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'Angrezon Ke Zamane Ka Jailer' No More: Bollywood Mourns Comedy Legend Asrani’s Passing At 84
Bollywood

‘Angrezon Ke Zamane Ka Jailer’ No More: Bollywood Mourns Comedy Legend Asrani’s Passing At 84

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Bollywood is grief-stricken today as veteran actor and comedian Asrani – born Govardhan Asrani – passed away in Mumbai at the age of 84 after a prolonged illness. His death marks the end of an era for Hindi cinema, which has lost one of its most cherished and versatile performers.

Final moments and farewell

Asrani reportedly passed away around 3:00 pm at the Arogya Nidhi Hospital in Juhu, Mumbai, following health complications. His manager confirmed the news, stating that the veteran had been undergoing treatment for breathing issues and had been admitted just days prior.

In keeping with his personal wishes, the actor’s last rites were conducted the same day at the Santacruz crematorium in a modest, private ceremony attended by his family and close friends. The family shared that Asrani had not wanted his passing to become a spectacle.

From Jaipur beginnings to Bollywood stardom

Born on January 1, 1941, in Jaipur into a humble Sindhi family, Asrani’s journey to the silver screen was one of sheer grit and talent. He initially worked as a voice artist at All India Radio in his hometown, and later joined the prestigious Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), Pune.

Despite his formal training, early years were a struggle. He took on small roles while teaching at FTII and gradually worked his way up. His big break arrived in the 1971 film Guddi, directed by Hrishikesh Mukherjee, after which he went on to deliver a string of standout performances.

Also Read: ‘We’ll Never Leave Each Other’: Govinda’s Perfect Reply After Panicked Sunita Loses 38-Year-Old Engagement Ring

The role of a lifetime: from Sholay to timeless comedy

While Asrani appeared in more than 300 films across five decades, the role that cemented his place in Indian pop-culture was that of the eccentric jailer in the 1975 cult classic Sholay. His nasal delivery of the line “Angrezon ke zamaane ka jailor” remains etched in public memory.

Beyond Sholay, his remarkable comic timing shone in films such as Chupke Chupke, Bawarchi, Abhimaan, Chhoti Si Baat, Hera Pheri, Welcome, and many more. Directors from Bombay’s golden era and subsequent revival of comedy films often relied on his dependable presence and versatility.

Even in recent years, Asrani remained active; he shot for films including Haiwaan and Bhoot Bangla, working right up until his final days. In fact, actor Akshay Kumar revealed they shared a warm hug just a week before the veteran’s death on a film set.

A legacy of laughter and respect

Colleagues, fans and film-lovers took to social media to mourn the stalwart actor. Tributes highlighted that Asrani’s brilliance lay not just in slapstick comedy, but in bringing humanity and soul to his characters. His ability to move effortlessly between humour and subtle emotion is often cited among his greatest strengths.

In a 2016 interview, Asrani himself lamented how Indian comedy had moved from subtlety to superficial shock-value — noting that earlier days had allowed for storytelling rather than mere spectacle.

What he leaves behind

Asrani is survived by his wife, Manju Asrani, his sister and nephew. The couple did not have children. The film-industry has lost one of its last link-bridges to a decade when character actors were equals to stars in laying the emotional foundations of a story.

Today, as Sholay plays on television screens across the country, a wave of nostalgia is rippling through millions who laughed with him, cried with him, and celebrated years of cinematic joy. The day of his passing being Diwali only heightens the emotion — around the same time when lights and celebrations were lighting up homes, Bollywood’s own light has dimmed.

The final bow

In his own understated way, Asrani left the stage for good — not with a flamboyant exit, but with a quiet passing that reflects the humility and grounded nature of the man. He didn’t seek fanfare. He simply left behind a body of work that will keep generations smiling.

Bollywood may never again find another jailer as iconic nor an actor so cherished for his every-man persona wrapped in comic genius. And as festivals come and go, perhaps the real fireworks will now be those flickering in memory of Asrani — the laughter, the timing, the joy.

Rest in laughter, legend.

 

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Iconic comedy star Asrani dead at 84: Angrezon Ke Zamane Ka Jailor rests in peace
Bollywood

Iconic comedy star Asrani dead at 84: Angrezon Ke Zamane Ka Jailor rests in peace

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Legendary comedian and actor Asrani has died. He died at the age of 84 after prolonged illness.

Asrani has died at 84.

News agency ANI tweeted, “Actor-director Govardhan Asrani, popularly known as ‘Asrani’ passed away in Mumbai today after a prolonged illness. His last rites were performed at Santacruz Crematorium.”

Asrani’s manager, Babubhai Thiba, told ANI – “Asrani passed away today at 3 PM at Arogya Nidhi Hospital, Juhu. He is survived by his wife, sister, and nephew.”

They also shared pictures from the Crematorium where his family gathered for the last rites.

Asrani, one of Indian cinema’s most beloved comic actors, entertained audiences for over five decades.

A graduate of the Film and Television Institute of India, he began his career in the 1960s and quickly became a fixture in Hindi films. Best known for his hilarious portrayal of the eccentric jailor in Sholay, Asrani’s versatility allowed him to shine in both comedic and serious roles across hundreds of films. 

His collaborations with directors like Hrishikesh Mukherjee and Raj Kapoor cemented his reputation as a dependable character actor with an enduring charm and wit.

In 2016, he spoke to HT about how comedy has become vulgar over the years.

“Earlier we had two types of schools of comedy – Bimal Roy school (which was realistic) and Madras school (which was subtle). Bimal Roy never kept comedy out of the story line. Madras comedy was another track but never vulgar. Now, it has come down to terrible stuff. Ab to behad vulgar ho gya hai, bas kapde utarne ki deri hai,” said Asrani.

Asrani’s last Bollywood film Mastizaade was an adult comedy, where he played actor Sunny Leone’s father. “Mujhe mastizaade main kaam karna pada, mujhe sharam aayi (I had to work in Mastizaade, I felt embarrassed),” says Asrani.

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Akshay Kumar's Niece Naomika Saran To Make Her Bollywood Debut With Vedang Raina In Romantic Comedy! | Glamsham.com
Bollywood

Akshay Kumar’s Niece Naomika Saran To Make Her Bollywood Debut With Vedang Raina In Romantic Comedy! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Naomika Saran, daughter of Rinke Khanna and granddaughter of the late Rajesh Khanna, is ready to make her big entry into Bollywood with her awaited debut. As per reports, the young actress will enter the big screen with a romantic comedy produced by Dinesh Vijan’s Maddock Films an outfit famous for producing new and youthful stories. Set to release on floors by mid-2026, the movie will feature Naomika acting alongside emerging talent Vedang Raina, who has been in the news recently for his role in Jigra.

Naomika’s debut has been the focus of whispers in the industry for months, particularly since she was seen at Maddock Films’ office on several occasions. Though she has avoided the media glare for the most part, sources disclose that Naomika has worked hard to prepare herself for her debut. She has apparently been spending the last year getting rigorous acting and dance training to prepare herself with talent and confidence when she enters the industry.

Having been born into one of Bollywood’s most illustrious film dynasties, Naomika continues an illustrious family tradition. Her mother, Rinke Khanna, debuted in 1998 with Pyaar Mein Kabhi Kabhi. Her aunt, Twinkle Khanna, had a successful acting career before turning to writing and entrepreneurship. She is the niece of superstar Akshay Kumar, continuing to strengthen her ties within the business. Still, while her prestigious past might have prepared people for more, Naomika has maintained a low profile, further fueling the hype surrounding her debut.

A source close to the production revealed details about the pairing of Naomika and Vedang Raina. “Vedang and Naomika have great chemistry. When the team saw them together, it just clicked. Vedang is currently shooting for an Imtiaz Ali film and will move on to this project next,” the source said. Their pairing is expected to bring a youthful and fresh energy to the screen.

The untitled film will be directed by a first-timer Maddock Films’ protégé in keeping with Dinesh Vijan’s tradition of nurturing new talent and redefining romance for the next generation of cinema audiences. Maddock Films has a excellent track record of giving the world new-generation romantic comedies such as Luka Chuppi and Zara Hatke Zara Bachke, promising big things for Naomika’s launchpad.

Also Read: The Bombay High Court Just Made a Big Statement on Deepfake Videos: Akshay Kumar Benefits

With her heritage family, intense training, and stellar production team, Naomika Saran’s launch is looking to be one of the most awaited debuts of 2026. Industry observers and fans alike are waiting with bated breath to catch a glimpse of the new generation of Bollywood royalty on the big screen.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Winners of The 70th Hyundai Filmfare Awards 2025 With Gujarat Tourism: Full List Out
Bollywood

Pati Patni Aur Woh Do: Ayushmann Khurrana Starrer Romantic Comedy to Release on THIS Date

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

The makers have released a creative poster for the upcoming movie, Pati Patni Aur Woh Do. The movie will star Ayushmann Khurrana, Sara Ali Khan, Rakul Preet Singh and Wamiqa Gabbi in leading roles. The poster shares the final release date of the movie, which has been announced as March 4, 2026. The Mudassar Aziz directorial will be released during Holi next year.


In the caption, the makers have introduced Ayushmann Khurrana as Prajapati Pandey. The caption reads, “Har pati ki hoti hai, apni ek aflatoon duniya… Jo unko bhale hi satati ho, magar hum sabko badha hasati hai! Introducing the world of #PrajapatiPandey starring #AyushmannKhurrana in #PatiPatniAurWohDo. With #SaraAliKhan, #WamiqaGabbi, and #RakulPreetSingh joining the ride, this #MudassarAziz directorial, produced by Bhushan Kumar and Renu Ravi Chopra, and creatively produced by Juno Chopra, brings laughter, love, and chaos this Holi – 4th March 2026.” Interestingly, much like the first movie, Pati Patni Aur Woh, the new movie also promises marital confusion, sprinkled with love and laughter. The first instalment featured Kartik Aaryan, Bhumi Pednekar and Ananya Panday in leading roles. It was released on December 6, 2019.

Also Read: Ananya Panday talks about new co-star Kartik Aaryan

While the major details of the plot have been kept under the wraps, the stars have been captured filming different scenes from the movie time and again. Filmfare had exclusively shared photos from the sets once, when the lead cast was seemingly filming at an airport. The photos featured Rakul Preet Singh and Sara Ali Khan.

Pati Patni Aur Woh DoPati Patni Aur Woh Do


Ayushmann Khurrana will also be seen in Thamma, alongside Rashmika Mandanna. The movie is slated to hit the theatres this Diwali, on October 21, 2025. Rakul Preet Singh will be seen in De De Pyaar De 2, alongside Ajay Devgn.

Also Read: Ananya Panday talks about new co-star Kartik Aaryan

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Adam Pally’s First Comedy Special Goes Deep About Truth: Interview
TV & Streaming

Adam Pally’s First Comedy Special Goes Deep About Truth: Interview

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

I don’t know if Adam Pally liked this interview. I think he did, but I can’t say for sure. At one point — maybe two — I inadvertently insulted him, but I think we’re cool. Adam Pally is everybody’s best friend.

On Friday, Pally’s (The Mindy Project, Happy Endings, Sonic the Hedgehog) first-ever comedy special, An Intimate Evening with Adam Pally, premieres at 9 p.m. on HBO and HBO Max. “Equal parts stand-up, documentary and rock concert, Adam Pally plays with the truth — and his guitar — in a one-time-only performance,” the logline reads.

Pally’s schtick is not quite stand-up, and though he dons a guitar for most of the live performance, it’s not what you think. There are no silly songs, just earnest covers strategically placed throughout the set to move along its storytelling. And it probably accomplished that for the 200 audience members at the live taping at the Bell House in Brooklyn. For the vast majority of people who will ultimately consume the Pally performance at home, it won’t be the same experience.

Pally and the documentary’s director Brent Hodge failed to get the rights to, well, any of the cover songs Pally plays. (Pally, the son of lounge singers, is a legitimate musician; when we spoke via Zoom, no fewer than six guitars were visible. So that’s where the Mindy money went!) Their legal failure doesn’t mean viewers won’t find enjoyment in those muted moments, however, as the inability to gain clearances becomes part of a running joke that serves the documentary.

That’s kind of the special in a nutshell. Pally goes with the flow as well as anyone, which puts an interviewer at ease — as that’s when inadvertent insults can happen. It’s chill: Adam Pally is my friend. I think. You decide; read our Q&A below.

***

I didn’t know what to expect from this special, which seems like partially the point. The trailer suggests the performance may have been a shitshow — but it was, in fact, a good show.

I guess then I’ve done it. I’ve set the expectations for something I’ve made so low that people are surprised that it even exists. In some ways, I take that as a huge compliment. I don’t know if I have a brand — a comedic brand — or anything like that. But I think a lot of the times I’ve gotten the chance to do something like this, I tend to do something self-effacing or meta or talk about the actual thing I’m doing, which some people like or some don’t. So this felt kind of on brand, I guess for me.

The special has a bigger point, this theme of truth. I wonder, though, because of your casual, affable style, if you don’t get credit for the depth.

I feel seen in this interview — I feel like you get me. I think I’m always grappling with how much someone’s attention is worth, and whether I’m worthy of that attention. I don’t take it lightly that people would be paying attention to it. I think that leads to a lot of thought, and if you’re not thinking about that then you’re truly an A-grade narcissist. But you have to sometimes be like, “Is my voice worth it? Is my opinion worth it?” It’s OK to have an opinion, but to put it out there, to do your work in public, is there a reason for it? I struggle with that a lot, because making people laugh is sometimes viewed as a less-than-honorable pursuit. Like the idea that a joke is cheap. To me, a joke is high art. A great joke is something like a great album, and a great comedian is like a great musician or great artist. You can hang “Who’s on First?” in a museum, right next to the Mona Lisa. To me, they’re equal parts cerebral and artistic and genius.

Is [this special] worth something to someone? I don’t know. Or is it just what I do? This is something that I felt compelled to do. I think all those thoughts went into making this, and all those thoughts go into a lot of my comedy. They tend to kind of run the gamut of, “Why?”

It can be a lot of work to look like you’re not working hard.

Sometimes people say good style is when you’re wearing something that looks like you’ve worn it for 30 years. I do try to do that. I try to make everything feel lived in. I toured this concept in this show for a long time, and really perfected it. I was all over in small places, really small venues. Not purposely, it just felt like that’s where I could book. That led to every night being different. I’m a child of jam bands. I love the Grateful Dead and Phish and and Dave Matthews Band and Pearl Jam — I love a new set every night.

I came up through improv. Stand-up comics have to do the same set every night, which would frustrate me. What I love about improv is that it’s different. But straight improv can sometimes be really tough to watch, and it doesn’t translate to movies and television, which is ultimately something else I wanted to do. I was thinking there has to be a way to make it feel special and different every night, while having it be the same and well-rehearsed and well-timed. I know where the jokes are, and I know how to take the audience for a ride with me — like a concert.

With the central theme of truth, were all of the recorded voicemails and phone calls between you and director Brent Hodge authentic, or were some of those moments planned out?

I can’t answer that because I truly don’t know the answer. Brett never told me when we were recording when he was recording. So whether that makes it authentic or not — after I saw the first cut, I knew that every time I talked to Brett on the phone, he was recording me. So you could take that answer however you want.

The time you got upset with him over music rights, were you legitimately angry?

At that point, I knew I was being recorded — but I was also legitimately upset.

Adam Pally (left) and Stephen Curry in Peacock’s Mr. Throwback.

David Moir/Peacock

At what point did you decide — or realize — the show was about truth?

About five years ago, I was doing short guest spots on my friends’ shows. I started to bring my guitar because it was all I had, and the spots started to evolve. Around that time, there was a big question about stand-ups and authenticity. How authentic you had to be or how authentic you are, or if these stories happen to me or someone like me, or if I’m confusing it in my mind. It was a hot time. So I started telling these long stories and forming punchlines for them. Then the music kind of supported them. In a lot of ways, to me, it doesn’t matter [if it’s true] unless you want it to matter. I know that sounds strange, but if someone’s telling me a story and it’s funny, they put themselves in the protagonist position for a reason, then I’m judgmental of it. But if they’re just getting a laugh on it, like this is the way to get the point across, or this is the story — that’s how people write movies.

I was trying to exonerate that, and saying, “You know what, none of it matters because we’re all struggling, we’re all the same.” Really the only truth — the only real honest truth for any performer — is that they just want people to look at them and be seen. If someone tells you otherwise, they’re lying. So that was the truth I came to and I was trying to explore as many avenues into that answer as I could — to pull as many cars into that garage as I could.

You said earlier you don’t know if you have a comedic brand. I think you do. I think your brand is “Everybody’s Best Friend.”

My agent would hate to hear that. My publicist is literally like, “[Groans] There goes leading man!” Actually, when I say “agent” and “manager,” it’s actually my own brain. I’m way too fat to be a leading man.

(Laughs.) That’s actually not the way I meant it. You can play a lead, like on Mr. Throwback, which as you know I really liked. But you have an aura of being everyone’s pal — meaning everyone in the audience. Like Ike Barinholtz, whom of course you worked with on The Mindy Project.

No, no. I was kidding. That’s very nice of you, again. To be compared to Ike is a huge, huge, huge— well, he’s big in stature. [Note: Barinholtz is about 6-foot-2 to Pally’s 5-foot-10.] It’s a huge compliment. He’s the greatest. I was just telling someone today, one of the things I loved the most about working on Mindy was watching Ike and Dave Stassen and Mindy [Kaling] work. Truly, I learned from watching them — “Oh, you can run a show and be funny and be on it and get your voice [on it]?” So to have my name brought up in any sense with Ike is a true compliment.

I’m surprised to hear you say [I’m so likable] because I feel like — I don’t know if I have a brand, but I guess it would be maybe chaos? Mindy Kaling once called me a Loki, like a bit of a troublemaker. But I’m trying, especially as I get older, to channel those powers for good.

I just can’t picture you in an argument with somebody.

I do hate confrontation, so that’s fair.

Mr. Throwback is a good example. Your character isn’t a good guy — not at first — but he’s still lovable, and not in an antihero-type way…

Yeah, yeah.

Do you want to play a real villain?

You want to talk about chewing scenery? I mean, I would dig in. I would hope to one day be afforded those opportunities to really stretch and grow. But I’ve been so lucky. I’ve been banging around for almost 20 years. I would love to play a real villain and be given that opportunity, and I know I would do a good job with it. But at the same time, I don’t turn my nose up at any work, really. I need to work. I like to work and I need to work. So I’m so thankful. If someone sees me as the best friend, that’s great, because hopefully I’ll do something different in that best friend role that you can’t imagine anyone else doing. That’s the goal of everything I play — every thing I put out, and every comedic thing I do, or anything I do in general. I would hope that you would say, “No one else could do that.”

Were you crushed by the Mr. Throwback cancellation? It was bizarre how quick Peacock was to pull that trigger after all of the marketing behind it.

You know what? It did what it did — and it’ll do what it’ll do. And you know what it really did? Everybody that worked on it is now working on something else. I’m the only one that’s not. And that happens on almost every job that I’ve been lucky enough to have. I think I’m proud of that the most. Usually people after working with me go on to do really great things — and whether that’s because they (laughs) saw the way I did it and didn’t like it, or because they took a little bit of me with them, I think it’s a nice pattern in my career that I would hope to continue. Everybody on Throwback from the writing staff to the cast is thriving.

Steph [Curry] landed on his feet.

Look, he does Throwback and Jimmy Butler shows up. [Note: Butler was traded from the Miami Heat to Curry’s Golden State Warriors in February.]

Adam Pally as Wade Whipple and Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in Paramount+ Knuckles.

Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+

My daughters and I enjoy the Sonic movies and Knuckles spinoff, which gives you a bit more to do than the films. I understand Idris Elba has had a stellar dramatic acting career, but I cannot be convinced that Knuckles is not his finest role.

I honestly don’t know what the plans are for the franchise. It’s the greatest gig. Truly the best job. Idris is funny. In person, he is very funny. He makes me laugh all the time. To the premiere I invited my aunt and uncle, and they were a little nervous; they didn’t know where to go. I was trying to tell them on the phone where to go. But I was doing interviews — it’s kind of hectic, so was like, “Just go to the theater.” I show up, do the red carpet and then I bump into Idris and he goes, [doing an excellent Idris impression] “Adam, this is your uncle.” He had already been hanging out with my uncle. He’s like, [back to Idris impression] “Your Uncle Robert is very funny!”

That’s a very good Idris impression)

Well, I spent enough time with him. He’s a funny guy. His his tone is perfect — he nails it. I hope he does more comedy. He makes me laugh in real life. I feel like there’s a comedy out there for him, and it’ll be a huge hit.

For Knuckles, are you mostly acting opposite a tennis ball or like a stuffy of Knuckles?

It depends on what the scene is. It runs the gamut from a child in a green suit to a tennis ball, to a live puppet with, like, full animatronic features.

No real echidna?

Haven’t thrown in a real echidna. They know not to. I remember doing a scene with a snake once in Champaign, ILL. I am really good on set. Like, really good. You can beat me up, put me in a cage, feed me through a tube, whatever. I’m an actor’s-actor. I’ve worked with David Caspe, who directed and created that show, a million times. And I remember after we did the snake scene, he came over to me and was like, “Wow, you really hated that snake.” There’s some things I can’t act through.

***

An Intimate Evening with Adam Pally premieres on HBO and streams on HBO Max at 9 p.m. Friday.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Holt & Connor Swindells in UK Comedy 'Jingle Bell Heist' Trailer
Hollywood

Olivia Holt & Connor Swindells in UK Comedy ‘Jingle Bell Heist’ Trailer

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Olivia Holt & Connor Swindells in UK Comedy ‘Jingle Bell Heist’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
October 16, 2025
Source: YouTube

“We should’ve gone with my idea.” Netflix has unveiled the trailer for a holiday crime comedy called Jingle Bell Heist, arriving to watch later in November in the holiday season. It’s about two thieves who become lovers who try to pull off the same heist who then run into problems with their heist and their relationship. Two down-on-their-luck hourly workers reluctantly form an alliance to rob one of London’s most illustrious stores on Christmas Eve. As they hatch their plans, the pair start to realize there are sparks between them — and they’re not from the twinkly holiday lights around jolly London town. Starring Olivia Holt as Sophia Martin, who moved to London to care fer her mom; and Connor Swindells as Nick O’Connor, a former security consultant turned phone tech. Along with Lucy Punch, Peter Serafinowicz, Poppy Drayton, Natasha Joseph, and Michael Salami. This looks like a made-for-TV riff on Bad Santa, but without the same crude humor that Billy Bob Thornton brought to that. Another Netflix watch & forget holiday special.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Michael Fimognari’s comedy Jingle Bell Heist, from YouTube:

Jingle Bell Heist Trailer

Jingle Bell Heist Poster

“This holiday, payback never looked so festive.” Sophia (Olivia Holt), a sharp-witted retail worker, and Nick (Connor Swindells), a down-on-his-luck repairman, are small-time thieves both with eyes on the same Christmas Eve score: robbing London’s most notorious department store. Forced into an uneasy alliance, as secrets surface & feelings for each other deepen, Sophia & Nick put their relationship and the heist in jeopardy. Jingle Bell Heist is directed by American producer / filmmaker Michael Fimognari, director of the films To All the Boys: P.S. I Still Love You, To All the Boys: Always & Forever, and series “The Midnight Club” & “The Fall of the House of Usher” previously. The screenplay is by Abby McDonald and Amy Reed; and story by Abby McDonald. Produced by Matt Kaplan; co-produced by Shannon Gibson. Netflix debuts Fimognari’s Jingle Bell Heist streaming on Netflix starting November 26th, 2025 this fall.

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October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Akshay Kumar
Bollywood

De De Pyaar De 2 Trailer: Ajay Devgn & R Madhavan Reunite for This Romantic Comedy

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

2025 seems to be a year of sequels for Ajay Devgn. After the release of Rohit Shetty’s cop drama Singham Again last year, Ajay is slated to have a series of sequels releasing in 2025 as well. This began with Raj Kumar Gupta’s highly successful crime thriller Raid 2, followed by the comedy Son of Sardaar 2. Currently, the trailer for Ajay’s next sequel, De De Pyaar De 2, has been released.

 

The movie starts precisely where the first part ended. During the climax of De De Pyaar De, the character Aashish, played by Ajay Devgn, and his girlfriend, Ayesha, played by Rakul Preet Singh, find themselves caught in a disagreement regarding whether he should seek her family’s approval. The main aspect as revealed at the beginning of the film being –  Aashish is 50 years old, while Ayesha is 26, nearly half his age.

The trailer depicts Ajay’s character, Aashish, meeting Ayesha’s parents, played by R Madhavan and Gautami Kapoor. While they initially try to be open-minded about the age difference, their perspective shifts upon discovering that Aashish is nearly the same age as Ayesha’s father. Eventually, the trailer introduces Meezaan Jafri’s character, who has been called upon by Ayesha’s parents to pursue her, with the intention of ending her relationship with Aashish.

 

The 2019 original focused on Aashish’s desire to gain his estranged family’s acceptance of Ayesha, considering their age difference. As the film concluded, his estranged wife, Manju, played by Tabu, successfully persuaded not only their family, including their two children, but also Ayesha herself, to offer Aashish another opportunity for love. The sequel is now set to depict Aashish seeking the approval of Ayesha’s family.

De De Pyaar De 2

While the first film, De De Pyaar De, was directed by Akiv Ali, the sequel is directed by Anshul Sharma. The story for both films have been written by Luv Ranjan, who is known for making successful romantic comedies such as Pyaar Ka Punchnama, Sonu Ke Titu Ki Sweety, and Tu Jhoothi Main Makkar.  He has also co-produced the film through Luv Films, which he co-owns with Ankur Garg, in collaboration with Bhushan Kumar’s T-Series.

 

Apart from Ajay Devgn and Rakul Preet Singh, the cast also includes R. Madhavan, Javed Jaffrey, Meezan Jafri, Gautami Kapoor, and Ishita Dutta in key roles. The film will be released on November 14. 


Also Read: De De Pyaar De 2 to release on THIS date

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Whitney Cummings Shrugs Off Saudi Comedy Fest Criticism as "Just Racism"
Music

Whitney Cummings Shrugs Off Saudi Comedy Fest Criticism as “Just Racism”

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Whitney Cummings has heard the criticisms for performing at the controversial Riyadh Comedy Festival, which the comedian has dismissed as “just racism.”

Cummings spoke up on her Good for You podcast, where she responded to the ongoing disapproval being leveled at comedians like herself who traveled to Saudi Arabia for the fest.

“I guess I’m this weirdo. I don’t operate under, you know, the idea that every government and their people are the same,” she said. “Like, you think that the people of Saudi Arabia and the Saudi government all share [the same values]? So you also believe that the Chinese government and the Chinese people are exactly the same? It’s just racism. I think it took me a second, because when people are going like, ‘You’re doing something unethical,’ I’m like, ‘Oh, these must be ethical people, let me listen.’ And then you’re like, ‘Oh no, you’re just racist.’ But these are also, by the way, the same people that would go like, ‘Trump’s not my president! I am nothing like our government.’ But other countries are?”

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Cummings is the latest in a line of comedians who’ve defended their decision to perform at the Riyadh Comedy Festival. Aziz Ansari faced off against Jimmy Kimmel on his late-night talk show about it recently, saying that while it’s “a complicated issue,” he still wanted to perform, and that “there’s people over there that don’t agree with the stuff that the government’s doing, and to ascribe like the worst behavior of the government onto those people, that’s not fair.”

Bill Burr popped up on a live taping of the Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend podcast to say that he believes the controversy isn’t genuine, and is being inflamed by bots.

While comedian Jessica Kirson has apologized for her appearance at the fest, Louis C.K. defended his decision to perform there, calling it “a good opportunity.”

Dave Chappelle used his set at the event to say that “it’s easier to talk here than it is in America.”

Marc Maron, Shane Gillis and Zach Woods have all spoken out against the comics who chose to participate in the comedy festival.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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AI Is the Sickest Thing About Gross-Out Comedy
TV & Streaming

AI Is the Sickest Thing About Gross-Out Comedy

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The funniest thing about Todd Rohal’s “Fuck My Son!” — alas, one of the only funny things about this impressively sick but tiresomely self-amused celebration of bad taste — is that the most controversial aspect of the movie isn’t its title, or its demented story about a gun-packing mother who forces a random woman to have sex with her monstrous son (imagine if the Sarlaac from “Star Wars” had a baby with the alien from “Mac and Me,” nipples and boils everywhere, diaper oozing wet shit, just a gaping hole full of hotdogs where his dick should be), or even how brutally it treats the sex slave’s elementary school-age daughter, Belinda, who will be cooked in an oven if her mom doesn’t comply with their captor’s demands).

'The Mastermind'

No, the most controversial aspect of “Fuck My Son!” is that it uses some very crude and obvious AI for what amounts to roughly 90 seconds of screen time. A number of festival viewers were outraged. I guess some things are just too obscene for audiences to stomach.

Like everything else in Rohal’s film, the AI-afflicted scenes are designed to triple-underline their own grotesqueness. A prologue modeled after an AMC theater pre-show (“No jacking off in the theater,” “Do not pee or crap in your seat,” “Our restrooms are now closed”) is filled out with inhuman crowds, while the characters from Bernice’s favorite show — a “Veggietales”-esque abomination called “The Meatie Mates” — pop up throughout the movie in increasingly artificial form, their every appearance better reflecting the ghoulish slop that today’s children eagerly consume on YouTube. 

As in Radu Jude’s recent “Dracula,” the technology isn’t used as a shortcut (if anything, incorporating AI made Rohal’s work considerably more difficult), but rather as a commentary on the soullessness of modern “art.” Reactive to a world in which people have become more offended by form than content, “Fuck My Son!” exists to explore the efficacy of shock value at a time when image-making itself has become so repulsive and society has ingested its own memetic sickliness as a sign of the future. 

Rohal wants to push back against the numbing dystopia of Project 2025, so he’s cooked up a collective experience — one that will tour across the country, advertising its lack of streaming availability as its greatest hook — designed to startle us back to our senses and restore the sheer joy of transgression. Little other joy is on offer (either within this movie, or outside of it), but “Fuck My Son!” feels like it was only made to indulge in the fact that it still could be.

So while I may not have particularly enjoyed the experience of watching it, I have no choice but to admit that it does, indeed, exist. Critics are raving “This is a real thing that people made.” Put it on the poster. 

Of course, this material didn’t originate with Rohal; an idea as pure and profound as “Fuck My Son!” has to come from somewhere. Usually it’s from a divine vision or the liquid meth they sell at the front of America’s finest gas stations. In this case, it came from a graphic novel: Johnny Ryan’s “Fuck My Son: A Tale of Terror, Issue One,” which Rohal has faithfully adapted like a sacred text. And that’s just as well, because the movie has no interest in making such intellectual property more palatable to a wider audience.

Either you want to see a movie called “Fuck My Son!” or you don’t (“It’s just garbage,” the director has said. “It’s made by trashmen for trashmen”), and Rohal’s film is squarely targeted at the people who might conceivably pay for a ticket; the aforementioned pre-show offers viewers the choice of “Perv-o-Vision” glasses that make all of the characters naked, or a “Nude Blok” edition for those who pray to “fill their lives with blissful ignorance and intolerance” (the film’s spirit all but requires comparisons to John Waters, even if its execution cleaves a lot closer to early James Gunn). 

The world of “Fuck My Son!” is a small and seedy place where every mote of innocence only exists as an invitation for perversion, or worse. We first meet Sandi (Tipper Newton, recalling Sarah Silverman in her ability to conflate innocence with repulsion) as she takes little Bernice (Kynzie Colmery) dress shopping, where — of course — a peeper is spying on all of the dressing rooms. Shot like an ’80s Z-picture but always self-indulgent enough to make clear that it’s in on the joke, the movie soon introduces its leading ladies to an overbearing mother (a Chris Farley-esque Robert Longstreet, growling in drag) who’s fallen and can’t get up. 

But it’s a trap! The mother lures Sandi and Bernice to her van, knocks them out, and takes them to the remote farmhouse where she lives with her mutant son Fabian (Steve Little). There’s so much sex in the world, and she can’t stand the thought that her sweet child will never get to have any of it. The mother wheels Fabian in, places Bernice nearby with a front-row view, and — wait for it — demands that Sandi fuck her son. Bareback. “Person to Person” star George Sample III eventually shows up to round out the cast, but that’s really about all there is to it. As positioned to Sandi, the terms couldn’t be simpler: “The sooner you fuck my son, the sooner I’ll let your daughter out of the oven.” What’s a mother to do? 

Rohal pays lip-service to the idea that parents will do anything for their children, but this movie is much less interested in developing its themes than it is in watching Sandi fish around Fabian’s innards for his Lovecraftian penis (spoiler alert: she finds it, and the massive appendage becomes a veritable character in its own right). Is it gross? Very.

But the grossness doesn’t scale at a particularly engaging rate, and while Rohal’s agenda required a certain amount of cheekiness to validate the fun of its own shock value, it’s hard to overlook the reality that “Fuck My Son!” is far less disturbing than the movie promised by its title. For all of its eldritch horrors (Fabian’s penis eventually penetrates almost everything you can imagine, with child rape being the most obvious red line that Rohal won’t cross), this heightened story is too “fun” to be even half as fucked up as the things we read in the headlines every day, and not funny enough for its increasingly whacked out “WTF”-ness to be enjoyable on its own terms. Things get wild because they can, and then slaphappy because they can’t be anything else.

When a title card pops up that reads: “The Ending: Part I,” the joke is that a movie with so little substance would require something as pompous as a multi-tiered epilogue. 

What meaning there is behind “Fuck My Son!” is easy enough to understand: Enjoy this kind of garbage while you can, because it won’t be long before late night TV hosts are locked in jail, Donald Trump starts talking about Eddington as if it were a real town he saw on Fox News, and everyone who saw “One Battle After Another” is labeled as a card-carrying member of Antifa (the “A” in “AMC A-List” stands for “Anarchy”). Appreciate when slop could still be a display of defiance instead, and not just the visual language of cultural defeat. See “Fuck My Son!” not because it’s good, but rather because it refuses to pretend that it isn’t bad. If only that argument were enough to convince me that it shouldn’t have been better.

Grade: C-

“Fuck My Son!” opens at the IFC Center in New York City on Thursday, October 16, before traveling to other theaters around the country. Its full touring schedule can be found here.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Whitney Cummings Defends Performing At Riyadh Comedy Festival
TV & Streaming

Whitney Cummings Defends Performing At Riyadh Comedy Festival

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Whitney Cummings is speaking out on the criticism of those who performed at Saudi Arabia’s debut Riyadh Comedy Festival.

Cummings defended her performance at the festival and those of others on her “Good for You” podcast Monday.

“It’s just racism,” she said of the criticism. “I think it took me a second, because when people are going like, ‘You’re doing something unethical,’ I’m like, ‘Oh, these must be ethical people, let me listen.’ And then you’re like, ‘Oh no, you’re just racist.’”

She continued, “I guess I’m this weirdo,” she said. “I don’t operate under, you know, the idea that every government and their people are the same… You think that the people of Saudi Arabia and the Saudi government all [share the same values]? So you also believe that the Chinese government and the Chinese people are exactly the same? It’s just racism. I think it took me a second, because when people are going like, ‘You’re doing something unethical,’ I’m like, ‘Oh, these must be ethical people, let me listen.’ And then you’re like, ‘Oh no, you’re just racist.’ These are also the same people who would go, ‘Trump is not my president! I am nothing like our president.’ But other countries are?”

She also pointed out the hypocrisy of comedians who opposed the festival and of those who performed.

“When you get a sec, google ‘Saudi Arabia Live Nation’ so you can be informed on the fact that anyone who has worked with Live Nation, every stand-up comic, has taken Saudi money,” she said. “Or bought a ticket through Live Nation, went to a Live Nation event, all the actors who are represented by William Morris Agency, which is all of them. If you want to send them notes too.”

Aziz Ansari was among the A-list comedians who defended the controversial decision to perform at the fest and said he planned to donate a portion of his fee to organizations like Reporters Without Borders and Human Rights Watch.

Other comedians who performed at the fest, which ran from Sept. 26 to Oct. 9, include Bill Burr, Dave Chappelle, Louis C.K., Kevin Hart, Pete Davidson and Andrew Schulz, among others.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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