; the TV show was mostly based on the storyline in the original manga. As the show progressed, more and more episodes became anime-original. The show works under a sliding timescale where the characters have maintained their ages throughout the course of the show. Though time has passed to allow for the rise and fall of several pop culture icons, marriages, pregnancies, and births of various characters, all the characters still maintain their age at the time of their introduction. For example, if the two major births in the series are taken into account (Shinnosuke's sister and his kindergarten teacher's child), Shinnosuke would be seven years old and in second grade, but he is not.
Yoshito Usui died on September 11, 2009 after a fall at Mount Arafune. After Usui died, Futabasha originally planned to end Crayon Shin-chan in November 2009. Upon discovery of new manuscripts, Futabasha decided to extend the comic's run until the March 2010 issue of the magazine, which shipped on February 5, 2010.[2]
The Shin-chan anime had an English dub produced by Vitello Productions in Burbank, California in 2002. The dub, with character names changed, ran on Fox Kids (now Disney XD) in the United Kingdom, and on RTÉ Two in the Republic of Ireland in the early 2000s. The dub is of American origin, with actors and actresses such as Kath Soucie, Russi Taylor, Grey DeLisle, and Pat Fraley playing major roles (Soucie plays Shin himself, and his mother). Despite the American origin, this dub was never licensed in North America. The dub is edited for content to some extent, but many scenes—including the frequent appearance of Shin's naked buttocks, humor relating to breast-size,transsexualism and other sexual concepts—remain in the finished product. RTÉ Two has not shown the series since 2003, and Jetix only usually shows it as shorts in between programs, with more edits. Vitello's dub was succeeded by Phuuz Entertainment inc. in 2003, which featured a new cast of voice artists.

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Adventures of Tin Tin


Adventures of Tin Tin








One of the most irritating things about the current advances in 3D and motion-capture technology is the way film-makers keep promising "photo-real" images. James Cameron was at it with Avatar, and now it seems that Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg are going to be bandying the word around to describe their forthcoming Tintin movie, which has borrowed a great deal of the technology utilised to bring Pandora and its weird and wonderful denizens to life.
"With live action you're going to have actors pretending to be Captain Haddock and Tintin," Jackson tells Empire magazine, which has published the first images from The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn, in its new issue. "With CGI we can bring Hergé's world to life, keep the stylised caricatured faces, keep everything looking like Hergé's artwork, but make it photo-real."
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the term, but looking at the images of Tintin himself, Snowy the Dog, and Captain Haddock, it's immediately obvious that the still versions do not look like photographs. They do, however, look pretty spectacular. This technology has come a long way since Robert Zemeckis was accused of creating dead-eyed children on his 2004 animated tale The Polar Express.
Yet, despite picking up plenty of critical plaudits when it was first released, there are now plenty of naysayers who question whether Avatar's technical miracle is enough on its own to ensure the film's lasting place in the pantheon of great event movies. Could Tintin be the first film to unite 3D motion-capture spectacle with storytelling that's free of corny cliche? Spielberg is certainly talking the talk, telling Empire: "The first part of the film, which is the most mysterious part, certainly owes much to not only film noir but the whole German Brechtian theatre – some of our night scenes and our action scenes are very contrasty. But at the same time the movie is a hell of an adventure."
With Jamie Bell as Tintin, Andy Serkis as Haddock, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost as Thomson and Thompson (or possibly the other way around), Tintin is due to find his way on to cinema screens next October. Fortunately for fans of Hergé's tales, the film is not being shot in New Zealand, and doesn't have anything to do with MGM, so that's one promise Jackson and Spielberg might just be able to keep.

Comments in chronological order (Total 9 comments)

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  • This symbol indicates that that person is a contributorContributor
  • JohnBarnesOnToast
    3 November 2010 3:23PM
    I'd be more interested in a film if its creators were championing the quality of its script, rather than its effects.
    I seem to recall that LOTR was heralded for its use of landmark CGI, and it already looks shit after less than a decade.
  • phaine
    3 November 2010 5:24PM
    Tintin's for squares. All the cool kids were into Asterix.
  • mrphantomb
    3 November 2010 5:35PM
    ....the film is not being shot in New Zealand...
    Erm....actually it was.
  • Monkeybug
    3 November 2010 5:38PM
    @JohnBarnesOnToast
    I seem to recall that LOTR was heralded for its use of landmark CGI, and it already looks shit after less than a decade.
    No it doesn't. I'm sure you can cherry-pick the odd effect which isn't very convincing, but you could at the time. Most of it still looks amazing.
    Plus the only 'landmark' CGI is the motion-capture performance of Andy Serkis as Gollum (which is still great). The LOTR films only used CGI when necessary (unlike Avatar and the Star Wars prequels) - plenty of sets and props were created for the production and the New Zealand scenery doubled as Middle Earth whenever possible.
  • struppi
    3 November 2010 5:58PM
    motion/performance was actually "captured" in Los Angeles, additional "capture" happened in New Zealand.
  • drbob1975
    3 November 2010 7:32PM
    Fortunately for fans of Hergé's tales, the film is not being shot in New Zealand
    True, most of the filming was done in Los Angeles in early 2009. But all the post-production work is taking place at Weta Digital in Wellington, New Zealand (which also did Avatar).
    Post-production is much more time-consuming in these motion-captured movies, as everything has to be created digitally, from scratch.
    Fortunately (or perhaps unfortunately for those who work in the industry), there is no union for digital artists in NZ.
  • lomier
    5 November 2010 3:15PM
    “I'd be more interested in a film if its creators were championing the quality of its script, rather than its effects.”
    Is this statement merely based on what you’ve read above? You should read the actual Empire article itself, which is pretty lengthy, before dismissing the project as nothing more than technological one! Rest assured, they talk an awful lot in it about the scripting and challenges of forging the story. Spielberg has rejected numerous Tintin scripts over the years as they were not up to scratch. But he feels the Edgar Wright and Joe Cornish have cracked it with their take on the character.