I make my own equations:Katrina

LADY LONG LEGS: Katrina Kaif .

The gorgeous bollywood actress Katrina Kaif is revelling in the success her recent films have enjoyed at the BO.

If her B-town image is taken into cognisance, Katrina Kaif seems to have taken over the ice-maiden tag from Aishwarya herself. Looking aloof most of the time, refusing to talk about her personal life and definitely not allowing the mention of a certain Mr Salman Khan. But take off a few layers and Katrina opens up.

It is her family that remains her favourite topic. "My mother lives in Chennai and I have six sisters. In fact, I've never felt the need to have girl friends because I'm very close to my sisters. All of us bond together like great buddies. I'm closest to my second oldest sister Christine. She is very kind and stable and has really influenced my life," Kat says.

So, does that mean she has no really close friends in Bollywood or elsewhere? "Actually, I have made a lot of friends in Bollywood. Vipul Shah and I get on really well. Sajid Nadiadwala and David Dhawan are two friends who keep coming home and we let our hair down. Basically, I am around a lot of people who are fun to be with. I create my own equations," she says.

Coincidentally, all these people happen to be very good friends of Salman Khan too? Kat goes all diplomatic as she says, "People have been writing about Salman and me for the past five years. There's no issue to talk about and that is what I've been saying all this while."

To emphasise that she has friends outside Salman's inner circle, Kat adds, "On the sets of Race, Akshaye Khanna taught me how to play chess. I'm not very good at the game but I'm getting much better now. Thanks to Akshaye's classes!"

Point taken. That means marriage is not on the cards? "I'm too young," pat comes her reply. She adds, "I have a lot of stuff to do before I get married. I'm trying to settle my family in London. And you never know how things turn out in the long run." Katrina also admits that she is a romantic at heart, "Everybody's a romantic and so am I. My kind of a man is a person I can laugh with, have a good time with."

Something that people don't know about her is that she is hooked on to old Hindi films. "I am glued to these films, they are larger than life. Today's cinema lacks that largeness. And those songs were different too – Helen aunty's songs are amazing. I also watch a lot of Madhubala movies," she says.

Bollywood families clash at the box office

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It was Farah Khan's Om Shanti Om V/s Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Saawariya or Sonam Kapoor V/s Deepika Padukone or Ranbir Kapoor V/S Shah Rukh Khan this Diwali. But many might have missed the fact that it Ranbir's debut film's opposition also had his father Rishi Kapoor acting in it.

Om Shanti Om , the very title was derived from a song from the film Karz in which Ranbir's father Rishi Kapoor danced to. That song was also included in Farah Khan's film. Apart from the archival footage used, Rishi also went onto make an appearance as well where he presented Om (Shah Rukh) for an award in the film. So you can say that even though Rishi wasn't the star of the film, it did release alongside his son's film. And also for the record Ranbir's cousin Karisma Kapoor too was part of the 'Deewangi' song in Om Shanti Om and had a couple of lines in the film as well.

However this was not the first time when relative's films clashed on the same day. Indiatimes Movies rewinds back into the recent past where relatives battled it out at the box-office.

Like this year's Diwali, the Diwali of 2004 also had family members competing against each other. First, it was Ram Gopal Varma's Naach which released with Yash Chopra's Veer Zaara . While Naach had Abhishek Bachchan in the lead, father Amitabh made a special appearance in Veer Zaara . While Veer Zaara proved to be fruitful to the producers, Naach bit the dust. Naach was a relatively smaller film and was the only failure that Diwali amongst the four films.

The other two films too had relatives though this was a different case altogether. Kareena Kapoor had her film Aitraaz releasing while the other film to release was the coloured version of K Asif's classic 1960 hit Mughal-E-Azam which had Kareena's great grandfather Prithviraj Kapoor in it. Now Kareena surely didn't expect that her film would one day be competing against her great grandfather's. In fact, Kareena was born five years after Prithviraj had passed away. Both films did good business and were also critically acclaimed.

However, Kareena was probably used to the situation by now. More than a year earlier Kareena had faced competition from another family member this time it being her own elder sister Karisma.

Bollywood's Fab 4 in Three Takes

 

Take 1: Johnny & Manorama -- Partners in Crime

"Bol kya naam hai tera" (Tell me your name)
"Johnny"
"Johnny Johnny.....telling lies...open your mouth."

When I first saw the trailer of Johnny Gaddaar, I was intrigued. Then I heard the music and I was hooked. I couldn't wait for the film but considering that this was not a big budget Bollywood movie, I knew it would be a long wait before I could get my hands on this film. In the meantime, I marveled at the film's simple yet perfect title. "Gaddaar" can be roughly translated as Traitor. But traitor can't fully express the emotion involved -- Gaddaar is not just a traitor but a sinister person who has gone over and beyond the limits of decency; the emotion contained in the word 'Gaddaar' reflects both the anger and disgust over such a person's action. Johnny Gaddaar's trailer shows 5 men sitting at a card table, cut to images of piles of cash, cut to fast paced action, a speeding train & a beautiful woman. Who is the Gaddaar? Johnny, ofcourse! But which of the 5 men is Johnny?





While I was waiting to learn about Johnny, I came across Manorama from the film Manorama Six Feet Under. The trailer indicated a murder mystery/darkish film cut in the mould of 2006's Being Cyrus . Now, I also wanted to track down Manorama.... But just like Johnny.., it would be a long wait. And thankfully, in both cases, the wait was worth it.

Johnny Gaddaar (2007, Director Sriram Raghavan): Rating 9/10

Usually when one has high expectations of a movie, they tend to be disappointed. But any such fears were dispelled within a few minutes of the film. The film's credits are probably the best I have seen in a long while and are modeled on 70's Bollywood movies where melodramatic music accomplished large, bold text and images of the film's key moments.



In that regard, it is clear that the film gives a nod to those Bollywood movies from an era long gone.

The film itself is a delightful look at the 5 con men's lives and the women who live with these men (either physically with them or in their mind).

The opening minutes of the movie give us a short but relevant look at the 5 men going about their regular life. From those few shots we can gather enough about their personalities and the weakness that exist in these men's lives. None of the characters are good men but are people who walk the gray line between good and bad. Shardul (played by Zakir Hussain) is the only person who appears to swim regularly in the pool of evil


while the leader of the pack, Sheshadri "It's not the age, it's the mile-age" (Dharmendra)
is someone who has gotten out of that same pool long ago and now simply arranges under the table deals.

Very early on the film we know who Johnny is.

But the true fun of the film is watching how the other characters react -- no one knows who this Gaddaar is, so they all try to guess the culprit by analyzing the people around them. This is where we truly get a glimpse of the evil that lurks in these men's hearts. Sriram Raghavan has done an amazing job in allowing the film to continue long after when other movies would have ended. With a body count of 2, many other directors might have let the film end. But Johnny Gaddaar continues and throws in one final wicked twist with a subtle deceit.

It has been a long time since I have enjoyed a Bollywood film as much as this. Plus, the film contains many great one-liners, something that was present in all those 70's Bollywood movies. On top of that, there are plenty of references to old Bollywood movies and the sinister plot in the movie is inspired from Amitabh Bachchan's Parwana.


Manorama Six Feet Under (2007, Director Navdeep Singh): Rating 8.5/10

Ah Rajasthan! sultry, colorful and exotic Rajasthan.


Errr, this is not that Rajasthan!

This is a hot, dry and dull Rajasthan. A small village where nothing happens. Nope. Nothing. It is a place where a writer Satyaveer (Abhay Deol) lives with his wife and his child.



His first novel (a pulp mystery) was a flop and sold only 200 copies. Satyaveer is ashamed of his novel so much that he doesn't even keep a copy at home. But everything in his life changes when one night a mysterious woman visits him. As it turns out, this woman's name is Manorama (played by a very graceful Sarika), same as the character in Satyaveer's novel. Coincidence? Manorama wants Satyaveer to investigate the local politician P.P Rathore and take pictures of Rathore's possible affair. Even though Satyaveer has no experience in spying on people, Manorama encourages him because she is a big fan of his book and thinks if he can write such an interesting detective story, he can surely catch P.P Rathore in the act.

But Satyaveer finds nothing out of the ordinary in Rathore's life. And just like that, Manorama disappears. He tries to find her but only runs into a dead end. Did she even exist? Just when he has given hope of finding her, he runs into a scared Manorama one more time where she blurts out that her life is in danger and if something happens to her, he should remember two facts -- her name is Manorama and her age is 32.

This is where the story could have ended had Satyaveer chosen to do nothing. But his curiosity gets the better of him and he tries to find out more about her life.


Each door that he opens leads him into more trouble -- he is beaten up by thugs, has hismotorcycle stolen, his wife leaves him, he falls for another woman

and is constantly threatened & under watch. Alone and helpless, he has nothing to turn to except two facts -- the name Manorama and age of 32. Only then, does the bright sun-light finally make his mind tick.

Although the film's pace is leisurely and tends to dip in parts, this is still a finely crafted film. The most impressive aspect is how much attention Navdeep Singh has paid to tiny details like getting the locales and feel of a small Rajasthani town right. There is one scene in the movie which is genius if Singh intended it to be. P. P Rathore (Kulbhushan Kharbanda) is giving a speech at a school function. Then Rathore does something which appears to be harmless but certainly catches the eye. I must admit this scene forced me to think of the mystery in a different light. When we finally learn the truth in the end, this scene takes on more importance because it fits in with Rathore's personality. But can any director intend such tiny detail? Or was Kharbanda diving too much into character? Or was that simple scene just a coincidence? Whatever the case maybe, Manorama Six Feet Under is certainly a film that deserves to seen and not buried under the massive pile of Bollywood movies.


Take 2: Lights, Camera, Action...arrey Cue music.

Om Shanti Om (2007, Director Farah Khan): Rating 8.5/10



Song, Dance, Melodrama, Action, Tears, Emotion! That is Bollywood in a nut-shell. I grew up watching these fascinating talkies. When I was a child, I too was in awe of the stars. I spoke the famous Amitabh one-liners from his films and listened to all the songs. Only when I grew up and looked back on these movies did I realize that these movies were quite bad. Most of those 70's and 80's Bollywood films had choppy editing, songs which popped out of nowhere and featured over the top acting. Even though Bollywood has improved since then, some of those old problems of recycled stories still exist. Farah Khan's enjoyable Om Shanti Om is a celebration of not only those horribly cheesy Bollywood films from 3 decades ago but even the bad Bollywood trends that exist today.



The first 30 minutes are a hilarious poke at elements which plagued Bollywood movies from the 70's -- melodramatic acting (if a son arrived home late at night, the mother almost had a heart-attack), bad costumes, cartoonish dance stops (only Bollywood can turn a badminton set into a song prop) and egoistic actors. Then just before the interval, the humour is put on hold when a darkish element creeps into the story. But even this dark tragedy is in keeping with the movie's overall theme of poking fun at Bollywood as the story is an updated version of Subhash Ghai's Karz. And keeping with the theme of modern Bollywood, Om Shanti Om takes the essence of 1980's Karz and spices it up with the twist element now found in many Bollywood films.



The acting and story are top-notch. As are the special effects of the film, especially the ones which inject a modern day Bollywood heroine into songs from 3 decades ago. If there is let down with the film, it is with the music and some of the videos. Considering that Farah Khan has been one of Bollywood's leading choreographers and her first film Main Hoon Na featured lively videos, the average subdued videos in Om Shanti Om are disappointing. Also, the music is too low key. Now that could have been an intended choice but if a movie is poking fun at films, it should atleast have better music than the movies it is making fun of.Although, the finale song is a perfect update of the climatic song from Karz. I grew up loving Karz -- the reincarnation story really was something that has stayed me over the years. And watching Om Shanti Om made me realize why one loves Bollywood in the first place -- that oh so Happy Ending!

Kudos also goes to Farah Khan for rolling out the red carpet for the film's cast and crew in the final credits. Just like in her first film, Farah turns the camera on all the people who worked on the film right from the producers to the spot boys.


Take 3: No Lights but just smoke

No Smoking (2007, Director Anurag Kashyap): Rating 10/10

The best Bollywood film of the year has finally arrived. Everyone step back and mind the smoke.

A nightmare that gives way to a grey reality which leads towards a dark path into hell, which switches back to reality before finally diving down the hole into a hellish climax. And then after the flames die out, a soul-less body exists!

Huh? What does it all mean? Does it really matter what it means? Even if one tries to analyze cinema objectively, a person still reacts with a dose of subjectivity to what one sees in a movie -- One can't help reacting by instinct. Watching this movie, I remembered such films as The Game (1997), Fight Club, Alejandro Amenábar's Open Your Eyes (remade as Vanilla Sky) and the The Devil's Advocate. Call me crazy but one scene reminded of David Lynch's Inland Empire. There is a scene in No Smoking where the main character's memory is portrayed as a soap-opera with canned laughter. I thought of those soap-opera rabbits from Inland Empire.



And then there is the reference to Kafka. The main character is simply named K, a person (John Abraham) who can't stop smoking. He is beyond addiction. His wife Anjali (Ayesha Takia) wants to leave him because she can't stand his smoking. Finally, K decides he will try to quit. He is referred to a guru who can help him but his search leads him to the lower depths, literally. What follows is only a horrific nightmare.



There are plenty of clues in this non-linear film which give an idea as to the film's meaning but I still need to see the movie a second time to exactly draw lines at the moments of dream-reality sequences. Although, there is one scene, only one, which might give us a glimpse into the true reality of this movie. But at the end of the day, despite the questions, I can't help respond to this film instinctively. A fascinating mind bending roller coaster nighmarish ride of a person's soul through the darkest paths of hell. Wow!


The versatility of Vinay Pathak:

One of the best characters of 2006's Khosla Ka Ghosla was Vinay Pathak's Asif who plays teaches the film's characters on how to get revenge with a land shark. Vinay Pathak also played the idiot in Bheja Fry, an Indian remake of the delightful French comedy The Dinner Game. Now he has turned two more colorful performances in Johnny Gaddaar and Manorama Six Feet Under. In Johnny he plays a gambler who can't avoid the cards


whereas in Manorama he plays a well meaning cop who is Satyaveer's only real friend in the movie.


Vinay has a few more interesting films coming up and one of them is Sudhir Mishra's slick looking Khoya Khoya Chand. I can't wait to see more of him on screen!

Saawariya opens in 85 theatres in North America

Saawariya, the first Bollywood film co-produced and distributed by a major Hollywood studio, has opened in 85 theatres in the US and Canada, with press reviews calling it a visually enchanting extravaganza.

The New York Times led its movie reviews section Friday with Saawariya, produced in collaboration between acclaimed director Sanjay Leela Bhansali and Sony Pictures Entertainment. Eye and ear candy for fans of Indian musical cinema, it is 2 hours 11 minutes - bracingly compact by Bollywood standards

In conclusion, Scott finds the film, released here Friday and starring newcomers Ranbir Kapoor and Sonam Kapoor "visually enchanting, cloyingly sweet, at once utterly chaste and insanely erotic, and finally exhausting".

Scott also notes that the film is rated PG (Parental guidance suggested) for "exposed bellybuttons and mild sexual innuendo".

The rating itself, however, shows Sony's professionalism, a lesson for Bollywood that rarely bothers to get an official rating in the US.

The Los Angeles Times headlines its review of Saawariya as "Bollywood grace--in a crazy way". Its reviewer finds the film "typically outsized extravaganza - sure to drop your jaw with its ravishment or trigger a seizure, depending on your design temperament".

The reviewer, however, concedes: "Bhansali's operatic style -- an ocean of close-ups, gliding camera moves and color saturation -- achieves its own kind of crazy grace."

LA Times is also scheduled to run a feature story on the film Sunday, according to the film's US publicist.

New York Post review titled "Bollywood flick, Hollywood folly", asks, "How can it be that a movie as beautiful to look at as 'Saawariya' is so ... boring?"

The reviewer blames Hollywood, "which has an annoying habit of sucking the life out of material".

The film, the review says, is yet another example of Hollywood trying to please everybody and, as a result, pleasing nobody.

Diwali 06-07: Bollywood's Top 10 films

MUMBAI: One saw yet another double bonanza at the box office this Diwali. While last year saw two movies – Don and Jaan-E-Mann releasing during Diwali, this year it was Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Saawariya and Farah Khan's Om Shanti Om.

With the influx of multiplexes in the country, the bulk box office revenues of most movies come from multiplexes. In the case of major Bollywood films, multiplexes account for 60 – 65 per cent of the net theatrical realization and the remaining from single screens. On the other hand, for niche films, multiplexes garner 80 – 85 per cent collections.

 

In a scenario where business of films is highly dependent on multiplexes, Businessofcinema.com brings a special report on the Top 10 films from Diwali 2006 to Diwali 2007 across major multiplex chains in India.

 

 

The ranking is determined by overall business done by a particular movie, which is a determined by keeping in mind factors such as the number of screens, seating capacity, number of shows, the ticket prices etc.

In the news for the wrong reason

BOLLYWOOD star Aamir Khan is in the news for all the wrong reasons. Poor fellow, he has had his family's dirty linen washed and hung up in public for the entire world to look at with disdain as he himself wrings his hands in utter despair, not knowing how to put the lid on an ugly family feud.  

Hindi cinema's highest paid actor, who commands fees upwards of Rs8 crores (RM6.7mil) per film, was accused by his father of seeking to have his own younger brother declared mentally unsound, a charge Aamir denied most vehemently in a Mumbai court recently. 

The feud in the Aamir Khan family hit national headlines recently when in a court petition the actor sought the custody of his younger brother Faisal. Aamir pleaded that his father Tahir Hussain was in no position to take care of his mentally unsound brother.  

The family has been split, with father Tahir Hussain, a one-time failed film producer, and his younger son Faisal staying together, while Aamir, his mother, and the rest of the extended tribe live separately. 

The split between the father and the most successful member of the family, that is, Aamir, was complete when some time ago Tahir Hussain married a second time, causing his first wife and the actor's mother to break relations with him.  

However, Faisal stayed with his father and stepmother.  

Psychiatrists ascribed the reason for Faisal's deteriorating mental condition partly to his frustration at not becoming a successful actor. The worsening financial condition of his father aggravated the mental condition of his younger son. 

Making headlines: Aamir plays a freedom fighter in Mangal Pandey which was released two years ago. It may be mere coincidence, but every time a new Aamir film is due for release, he is dogged by public controversy.
Most notably, Aamir had sought to give his brother's film career a leg-up a few years ago when he co-starred with him in a couple of films which, unfortunately, flopped at the box-office and thus put paid to Faisal's dream of making it big in Bollywood. 

Aamir sought direction from the court to provide the "best medical care to the mentally unfit" brother. He cited the poor financial condition of his father as a vital ground for being allowed to have the custody of Faisal.  

Also, he petitioned the court to order Faisal's examination by an independent panel of psychiatrists so that a view could be taken whether or not he was fit to look after himself. 

The father responded with a counter-petition, making all sorts of scurrilous allegations against the actor, including that he was out to destroy him (Tahir Hussain) and his brother Faisal, since he was a "control freak".  

However, in turning down the plea for handing over Faisal to the charge of Aamir, the court relied on the sworn statement of the younger brother, who said that he was happy living with his father and that he wanted nothing to do with his more famous brother.  

The court rejected Aamir's petition, though it did not find any merit in his father's charge that the actor was trying to declare his younger brother mentally unsound. 

A very pained family of Aamir Khan, including his mother, felt compelled to issue a public statement in defence of the actor, describing Tahir Hussain's "pathetic behaviour", "truly shameful". 

"As a family we have always believed in maintaining our silence and dignity, choosing not to react to the many absurd allegations that are frequently hurled at our loved one, Aamir," the statement said.  

"But this time we feel the need to express our utter shock, disgust and contempt at the public statements of Tahir Hussain and Faisal Khan." 

It may be mere coincidence, but every time a new Aamir film is due for release, he is dogged by public controversy.  

Two years ago when the film based on the hero of the freedom struggle Mangal Pandey was ready for release, a British author claimed to have given birth to Aamir Khan's love child.  

The woman, who had written a book on Bollywood, claimed that she was in love with the actor and it was his child, though she declared that she did not want a penny from him to support either her or the child. 

Some time later came the super-duper hit Rang De Basanti. But its release too was preceded by nation-wide publicity centring on Aamir's break-up with his first wife and his romance and subsequent marriage to assistant director Kiran Rao.  

There were stories galore as to how much he had paid to secure his divorce and how he had wed Rao secretly in a faraway hill station in the presence of a few of her close relatives.  

Yet another Aamir film, Fanaa, was accompanied by the controversy over his public support to the displaced persons of the prestigious hydro-electric Narmada power project.  

Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi took umbrage at his public support to the leaders of the anti-Narmada dam project and ensured that Fanaa was not released for viewing throughout the state. The film was a huge hit in the rest of the country. 

And now that Aamir's own maiden directorial venture, the multi-crore Taare Zamin Par is nearing completion for an early release, the odious controversy about his father accusing him of plotting against him and his younger son has hit the headlines. 

Admittedly, lives of film stars serve as easy game for a large sections of the media.  

The price of celebrity is a constant focus on the private lives of stars. From their marital problems to their weakness for women and wine, all is fair for a mushrooming print and television media which for want of a substantive fare settle for titillating tales from Bollywood.  

Some might call it dumbing down of the media. But then it sells. And you cannot blame them for giving viewers/readers what they would lap up rather than the finer points of the controversial nuclear deal with the US or the multi-faceted costs of a mounting environmental deterioration.

Who's better? Deepika or Sonam

Deepika Padukone

Never before have two Bollywood debutantes generated this much buzz about themselves.

Their histrionic abilities were being predicted and dissected with minute precision even before they gave us glimpses of their mettle. They were being pitted against each other in almost every department — be it looks, dancing abilities, sex appeal to even their chemistry with their respective co-stars. And why not? They both come from illustrious backgrounds. One from a well-respected filmi family and the other is the daughter of a former sportstar.

Yes, Sonam Kapoor and Deepika Padukone had a lot to live up to. So, now that their debut vehicles have docked at the box office, the question begging an answer now remains: How do they measure up against each other? A few hours after their movies Sawaariya and Om Shanti Om released, BT conducted a poll getting the vox populi on the fate of Bollywood's newest czarinas and here's presenting the results...

SONAM KAPOOR
Has what it takes, but...

"Pathos, longing, tearful eyes that are forever searching and above all mystique — elements that make Sonam Kapoor's introductory scene in Sawaariya one of the best ever!"

Most had this to say as far as first impressions of her go. But sadly, introductory scenes don't maketh a film. With a crescendo already built up in her first scene, it could only be down, down, down for the rest of the two hours 10 minutes, yet Sonam valiantly tries and perseveres...

While her look is quite distinct in the flashback portions, where one sees her in more colourful garb vis-a-vis her 'thousand shades on blue-meets-black' look that is omnipresent throughout the rest of the film, the overall impression people had of her is of a character far older than the one she portrays.

But one thing that Sonam has is tremendous screen presence. You can't seem to take your eyes off her. And the chemistry with both her co-stars, Ranbir Kapoor and Salman Khan is noteworthy.

Full marks for her oomph factor especially in a scene where a mere exposed leg drew in the oohs and ahhs far more than her amply revealed midriff and cleavage did! Her dialogue delivery too is flawless and voice modulation perfect for the simpering Sakina that she is made to portray.

Despite her two minute kathak performance, many felt that Sonam has what it takes to be a good dancer as she is full of poise and grace, like a young Waheeda Rehman — but only in the dancing department. This analogy reminds one of another point as far as Sonam's body language goes. She has the same languorous, bordering-on-gawky gait that Tabu has.

Sadly for Sonam, it's thumbs down in the emotions department. Her jerky performance in the emotional scenes is what one viewer described as "mind-numbingly irritating". With a one dimensional character that Sanjay Leela Bhansali has etched for her, leaving no scope for versatility, Sonam does display an ease with comedy when given the chance.

DEEPIKA PADUKONE
Much ado about something!

She came, she acted and she certainly conquered. Deepika Padukone has made her stamp in the big, bad world of Bollywood. Despite her debut film Om Shanti Om not living up to its exceedingly high expectations, the debutante has managed to create some ripples (barring the ripples that Shah Rukh Khan's six-pack generated!).

Bottomline: the model can act; she was definitely much better than Aishwarya Rai, Sushmita Sen and a host of other actresses when they started out. More significantly, she can emote (without looking fake or overacting). The scene where her character Shantipriya dies in the fire is commendable.

Playing a double role (of contrasting characters in two different generations) is also quite a challenge for a first-timer. But Deepika took on the dual role well. From the graceful and elegant actress of the seventies, Shantipriya, Deepika smoothly transformed into the bubbly, carefree Sandy of 2007. Deepika scores on versatility.

The first impression is the last impression, especially in the highly competitive world of Bollywood. And the doe-eyed beauty definitely has immense grace and poise on screen. There truly is an ajab si ada in her aankhen in the song Aankhon Mein Teri... And her long legs are hard to miss in the second half.

The pressure to prove her worth must have been immense, but Deepika has sailed through. She got a role where she makes the audience laugh, cry and dance with her, of course with lots of help from SRK.

And when a film is directed by choreographer Farah Khan, it's just not possible that the heroine can have two left feet. She gets a six on ten for her dancing skills. Regarding sharing a chemistry with his co-stars, SRK had once said that he is now capable of even romancing a rock, but he didn't have to try too hard here, because Deepika and he looked quite the couple on-screen.