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Frieda Pinto to be next Bond girl

Before the movie success many Indians were not even willing to accept if there are any such condition in India.

Indians on PDF certainly might have not seen such slums in real life! who really goes to Bombay to see slums! but it's not only they are poor and living in tht condition, they could have lived a normal life in their native villages but no they come to Bombay to realize their dreams and buying or renting a place in bombay is not an easy task. Checkout some slum videos of bombay on youtube. Some of them have TV, Fridge, Scooter but cant afford a home and hence living in shanty houses and yes more than 10 million in Bombay itself.

This is the most logical answer I can give!:cheers::cheers:
 
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Aray Na Kar Yaar!!!! Just Think about Katrina Kaif, tu dil Maanta Hai...
 
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She has already dashed the rumours and said she is not even contacted.


Make up, lightening can do wonders. and Hollywood is far better technicaly


Hollywood is bigger than bollywood.


But we are also making it big, our Ambani is bidding to buy the MGM owner and maker of James Bond movies :bounce::bounce:


Ambani's Indian tiger eyes wounded MGM lion :cheers:

By Joe Leahy in Mumbai

Published: January 16 2010 02:00 | Last updated: January 16 2010 02:00

Anil Ambani is preparing to bid for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the film studio behind classics such as Gone with the Wind , in a move that would bring Bollywood deeper into Hollywood.

The Indian billionaire businessman's Reliance Big Entertainment is one of at least a dozen groups poised to make an offer for the debt-laden MGM, whose assets include the James Bond franchise.

"Initial expressions of interest are due today," a person familiar with the matter said yesterday. He said he expected most bidders to ask for more time.

News Corp's Fox and Time Warner were said to be the among the possible bidders, with Lionsgate also interested. Reliance declined to comment.

MGM is seeking a white knight to avert a painful re-struc-turing to cope with its $3.7bn debt amassed when it was taken over in 2005 by a consortium of private equity firms TPG, Providence Equity Partners, DLJ Merchant Banking Part-ners and Quadrangle Group, and media companies Sony and Comcast.

The studio was forced to skip an interest payment last year on its debt when it failed to raise the capital required to support an ambitious production schedule. It must make a $250m payment by April 2010 on a revolving credit facility and pay off its $3.7bn term loan by 2012. MGM's lenders have granted it forbearance from interest payments until the end of this month.

MGM's main value lies in its 4,000-title film library and its franchises, including rights to James Bond, the Pink Panther and The Hobbit .

Cash flow from the library was about $300m a year, or about $100m less overheads, a person familiar with the deal said.

A takeover of MGM would give Mr Ambani's Reliance, which this year produced one of the biggest grossing Bollywood films in the comedy 3 Idiots , a position at the heart of Hollywood. Reliance has already provided $325m of equity for a venture with Steven Spielberg, who has broken with Viacom and is recreating his DreamWorks studio as an independent entity.

The Indian billionaire, whose other businesses range from mobile telephony to mutual funds, also has production deals with other leading directors and actors, such as Brad Pitt and George Clooney.

The person familiar with the MGM deal said the US studio was asking for about $2bn but doubted any bidders would make an offer at that price.

FT.com / UK - Ambani's Indian tiger eyes wounded MGM lion
 
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Bollywood Goes Global With Hollywood Movie Deal :cheers:

Anil Ambani announces his media group will be making 10 Hollywood movies for a billion dollars


It could be a scene straight out of a Bollywood movie. An Indian billionaire sees a foreign rival struggling to raise money as the global economy sinks, and swoops to pick up a clutch of big names at rock bottom prices.

But yesterday fiction became fact when Reliance Big Entertainment, the media arm of Anil Ambani - the world's sixth richest man - announced it would be making 10 Hollywood movies for a billion dollars.

The media group has signed separate deals with the production firms of Hollywood stars Nicolas Cage, Jim Carrey, George Clooney, Tom Hanks and Brad Pitt. However, it is unlikely that the Indian-financed films will contain the key ingredients of a Bollywood blockbuster: tears, singing, dancing, and a happy ending.

"We want to make Hollywood movies that have a global audience. We are not inserting Bollywood into Hollywood just yet," said Rajesh Sawhney, the president of Reliance. "I think Indian movies get stereotyped as all singing and dancing in the same way as Hollywood gets stereotyped for sex and violence. We are looking for good content regardless of genre."

With the economy sluggish in America, Hollywood has been courting Indian film producers flush with cash from the country's economic boom. Studios such as Disney, News Corporation and Sony have all tied up Bollywood companies in the past few years but Reliance's foray dwarfs previous deals.

"The aim is to look at 30 film scripts under this deal over the next two years, out of which 10 will go to screen. This is just the beginning of our relationship with Hollywood," said Sawhney.

The move also opens the door for Indian directors to work in Hollywood. Reliance announced that in addition to funding Hollywood films, it will also produce a multi million dollar American gangster movie entitled Broken Horses, directed by Indian filmmaker and Oscar nominee Vidhu Vinod Chopra.

In many ways Reliance is playing catch up with its smaller rivals. News Corporation and Indian company UTV paid $28m (£24m) each to make The Happening, a thriller directed by M Night Shyamalan and starring Mark Wahlberg that will be released next month. UTV is also producing two movies with Will Smith. The final instalment of Michael Douglas's Romancing the Stone movies, called Racing the Monsoon, will also be funded by an Indian studio.

Many experts see this as the beginning of a marriage of two cultures. "Reliance is making a major move in putting Hollywood and Bollywood together. The key will be whether you can make Indian movies that sell abroad and at the same time sell foreign stars in India," said Komal Nahta, the editor of Mumbai trade paper the Film Street Journal.

Others say Bollywood has much to learn about the business of making movies. The Indian film industry puts out 1,000 movies a year but is only a £1bn business. Hollywood produces half that number of films but has 10 times the sales.

The reason for the lack of commercial success is that traditional Bollywood studios are family-run affairs which rely more on pandering to star talent than scouting for good scripts or sticking to budgets.

The new deal is a step change for Indian studios, whose biggest movies to date cost around $15m. "We are looking to make big-budget, live-action movies in Hollywood that make money for us," said Sawhney. "That will mean a different way of making movies."

Reliance, which already has 160 cinemas in India, will open a further 220 across North America to promote its new films.

There is little doubt that Reliance, which has until now kept a low profile, aims to become India's biggest media house. Its owner, Ambani, 48, is a familiar face in India. With a personal fortune of $40bn, he has weathered a bitter battle with his elder brother over the family business which ended with the company split between them in 2005. Ambani's Reliance empire already controls India's second biggest mobile phone operator and the largest FM radio station.

It has plans to launch a satellite TV platform and is creating a new 20-channel TV network. In February the financier George Soros paid $100m for a 3% stake in the entertainment arm, valuing the company at $3bn.

Bollywood Goes Global With Hollywood Movie Deal
 
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Why is Ambani buying cinemas in the US?

April 22, 2008

In an audacious move, billionaire Anil Ambani's Reliance Entertainment has bought or leased out more than 200 cinema theatres in America for an undisclosed sum, and plans to launch a cinema chain under the brand name �Big' from May.

This is the biggest South Asian venture in the entertainment sector in the United States, but not the first: Pyramid Saimira bought the Richardson, Texas-based FunAsia cinema chain in 2007. It has theatres in Texas, Chicago, Bay Area and Virginia.

Apart from Bollywood films, Reliance Entertainment will screen regional movies from the South and second-run Hollywood films in these theatres.

Some Hollywood insiders believe the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group, which controls Reliance Entertainment, has invested close to $250 million in the venture. Add to this the money being spent to renovate the theatres, including installing air-conditioning and attractive concession stands, and the investment could approach $500 million.

Reliance Entertainment will run the chain with the help of the Tennessee-based management company Phoenix Theatres, headed by a former top executive of Regal chain theatres, Phil Zacheretti. Reliance could buy more theatres that will also show first-run mainstream films and this could pave the way to the purchase of multiplexes.
 
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wish i was bond ..:D
Only if the bond girl is Eva green.:D

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Anil Ambani enters Hollywood, signs $825m deal with Steven Spielberg

MUMBAI: Making his Hollywood debut, Anil Ambani is set to invest around $825 million as a first tranche towards making six films a year for global audiences. In one of the largest deals in global cinema in recent times, Ambani has teamed up with noted Hollywood filmmaker Steven Spielberg for their Los Angeles-based production house, Dreamworks Studios.

In a late-evening global conference call from New York, Ambani and Spielberg said the movies produced by Dreamworks would be distributed by Walt Disney globally, while the exclusive rights for India, ‘‘including DTH, DVD and theatre rights'', would rest with Reliance Big Entertainment. Anil Ambani said $325 million would come from his personal contribution, ‘‘$150 million would be chipped in by Disney and the rest would be with banks and institutions.'' ‘‘Clearly, the outlay of $825 million is what we are aiming at in the next three years: $325 million will be in the form of equity,'' Ambani said.

Reacting to suggestions that an investment outlay of over $1.5 billion for Dreamworks was on the cards, Ambani said, ‘‘There is no scaling up or scaling down of investment. We will begin with $825 million and this is the largest in recent times.''

The first DreamWorks motion picture to be released under the Touchstone Pictures banner is scheduled to hit theatres by 2010. Ambani also announced that his associate Amitabh Jhunjhunwala and Spielberg's partner for decades Stacey Snider, who has been associated with projects like ‘Eric Brockovich', ‘The Mummy' and ‘American Pie', would also serve on the Dreamworks board. He added that even though Reliance Big Entertainment was a private enterprise, he was not averse to listing it on the capital markets at an appropriate time.

Spielberg said he was looking forward to visiting India to meet up with filmmakers. ‘‘This venture with Reliance opens a new door to our future,'' he said. ‘‘Their visionary step has given us a new set of dreams to work toward.''

Ambani said: ‘‘We are delighted to partner with such talented individuals as Steven Spielberg and Stacey Snider. Ever since we looked at their business plan, I have never doubted that we would succeed in providing them with financial muscle.”

Anil Ambani enters Hollywood, signs $825m deal with Spielberg - India Business - Biz - The Times of India
 
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@ Jana

We know Hollywood is big that's why we are going towards it.

May be pakistani media don't publish such news.

From the ultimate director like Steven Spielberg to the Hollywood stars Nicolas Cage, Jim Carrey, George Clooney, Tom Hanks and Brad Pitt we have got them all.

And Ambai has also purchased hundreds of cinemas across America.

So, in future you may see Hollywood more bigger. :bunny:
 
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