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Sunday, December 14, 2008

Rab Ne brings cheers to Yash Raj camp

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Mumbai is still not in a cinema-going mood after the terror strikes, but movie buffs - and loyal Shah Rukh Khan fans to be precise - could not have given Yash Raj Films' much-awaited movie Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi a miss.

So if not in droves, they came in sizeable numbers for the first day first show to give the movie a decent and honourable opening in the city.

The opening collections here ranged from 70 per cent to over 80 per cent - and more in other parts of the country. According to initial reports, the collections were cent per cent in many centres in north India, especially Punjab, thanks to rapid advance bookings.

Yash Raj Films (YRF), which has suffered monetary losses after successive failures of its recent ventures, could not have asked for more.

In one quick shot, Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi redeemed its prestige. The credit for this, as many in the industry said, should go to the jodi (alliance) of Shah Rukh and the industry's most private filmmaker, Aditya Chopra - the duo that have given one of the biggest hits in Dilwala Dulhaniya Le Jayenge.

The film is Shah Rukh's first release of the year. Apart from this, it is the first Shah Rukh Khan-Aditya Chopra film in over eight years. They had last collaborated for Mohabbatein in 2000.

Set in Amritsar, Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi is the story of a mismatched couple played by Shah Rukh and newcomer Anushka Sharma and how the two of them find love in the backdrop of a dance competition.

The trade circles, which earlier were a little circumspect in their opinion about the movie's probable box-office fate post 26/11, have now given the movie a thumbs up, saying it has brought a little cheer to Mumbai's prevailing sombre mood.

In spite of not being a run-of-the-mill Bollywood blockbuster, Rab Ne... is attracting audiences all over the country because cinegoers have been missing the nation's darling, Shah Rukh, the whole year and the breeziness he displays on the screen.

"Bollywood masala addicts may find Rab Ne... a low-key affair as it has no pungent sex and the picturesque locales YRF movies are known for, but what has marked it out is that it has identifiable characters and that makes it an intimate movie within the limited scope of the story," said trade analyst V Verma.

YRF has two weeks to cash in on the enthusiasm the movie has generated among the audience before Aamir Khan-starrer Ghajini arrives. But by that time, Rab Ne.. would have consolidated its position at the box-office and be declared a superhit," said I M Pannu, another trade analyst.

Reactions to Rab Ne..., however, was not as enthusiastic among some young audience members.

"I know 'experimental' may not be the right word to sum up the movie, but somehow I found the movie to be a tepid fare, lacking in the usual grandeur of a Bollywood movie," said 21-year-old Dipesh Vyas, a college student.

But his friend Sheetal Jain said Shah Rukh made it all up. "Even the new girl, Anuksha Sharma, is good. In totality, I would say the movie is okay " she added.

SRK to pen down Knight-Riding experience

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After stepping into the world of cricket by buying the Indian Premier League team of Kolkata Knight Riders, the king of Bollywood Shah Rukh Khan has now decided to step into an author’s shoes and write a book on his experience with the team.

A source close to the actor revealed that King Khan will maintain a diary in which he will jot down all the special moments and photographs. And as SRK aims towards making it of and by the team members, the diary will be circulated amongst all the Knight Riders who will be asked to contribute their bit before it is compiled into a book.

“Shah Rukh had been planning to create this diary of sorts last year but it didn`t happen. This year, he will start it when the next IPL season begins. Giving details about the book,” the source said. “Shah Rukh will pen down his thoughts and maintain stats of every game.”

“All players and even the coaches can contribute to the book, and can borrow the book to read it. One of its kind; the book won`t be on sale and will be rotated from player to player whenever they want to add their inputs."

When asked about the plan from Shah Rukh himself, he said, “Yes, I am planning a book like that. And I want it to become like a collector`s item. Hundred years from now, when none of us are around, people will start searching for it and wondering who it is lying with, and where it was seen last.”

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