celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Legacy
Tag:

Legacy

Ikkis New Poster Out! Dharmendra Brings Legacy, Emotion To Agastya Nanda’s War Drama
Bollywood

Ikkis New Poster Out! Dharmendra Brings Legacy, Emotion To Agastya Nanda’s War Drama

by jummy84 November 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The makers of Ikkis have revealed a powerful new poster featuring veteran actor Dharmendra, and it has already created a huge buzz among fans. The poster introduces him in a role filled with emotion, strength, and dignity, reminding everyone why he remains one of Indian cinema’s most respected icons.

Dharmendra’s New Poster From Ikkis Out!

The tagline on the poster reads, “Fathers raise sons. Legends raise nations.” This line sets the tone for the film and hints at a story that is rooted in sacrifice, courage, and legacy.

Ikkis tells the story of India’s youngest Param Vir Chakra awardee, and Dharmendra’s presence adds weight and depth to this patriotic narrative. The film is presented by Dinesh Vijan and Maddock Films and is directed by ace filmmaker Sriram Raghavan, known for his gripping storytelling and unique style.

Agastya Nanda steps into the role of Arun Khetarpal, marking a powerful transformation from his previous youthful role in The Archies to portraying a national hero. The film also stars Jaideep Ahlawat, Dharmendra, and Sikandar Kher in pivotal roles, adding strong depth to the ensemble cast.
Directed by Sriram Raghavan, known for his critically acclaimed thrillers like Andhadhun and Badlapur, Ikkis is expected to combine emotion, patriotism, and intense storytelling.

As fans await Agastya’s theatrical debut, the first look at Ikkis has already created excitement across social media. With its powerful subject, talented cast, and Raghavan’s direction, the film is poised to be one of the most anticipated releases of 2025, a tribute to bravery that will resonate across generations. It is all set to release in cinemas worldwide this Christmas.

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Agastya Nanda’s War Drama Ikkis Based On Real-Life Story Of Second Lieutenant Arun Khetarpal Gets A Release Date

Manisha Karki

Manisha has established a reputation for insightful and engaging storytelling with over six years of expertise in the industry. With a deep passion for cinema, she brings a unique perspective to her coverage, making it a trusted voice in the entertainment world.

November 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
First Look at Season 2 of 'Monarch: Legacy of Monsters' Kaiju Series
Hollywood

First Look at Season 2 of ‘Monarch: Legacy of Monsters’ Kaiju Series

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

First Look at Season 2 of ‘Monarch: Legacy of Monsters’ Kaiju Series

by Alex Billington
November 13, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Attention surfers – the beach is closed!” Hello there, big guy! Apple TV has unveiled the first look teaser for their next exciting Season 2 of the hit sci-fi show Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, about Godzilla and King Kong and all the Kaiju (which are known as “Titans” in this series). This is a spin-off series based on the recent Godzilla movies, following people working for the secretive organization known as Monarch. The first season launched in 2023 and turned out to be pretty damn good. The next season continues onward in February 2026 after filming earlier this year. Based on Legendary’s Monsterverse, the 10-episode epic series follows two siblings find themselves revisiting the past to uncover the truth behind the secret “Monarch” organization and the many emerging monsters. Season 2 picks up with the fate of Monarch — and the world — hanging in the balance. The dramatic saga reveals buried secrets that reunite our heroes (and villains) on Kong’s Skull Island, and a new, mysterious village where a mythical Titan rises from the sea. The show stars Kurt Russell and Wyatt Russell (both are returning again), with Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Anders Holm, and Joe Tippett. It’s looks quite gnarly so far! Take a peek.

Here’s the first promo for Apple TV’s series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters – Season 2, from YouTube:

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Series Season 2

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Series Season 2

You can still watch Season 1 of Apple TV’s Monarch: Legacy of Monsters series streaming on Apple TV now.

Season two will pick up with the fate of Monarch — and the world — hanging in the balance. The dramatic saga reveals many buried secrets that reunite our heroes (and villains) on Kong’s Skull Island, and a new, mysterious village where a mythical Titan rises from the sea. The ripple effects of the past make waves in the present day, blurring the bonds between family, friend and foe — all with the threat of a Titan event on the horizon. Monarch: Legacy of Monsters is a sci-fi action thriller series co-created by Chris Black (“Star Trek: Enterprise”, “Ugly Betty”, “Outcast”) & Matt Fraction (comic book writer; story consultant). Season 2 is showrun by Chris Black. With writing by Andrew Colville, Joe Pokaski, Kari Drake, Dan Dworkin, Ralph Eggleston, Tanner Hansinger, & Maria Melnik. And with episodes directed by Mairzee Almas and Lawrence Trilling. Executive produced by Chris Black, Jen Roskind, Matt Shakman, Lawrence Trilling, Joby Harold, Tory Tunnell, Andrew Colville, Hiro Matsuoka, Takemasa Arita. Co-produced by Toho Co., Ltd. Apple will debut the series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters – Season 2 streaming on Apple TV+ worldwide starting on February 27th, 2026 early next year with new episodes arriving weekly until May. Who’s ready for more?

Share

Find more posts in: Sci-Fi, Streaming, To Watch, Trailer

November 15, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Diane Lane On Punk Legacy Of 'The Fabulous Stains'
TV & Streaming

Diane Lane On Punk Legacy Of ‘The Fabulous Stains’

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Nearly 45 years later, Diane Lane is proud of the punk legacy that has come from one of her pre-breakout roles.

In an interview with Deadline, the 3x Golden Globe nominee recently reflected on her Lou Adler-directed 1982 cult classic Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains, which is largely credited for influencing the riot grrrl movement of the ’90s.

“It was so wild,” she said of filming the movie as a teen. “It was airing not too long ago on TCM, and I was very vindicated to see that that film had the legs that it deserves to have, and it was wonderful to have been appreciated by people who went on in their music careers and were emboldened by our story.”

Lane continued, “It was February of 1980 when we filmed that. So, just put that in your pipe and smoke it. I mean, it was very real to the times just coming out of the 70s. So, punk was already there and getting only more so. But as a point in history, it’s lovely to say I was a part of it in whatever little way that I could be as a 15-year old girl in the film industry.”

In Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains, Lane starred as frustrated teen Corinne Burns, who forms the band, The Stains, with her sister Tracy (Marin Kanter) and their cousin Jessica McNeil (Laura Dern). When the punk group, The Looters, comes to town, the trio joins their tour and quickly rises to global stardom. The cast also featured the Sex Pistols’ Paul Thomas Cook and Steve Jones, as well as The Clash’s Paul Simonon.

Since garnering a cult following shortly after its release, musicians like Courtney Love, Bikini Kill’s Tobi Vail and Bratmobile’s Allison Wolfe have credited the film as an influence.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Share
Bollywood

Lucknow pays tribute to Begum Akhtar’s immortal legacy; Ashwini Bhide Deshpande performs at Mallika-e-Ghazal’s mazar

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

The state capital hosted various events to commemorate the legacy of Mallika-e-Ghazal Begum Akhtar. Marking her death anniversary on October 30, 1974, Padma Shri awardee and Hindustani classical singer Ashwini Bhide Deshpande paid a musical tribute, presenting the legendary artist’s popular songs at her Mazar in Pasand Bagh, Old City.

Hindustani classical singer Ashwini Bhide Deshpande paid a musical tribute to Begum Akhtar. She performed the Mallika-e-Ghazal’s mazar in Lucknow (inset) (Photos: HT)

The singer from Jaipur’s Atrauli Gharana expressed her reverence, stating, “Like everyone, I am a very big fan of Begum Akhtar’s ghazals, her dadras, and thumris. Each of her songs is a masterpiece, and it’s an honour and a special feeling to dedicate a musical evening Hazri, for her at the very place where she rests.”

Deshpande held the audience spellbound with her renditions of ghazals, dadra, and thumri. She opened the evening with a Hazri in Raag Kedar, followed by the ghazal Chha Rahi Kali Ghata, the thumri Ab Ke Sawan Ghar Aa Ja, and the dadra Ho Gayi Beriya Piya. She was accompanied by vocalist Megha Shyamlal Bhatt, Pandit Vinod Lele on the tabla, and Pandit Dharam Nath Mishra on the harmonium. A large gathering of music lovers was present at the Mazar to pay their respects to the legendary singer.

Organiser Madhvi Kuckreja shared, “The musical Hazri has become an annual feature at her Mazar. This year is special because, at our Lucknow Bioscope museum in Sanatkada Ka Adda, we have put up an exclusive exhibition, Life and Legacy of Begum Akhtar. It displays her music LP records, rare articles, some personal belongings, a harmonium gifted by her, and much more.”

A separate two-day musical evening was also organised by Bhatkhande Sanskriti Vishwavidyalaya at the Kalamandapam auditorium. Pune-based singer Sangeeta Nerurkar performed on the opening day, while Rageshwari Das from Kolkata offered a musical tribute on the concluding day.

Her popular songs including Humri Atariay Pe, Kuch to Duniya Ki Inayat Hai and Aye Mohabaat… were presented on the occasion.

The university’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Mandvi Singh, remarked, “It is a matter of pride for us that Begum Akhtar was associated with the Bhatkhande Music Institute for some time. Revisiting this historic connection fills us with immense respect and honour. This event is a tribute to the immortal legacy of Begum Akhtar.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
With Ashes and Diamonds Daniel Ash Carries on His Bauhaus Legacy » PopMatters
Music

With Ashes and Diamonds Daniel Ash Carries on His Bauhaus Legacy » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Some people are fortunate enough to play in one successful band; Daniel Ash managed to be in two. Following the dissolution of gothic rock band Bauhaus, Ash and brothers Kevin Haskins & David J founded Love and Rockets in 1985. This trio embodied a slicker sound than the more arty Bauhaus, and Ash has continued to pursue his artistry with his latest group, Ashes and Diamonds.

Ash has formed a band with percussionist Bruce Smith, of Public Image Ltd. fame, and bassist Paul Spencer Denman [Sade]. In some ways, this is a supergroup, but the intention is to keep the album “honest” sounding. Fittingly, their debut record is called Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever.

“I’m all over the place,” the guitarist chuckles. “My mum’s half-French, half-Belgian, and my dad’s English. I’ve lived here in the United States since 1994; do you notice an accent?” It is admittedly more transatlantic than British. “I notice it when I go back,” he laughs. “And I jump into a cab. They say to me: ‘Are you from America?’ I go: ‘Northampton!’ But I very much still sound English in the States still!”

He’s wearing spectacles, but beyond those rock furnishings, he comes across as a humble musician. “I don’t believe in jam sessions,” he admits, discussing the beginnings of Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever. “Now, I would get drum loops and a bassline from Paul [Spencer Denman] and Bruce [Smith]. We did most of this album independently because we live in different parts of the country. Bruce lives on the East Coast, I live on the West; so does Paul.”

He coughs and continues: “So they’d send me stuff, and I’d get the headphones on. I used this cut-up method that William Burroughs used, as did David Bowie. I’d get a bunch of headlines from tacky magazines: The Sun, The National Enquirer. All the gossip mags! They’d have all the best headlines, so I’d cut them up and put them on the kitchen table [while] listening to the backing tracks. If I were lucky, I’d get a song out of it by the end of the day. All this mix and match!”

Not an uncommon method: John Lennon did something very similar on “A Day in the Life” in 1967. “Yeah, that was an example of that,” Ash nods. “‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’ came from a painting with his kid. So, a similar idea, but I got the whole of the song from the headlines. Gets you started on something you wouldn’t usually write about.”

Was it a lengthy process? “We started this seven years ago,” he confirms. “This was started in 2017, 2018, and then COVID hit. So, we had to work independently. And at the 11th hour, we decided to scrap it and start it all again. We booked a studio in Los Angeles for ten days, and re-recorded and remixed everything. This was with a producer called Robert Stevenson.”

Another cough: “What I’m leading up to is that we had time to reflect and perfect everything. Because of that, I’m pretty much 100% on all the songs, but one track I like is ‘Ice Queen’. It’s different: not rock. I love the romantic sound of that track. The romance in it.”

Ash co-wrote the romantic number “So Alive” during the 1980s. “I wrote the lyric on that one,” he smiles. It has proven to be one of Love and Rockets’ most enduring tracks. “The situation with that track is we were going to do it the day before we were in the studio…” He splutters and pauses: “Well, on Friday, we had planned on Monday to do one of Dave’s songs. I had come up with just the riff and thought I had something special here. I had just the riff and the opening line. I said: ‘Give me half an hour.’ I went down into the cellar with a bottle of whiskey. It was a magic moment, because I got the lyrics in half an hour. With the help of a glass, or three!”

Ash joined his bandmates upstairs, where they set up and basically played that song.” Ash is reminded of Bauhaus staple “Bela Lugosi’s Dead” because both compositions were recorded quickly. “We played the song,” he confirms, “and I did a scratch vocal. And then by day two, we got the backing singers in. The whole thing was mixed and produced in 24 hours!”

He denies that the intention was to write a contrast to Bauhaus. “If you think about that track, it’s in the same vein as Lou Reed‘s ‘Walk on the Wild Side’. We didn’t plan it that way initially, but as I say, I was coming up from writing the lyric, and everyone locked in real-quick. We all agreed it needed female backing singers like ‘Walk on the Wild Side’. We got three girls in on backing, but you know, when you’re writing a song, you don’t know where it’s going to go.”

Morale was high in the studio. “David [J] and I were joking,” he giggles. “We said: ‘If ‘So Alive’ isn’t a hit, we quit.’” Ash says that the record company in America printed promos boasting that the album [their eponymous fourth] contained the hit ‘So Alive’. “That’s how confident they were,” he grins. It grossed the top position on the Billboard Modern Rock Charts in 1989.

Returning to Bauhaus, were they compared to Joy Division? “Yeah, because of the similarity in the vocals,” Ash agrees, suggesting that Peter Murphy and Ian Curtis shared a resonance. Curiously, both bands formed sequel outfits with the lead guitarist promoted to lead singer. “I never put that together,” Ash says. “Like New Order, yeah. Love and Rockets certainly sounds different to Bauhaus.”

He suggests that Tones on Tail, a band he formed with drummer Kevin Haskins in 1982 (revived in 2024), sounded different “again”. Ash pauses: “Are you familiar with Tones on Tail?” Pop is a fine exploration of textures. “That was the one album we made,” Ash says. “Kevin’s daughter Diva [Dompé] joined us in 2017 for Poptone. We called ourselves that because we covered Love and Rockets, Tones on Tail, and Bauhaus. We were a covers band, but covering ourselves, which was fun, but for the Cruel World gig that Tones on Tail played in 2024, Diva played bass on that.”

Returning to Bauhaus, some of the tunes, notably “Bela Lugosi’s Dead”, are soaked in reggae imprints. “Well, actually more Kevin, David, and me,” Ash replies. “I don’t think Peter was so into the reggae at that point [August 1979.] It was a mixture of various influences. You can’t really pinpoint…”

He realizes there is a yarn here. “I had this riff,” he elaborates. “This haunting riff: using open tuning. I was talking to Dave on the phone the night before we recorded that song. I said: ‘I have this real haunting riff.’ ‘That’s really funny,’ he said, ‘I’ve got this lyric about the vampire Bela Lugosi.’When we got into the rehearsal studio, I started playing, and Kevin started doing this bossa nova beat. David started on bass and handed the lyrics to Peter. He started singing it pretty much as you hear it, so again, real quick.”

Acknowledging the reggae influence, the guitarist points out that there is “bossa-nova beat there.” As a teenager/young man in the 1970s, Daniel Ash was struck by British glam rock. “I was brought up, you know, the big thing that hit me at 15 years old was the Ziggy Stardust thing,” he confesses. “Life-altering. That, and T-Rex. Iggy & the Stooges. That’s basically all I listened to at the time.”

Ash had an older sibling who was “into the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Kinks,” so this guitarist was exposed to older influences. “My two favorite guitar players are Hendrix and Mick Ronson,” he admits. “I’m not really into lots of shredding, so the Ronson thing was a big influence.”

Was he taken with Queen? “No, that’s different,” he replies. “It’s a little bit like Kiss in America; not the same thing.”

Ashes and Diamonds feature a drummer from John Lydon‘s band Public Image Ltd. “When the Sex Pistols came out in the 1970s, that was mind-blowing. On Top of the Pops, I hadn’t seen anything this exciting the whole Ziggy thing. That’s why a lot of bands came after. Siouxsie & The Banshees, the Damned [sic], the Cure. Sex Pistols are my favorite punk band.”

Primarily a guitarist, Daniel Ash has also dabbled with the saxophone. “There’s some crazy sax on a song called ‘Champagne Charlie’ on this album [Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever],” he confirms. “A bunch of sax at the end of this album.” Bauhaus favored frenzy, as is apparent on “She’s in Parties”. “That sounds polished to me,” he laughs. “If it sounds raw, great. It doesn’t sound raw to me like Velvet Underground raw. I love Velvet Underground, and it suited them to be lo-fi. I think their third album was more of an Andy Warhol vibe; he would use the cheapest cameras, simple lighting. I think the Velvets were influenced by that.”

Reed, like bassist John Cale, had a “healthy ego”, which Ash confirms is “part and parcel of being in a band. You’ve got to have an ego to want to create in the first place, as far as I’m concerned,” Ash says. “It’s tough, but if you ain’t got an ego, you won’t create anything.” Did the pandemic inspire Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever? “It only inspired the lyric to ‘2020’,” he elaborates. “That’s the only track that had an influence. The three of us recorded long-distance initially, but when we decided to re-record it, we were all in LA with Robert. Ten days to get it all done, and we finished it at 22:00 on the tenth day. Much better to do it that way.”

“The first Bauhaus album took two weeks,” Ash admits. “We used the band Crass’s studio, and then years later, with Love and Rockets, we were getting successful.” He pauses: “Not in England, Ireland, or Europe, but the States. We ended up taking two years to make Hot Trip to Heaven. We’re still proud of it, but it was commercial suicide. I remember thinking: ‘This is either our Dark Side of the Moon, or it is going to flop’. Commercially, it bombed, but we’re still proud of it.”

It contrasted the jokes they made about Fleetwood Mac‘s protracted studio times: “We ended up taking two years on an album!” Perhaps humbled by that experience, Daniel Ash takes the time to say thank you for this interview. “If the album’s successful, and there’s interest, then we’ll look at the live level,” he continues. “But if it’s not, then there’s no point going out. It’s in the hands of the Gods. We’re open to it. There’s so much traffic every day, and it’s tough to stand out.”

He’s not a fan of AI. “The concern is that it will take over,” he sighs. “Very strange, and very weird. They will be able to come up with ten Brad Pitts, no problem. Actors are talking about protecting themselves from that happening. We will all become obsolete. I haven’t used any AI in the making of the lyrics.”

Ash admits he’s been “moaning about it” but sees some potential that it could “help the human race, but it also could completely fuck us up,” he warns. “We’re just in the infancy stage. By Christmas, we might not be able to control it. The people who have made it are concerned.”

October 29, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Legacy of Dark Knight Honors 1989 Batman, Arkham Asylum
TV & Streaming

Legacy of Dark Knight Honors 1989 Batman, Arkham Asylum

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

“Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight” pays homage to nearly every incarnation of the Caped Crusader, and a new hands-on demo reveals inspiration pulled from Jack Nicholson’s Joker in the 1989 “Batman” movie and combat from Rocksteady’s popular “Arkham” video games.

Warner Bros. Games unveiled an hour-long demo of the game at New York Comic Con, where the open-world Gotham City and an early level set at Ace Chemicals, better known as the birthplace of the Joker, was shown off. The influence of the “Arkham” games was heavy, from the fluid combat of “Batman: Arkham Asylum,” to the open world of “Arkham City” and reckless Batmobile driving of “Arkham Knight.”

The open world portion of the demo lasted 15 minutes, where you could play as Batman or Commissioner Gordon (modeled after Jeffrey Wright in “The Batman”). Just like in “Arkham Knight,” Batman can launch to the sky with his grappling hook and soar for long distances with his cape. Once you get a hang of the controls, you can easily glide between rooftops and swoop down on Lego thugs committing crimes on the streets. On the ground, you can summon a Batmobile to zoom around the streets and harmlessly crash into Lego fire hydrants, street signs and citizens who will hilariously jump out of the way.

The world and combat feels very similar to “Arkham Knight,” one of the most popular Batman video games of all time that dropped the Caped Crusader into an open-world Gotham to fight many of his iconic foes. Lego Batman can effortlessly glide from foe to foe, linking punches and kicks from one bad guy to the next. Unlike the “Arkham” Batman, who breaks bones and leaves villains mangled, his Lego counterpart uses funny wrestling moves and gadgets to explode enemies in a flurry of bricks.

During the demo, Batman used his trusty batarangs and the bat-claw to dispatch bad guys and solve puzzles. The batarangs could hit long-range targets, while the bat-claw brought far-away enemies to Batman and could yank obstacles off walls. The tools could also be used in Riddler puzzles, another takeaway from the “Arkham” games. The one puzzle I encountered involved flipping a switch and hitting bullseyes on targets within a minute, hardly a challenge for gamers who struggled through the “Arkham” challenges. Commissioner Gordon, who could be controlled by a second player, had a foam pistol and goo gun that could clog up pipes.

Batman and Gordon teamed up to investigate the Red Hood and his gang, who’ve taken over Ace Chemicals during the 45-minute main mission. The duo must sneak around the industrial plant and analyze three packages full of teddy bears filled with a suspicious substance. Just like the “Arkham” games but much more forgiving, Batman can sneak around the area and eliminate crooks stealthily — but there’s not much penalty for getting caught. There’s also a short, simple minigame where you must identify and match chemicals in the teddy bears, similar to the detective mode sections in the “Arkham” games.

After that, the main part of the mission kicks in. Batman and Gordon sneak into Ace Chemicals and face off against Red Hood and his cronies. That includes a super-sized, hulking minifigure that serves as a more powerful enemy type, but if you dodge and time your attacks just right then you shouldn’t have a problem. If you’ve played a “Lego” game before (or any of the “Arkham” series), you’ll breeze through the rest of the level. Beat up bad guys, switch between characters to solve puzzles and smash and build Lego objects to get through the mission. If Batman or Gordon dies, they’ll get reassembled instantly, and soon enough you’ll fight Red Hood.

Batman fans should know how this face-off goes. After they fight above a vat of chemicals, Red Hood finds himself laughing hysterically and dangling for his life while clinging to Batman. The villain quotes Nicholson’s Joker from the 1989 “Batman” movie and asks, “Have you ever danced with the devil in the pale moonlight?” Instead of pulling himself up, Red Hood shocks the hero with a hand buzzer and falls into the chemicals. As police swarm the plant, Batman disappears in a puff of smoke. However, there’s a teaser that shows Red Hood’s bleached white hand rising above the pool of acidic goo, ready to wreak his revenge on Batman.

After the level, I unlocked a Golden Age costume for Batman and a cowboy-themed look for Gordon. Like previous “Lego” games, “Legacy of the Dark Knight” boasts hundreds of alternate costumes and DC characters to unlock. It’s been more than 10 years since Batman starred in his own “Lego” title, and TT Games and Warner Bros. Games have combined the best elements of past Caped Crusader incarnations into one nostalgia-packed adventure. Fans of all ages will find something to love in “Legacy of the Dark Knight,” releasing next year.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Rajinikanth
Bollywood

Made In Korea to R Madhavan’s Legacy, Tamil and Telugu Shows and Films to Look Forward to on OTT

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The Tamil and Telugu OTT space is buzzing with an exciting lineup of shows and films. Earlier, films such as Maharaja, Lucky Bhaskar and TEST received a lot of love and appreciation from the audience.

Following the success of these titles, Netflix today announced a lineup of six new Tamil and Telugu original films and series. From edge-of-the-seat thrillers to romantic flicks, it includes something for everyone.

Stephen, a Tamil psychological thriller film directed by Mithun and starring Gomathi Shankar, delves into the mind of a self-confessed killer being evaluated by a psychiatrist on a chilling case. The psychiatrist soon finds herself entangled in a mind-twisting mystery, as what begins as a simple evaluation becomes a descent into darkness. Next is a Telugu series Super Subbu, an offbeat comedy of errors, directed by Mallik Ram and starring Sandeep Kishan. It follows a man unexpectedly tasked with teaching sex education to members of a remote village, despite being the least qualified for the job.


There is also #Love, a Tamil series directed by Balaji Mohan and starring Arjun Das and Aishwarya Lekshmi, which offers a refreshing take on modern romance. The show explores the age-old debate as two unlikely partners embark on a unique challenge that brings them closer in unexpected ways.

Taking a heartfelt detour, Made In Korea brings a fresh cross-cultural story to Tamil cinema. Directed by Ra Karthik and starring Priyanka Mohan alongside Park Hye-Jin of Squid Game fame, the film is about a young woman whose dream trip to Korea is derailed by betrayal. Through unexpected friendships and hard lessons, she discovers hope, and herself.

Takshakudu is an upcoming Telugu folklore thriller directed by Vinod Anantoju. Anand Devarakonda stars as a blind man who, along with his loyal dog, sets out to avenge the deaths of his fellow villagers after a tragic accident.


Closing out the line-up is Legacy, a Tamil series from director Charukesh Sekar featuring a powerhouse ensemble cast: R. Madhavan, Nimisha Sajayan, Gautham Karthik, Gulshan Devaiah and Abhishek Banerjee. This gritty family gangster drama spirals into a story where high-stakes saga of succession, where saving an empire means risking everything.

From nail-biting thrillers and moving dramas to punchy comedies and tender romances, this diverse lineup showcases Tamil and Telugu cinema’s creative brilliance.

Also Read: Highest-Grossing Tamil Movies: 2.0, GOAT & More

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Wedotv, ZDF Studios Launch 'Legacy' FAST Channel
TV & Streaming

Wedotv, ZDF Studios Launch ‘Legacy’ FAST Channel

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

CANNES, France — wedotv, the global free ad-supported streaming network, is partnering with Germany’s ZDF Studios, to create and distribute a FAST channel dedicated to just one title: landmark South African drama series “Legacy.”

ZDF Studios already represents the series globally outside , bringing it to market at 2023’s Mipcom.  

As many companies turn to YouTube to build IP, then approach streaming services with masses of data on the result, the single IP channel – wedotv: Legacy — now created and distributed by wedotv – shows companies approaching IP the other way round. First released in 2020 on South Africa’s M-Net, a division of MultiChoice, and now a Canal Plus company, the thriller about how a family tears itself apart in a succession battle built a huge fandom in South Africa and fame abroad. It is now leveraging digital to open up new audiences. 

M-Net’s first telenovela, “Legacy” also underscores a new pathway to success – think Spain’s “The Vow” and “Sueños de Libertad” – by bringing premium production values to a novela narrative which, despite this, doesn’t hide telenovelas’ melodrama heart.

This comes with the series creators and its fictional world. “Legacy” was produced by South African powerhouse Tshedza Pictures, behind the International Emmy-nominated telenovela “The River” whose co-founders, Gwydon Beynon and Phathu Makwarela, created the series. 

It is set in a world of dazzling opulence, caught by the mansion of the Price family, whose patriarch, Sebastian Price has built up Legacy Investments into a billionaire behemoth. The family mansion is a huge white marble affair replete with a pool and rose garden. The women wear stunning fashion numbers, Sebastian’s wife Dineo Price slinking down a staircase in a cleavage revealing skimpy number in its opening minutes. 

Sebastian chooses and then rejects at least two successors in Ep. 1’s first 15 minutes, prompting his own murder, and a succession war as his bitter ex-wife and their unprincipled daughter Felicity will do anything to stop Dineo from shaping their playboy son into his successor. Legacy swept best telenovela and multiple other plaudits at South Africa’s 2021 SAFTA awards.

Among a large South African star-studded and notably diverse cast, the series toplines Dawid Minnaar (“Poppie Nongena”), Sean-Marco Vorster (“Warrior”) and the late Michelle Botes (“Isidingo”) who won SAFTA Golden Horns for actress and supporting actress for her performance.

The smash-hit, Award-winning series “Legacy” (104×45’) transports viewers into the high-stakes world of investment billionaires — where wealth is limitless, rivalries run deep, and family loyalty comes at a deadly price. Behind the glittering façade of the Price dynasty lies a battlefield of power, passion, and betrayal. As long-buried secrets explode and nothing and no one is safe, wedotv and ZDF Studios announced Monday at Mipcom.

“When ZDF Studios came to us with the idea of a channel dedicated to ‘Legacy,’ we wanted to make sure the key elements of a successful single IP channel were in place: quality, quantity, story, and proven audience ratings generator,” noted Philipp Rotermund, CEO of wedotv. “Legacy” has all of those key qualities in spades. It’s also incredibly compelling and binge-worthy, which helps keep viewers engaged within the platform ecosystem, which is essential for advertisers.” 

“There is a real upside to creating and launching a channel like wedotv: ‘Legacy’ — It has a built-in fan base,” said Florian Streit, Director, Drama, ZDF Studios. “Single IP channels work well because they are immediately identifiable to fans. ‘Legacy’ is also a long-running series that maintains an exceptional level of quality across all episodes.”

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
CBGB Festival Grew Venue's Legacy with Iggy Pop, Jack White
Music

CBGB Festival Grew Venue’s Legacy with Iggy Pop, Jack White

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s easy to get a little cynical about the very concept of CBGB Fest. When one of the side stages — the Young Punks Stage — is presented by Ed Hardy, it’s even easier. Is corporate integration and brand licensing really “punk?” Surely someone else can write that dissertation. Besides, the idea of counter culture in 2025, where monoculture is so fragmented it barely even exists, is rarely decoupled from capitalism.

So, is gathering a bunch of punk fans something to really diminish because they’re taking pictures in front of a replica CBGB awning? Let them rock, we say. And hey, at least the original bar and wall segments on display were real.

For sure, the inaugural edition of the festival at Under the K Bridge in Brooklyn, New York, had its issues. Although beverage stands were abundant, the food options were insufficient; you cannot expect four food trucks and two little stands to comfortably feed a festival crowd, and just about everyone had to deal with brutal wait times. But if we’re judging on the music alone, CBGB Fest knocked it out of the park — and it was the Godfather of Punk himself who put an exclamation point on the daylong event with a phenomenal set.

Related Video

At 78 years old, Iggy Pop is still one of the greatest live acts on Earth, and he proved that tenfold with his headlining performance. Taking the main CBGB Stage at 9:30 p.m., Iggy and his band tore right into the Stooges classic “TV Eye” — just about 20 minutes North West from the Brooklyn venue named after the song. With his skin weathered and leathered, and a twisted spine from all the damage he’s done to himself onstage over the years, Iggy is punk personified.

More Stooges gems followed, like “Raw Power,” “Gimme Danger,” and “I Wanna Be Your Dog,” as well as solo favorites like “The Passenger,” eliciting a “la, la, la, la” sing-along from the packed crowd, and “Lust for Life,” with the audience soaking it all in under a light rain coming down in between the cover of the Kosciuszko Bridge above.

Backed by a very cool band, including the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Nick Zinner on guitar, Iggy sounded as great as ever. And seeing the greatest living punk headlining a festival honoring the most iconic punk venue of all time gave off a very historic vibe, even in real time.

The brief drizzle during Iggy’s set was the only wet weather on a day that was comfortably overcast and mild. Which is good thing, considering the festival’s biggest sin: The “water station” — that place every festival has to offer free refills to keep attendees hydrated and safe, usually while reducing waste — was no more than a table handing out 8 oz. plastic bottles of water and someone yelling, “One per person!” A lack of NA beers felt lazy; the water situation felt like an afterthought.

Thankfully, those waiting in the ridiculous food lines at least were right next to the Young Punks Stage, which featured many of the day’s best sets. Former CoSigns Pinkshift, buzzy British band Lambrini Girls, rising Cali punks Scowl, and everyone’s favorite kids-turned-pros The Linda Lindas all brought truly deafening energy to the small stage. Having it tucked in the smaller courtyard Under the K Bridge gave it a fittingly intimate feeling — not as intimate as a tiny Bowery bar, sure, but close enough that Pinkshift and Lambrini Girls were able to control the crowd into joyful moshing.

Many of those Young Punks either took part in signings at the nearby Marshall tent or met with fans waiting by the side stage rails after sets. That amplified the community feeling of the event, and true monoculture or not, punk has always been a community. Above all else — even above the transcendent Iggy Pop performance, the exhilarating Jack White set, The Damned’s UK punk classics, and Johnny Marr’s Smiths-friendly setlist — that’s what felt most CBGB about CBGB Fest. People were there to have a good time and catch some great music; while more care could have been given to the comfort of attendees, the fans brought enough positivity that the gathering was largely successful.

Not even the delay on the mini-amphitheater Hilly’s Stage (YNWH Nailgun’s set was at least 20 minutes late, pushing back much of the afternoon — but worth the wait for vocalist Zack Borzone’s bizarro energy and drummer Sam Pickard’s percussive creativity) could dampen the mood. It was over on that stage that fans witnessed throwback performances from such acts as Cro-Mags, Marky Ramone, and Murphy’s Law — whose set included a surprise appearance by Jesse Malin, recovering from a spinal stroke he suffered two years ago that left him paralyzed from the waist down — offering the most old-school CBGB vibes of any of the stages throughout the day.

If organizers can figure out how to throw a truly sturdy festival Under the K Bridge, which would include fixing a few sound issues and overhauling their approach to concessions, CBGB Fest could easily turn into a landmark annual gathering. The location is great (they certainly have the physical space to make those adjustments), the bookings were unimpeachable, and the audience was open to it all. Who knows if it will fall to the slop and licensing complexities that CBGB is infamous for, but for one day, the grimy spirit of the Bowery felt alive under a Brooklyn bridge.

 

September 30, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Butthole Surfers, August 1996: (L-R) Guitarist Paul Leary, drummer King Coffey, and lead vocalist/keyboards Gibby Haynes of the American rock band the Butthole Surfers in New York, New York. (Credit: Bob Berg/Getty Images)
Music

New Butthole Surfers Documentary Cements the Psych-Punk Heroes’ Experimental Legacy

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Butthole Surfers: The Hole Truth and Nothing Butt, Tom Stern’s bio-doc chronicling the chaotic yet culturally significant career of San Antonio, Texas’ Butthole Surfers, was much-lauded at South By Southwest earlier this year for its revelatory examination of the band—which lives up to its title with a humorous, heartfelt, and unflinchingly honest approach. It’s also a rollicking look at one of the most brilliant, experimental, and misunderstood collectives in music history. 

The documentary made its West Coast debut September 23, kicking off Beyond Fest—the popular alternative genre movie series hosted by Neon and the American Cinemateque inside Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre. 

Friends, famous fans, and a multitude of bassists and drummers throughout Butthole Surfers’ trajectory are interviewed, but the spotlight is mostly on its founders, vocalist Gibby Haynes and guitarist Paul Leary. Their relationship started off as a creatively charged stoner bromance and ended up distanced, if not estranged, with both men recalling certain parts of their journey differently. 

Lol Tolhurst and Robert Smith of the Cure in 1983. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

Gibby Haynes poses at Sneekwave in Sneek, the Netherlands on August 9, 1987. (Credit: Frans Schellekens/Redferns)

Of course, that’s mostly due to drug use. The band members were known not just for drinking and toking themselves silly while touring across the country in their early years, but for dropping LSD and mushrooms right before live performances, which made their sets unpredictable and often volatile. 

These noisy freakouts became the stuff of underground legend, but their ground-breaking album releases on labels like Alternative Tentacles, Touch and Go, and Rough Trade in the ’80s, and later Capitol Records (where they scored a mainstream hit, “Pepper,” off of Electriclarryland in ’96) influenced the musical landscape for years to come.  

The band has been due a proper cinematic biography and this one delivers in a fittingly frenetic way, highlighting both the madness of the past and reflective regrets of today. 

After the Hollywood screening, Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison conducted a Q&A, but it was clear that the band didn’t want to talk too much about the film, with Haynes going off on tangents about Tex Mex food and jokingly calling music docs in general “bullshit.” About three questions were asked and answered (sort of) when Haynes gestured toward a set-up behind them. Then Butthole Surfers played a surprise mini-set of three songs including “Cherub,” “1401,” and “The Shah Sleeps in Lee Harvey’s Grave.” 

(L-R) Gibby Haynes, Teresa Nervosa, and King Coffey perform at the 7th St. Entry in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 24, 1985. (Credit: Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

SPIN messaged the filmmaker afterward to ask about the challenges of documenting such a tempestuous crew. “A big advantage I had is that I knew from the outset I would just keep shooting until I thought I had enough no matter how many years that took,” Stern says. “Production line-style documentaries like the ones you see on Netflix have a limited timeframe to shoot in, so they either get the goods or they don’t on the first couple tries, but I interviewed Gibby at least 20 times over five years and ultimately got the emotional vulnerability I was hoping for. He’s such a complicated guy and I felt the audience would want to understand him on a deeper level than what you see in the typical rock doc.” 

With hilarious puppet reenactments, wacky animation, awkward but illuminating edits, and outrageous archival footage, including the band’s infamous 1986 NYC Danceteria club show (which featured simulated sex on stage), The Hole Truth may not be a typical rock doc, but it is a highly entertaining one. 

Everyone from Dave Grohl to Keith Morris share fond memories, recalling the rhythmic rituals of dueling drummers King Coffey and Teresa Taylor, Leary’s astounding psychedelic riffage, and Haynes arresting presence as he trampled the stage in a bloody dress or completely naked, with fire, strobe lights, and graphic medical films adding to the spectacle.

The doc has a massive roster of famous commentators, too. And while some of them question the band’s choices—both live and on record—all of them tout B.S.’s transcendence and talent. Eric Andre, Flea, Ian MacKaye, Steve Albini, Donita Sparks, Henry Rollins, Thurston Moore, Wayne Coyne, Ice-T, Al Jourgensen, Richard Linklater, John Paul Jones, and many more share their thoughts and recollections, but two appearances in particular stand out. 

Gibby Haynes and Paul Leary, September 23, 2025. (Credit: Hadley Gustafson)

Johnny Depp (who befriended Haynes during the “Hollywood years” as it’s referred to in the doc) marks a low point, when the pair dabbled with heroin. He speaks somberly of the era, when he and Haynes formed a supergroup with the Red Hot Chili Pepper’s Flea and John Frusciante called P., which headlined Depp’s Sunset Strip club The Viper Room the night River Phoenix died there. 

He’s followed up with Thelonious Monster’s Bob Forrest, now an addiction recovery advocate, reflecting on Haynes’ guilt over Phoenix’s passing and bad advice he gave Kurt Cobain before his death. Forrest also helps the frontman revisit suppressed memories of childhood sexual abuse, which may have led to his self-destructive tendencies. 

Then we learn that Taylor, one of the most charismatic characters in the movie (she also starred in and became the poster girl for Linklater’s Gen-X classic Slackers after she left the band) was dying of lung disease and perished before it was completed, as did Coffey’s husband, who battled brain disease. Both figures are important reminders that the Surfers’ brought queer representation to the punk community (in Texas no less) before it was actually accepted. Their personal struggles are heart-wrenching and make for a pretty heavy last act. 

But ultimately, The Hole Truth takes fans on a wild ride filled with lots of laughs, vivid visuals, and thoughtful perspectives. It’s an amalgamation that captures the irreverent spirit and visionary madness of the group itself. 

“My goal was to cement a place in music history for this amazing band because they deserve it,” Stern shares. “They were singular artists, each one an amazing character, and they evoked such strong, emotional responses from audiences, including, obviously, me.”

September 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming