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Sajal Aly stuns at ‘What’s Love Got To Do With It’ London premiere

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Sajal Aly stuns at 'What's Love Got To Do With It' London premiere

Lollywood diva Sajal Aly made headlines as she attended the London premiere of the highly anticipated film What’s Love Got to Do with It? at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square on Monday, Feb 13.

Dressed to the nines, the ‘Ishq E Laa’ sensation dazzled her way through the red carpet donning navy blue sparkling attire paired up with matching earrings.

While Jemima Khan along with the other cast and crew members present at the screening amped up the glamour quotient for the night. The star-studded premiere started with traditional drum beats, and also captured a fun-filled moment between Aly and British actress and screenwriter Emma Thompson.

Turning to her official Instagram handle, Aly shared a reel grooving with Thompson along with the caption “She is amazing”

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Spilling the beans on her role, the diva told StudioCanal “I believe that she is the face of thousands of Pakistani and South Asian girls, and she is going to give a lot of strength and courage to all of them”.

Soon after the premier, the showbiz fraternity as well as the starlet’s fans started singing praises for the diva, to which Aly responded with gratitude.

Jemima Goldsmith’s screenplay, directed under the vital direction of Shekhar Kapur, stars Lily James, Shazad Latif, Shabana Azmi, Sajal Aly, Emma Thompson, Asim Chaudhry, Oliver Chris, and Jeff Mirza. 

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Quentin Tarantino doesn’t want Brit actors in his last movie

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Quentin Tarantino doesn't want Brit actors in his last movie

Quentin Tarantino – the famous movie director – wants to make his last venture a strictly American affair by excluding the British actors as he thinks they really don’t represent the US culture.

“Obviously, nothing against the Brits, but we’re living in a really weird time now,” he said in an interview given to a magazine at the recently-held Cannes Festival.

Tarantino – known for films like Pulp Fiction, Inglorious Basterds, Kill Bill Volume 1 and Kill Bill Volume II, The Hateful Eight – said, “I think when people look back on this era of cinema, and it’s just all these British actors pretending to be Americans and all these Australian actors pretending to be Americans, it’s like phantoms. Nobody is acting in their own voice.”

“I think it’s just a case that a bunch of Brits became more famous than the others. The Americans ceded their own ground. When I look at ’70s cinema I want to see Robert De Niro, I want to see Al Pacino, I want to see Stacy Keach, you know, I want to see people like that reflecting the culture back to me.”

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According to Tarantino, it is based on a man who wrote for a pornographic magazine and set in 1977’s California. The guy was never really famous and used to write movie reviews.

It means the inspiration comes from Tarantino’s teenage job where he would load pornographic magazines into a vending machine and empty quarters out of the cash dispenser. He explains, “All the other stuff was too skanky to read, but then there was this porno rag that had a really interesting movie page.”

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3rd man charged in 2002 shooting death of Run-DMC star Jam Master Jay

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3rd man charged in 2002 shooting death of Run-DMC star Jam Master Jay

A third man has been charged in the 2002 shooting death of Run-DMC star Jam Master Jay, prosecutors said Tuesday, marking the latest movement in a case that languished for years.

Federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York filed a superseding indictment on Tuesday, charging Jay Bryant, 49, in the death of Jason “Jay” Mizell, known professionally as Jam Master Jay.

Two other men, Ronald Washington and Karl Jordan Jr., had previously been indicted in August 2020 for the death of Jay. The hip-hop trailblazer was shot in the head in his studio on Oct. 30, 2002.

Bryant’s attorney, César de Castro, said in an email that they had just learned of the charges.

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“Securing an indictment in a secret grand jury, applying an extremely low burden of proof, is one thing. Proving it at trial is another matter,” he said.

Bryant, from Queens, was in custody already on unrelated federal drug charges.

At the time the other two men were indicted, authorities said Jay’s death involved a drug deal gone bad. In a letter filed with the court on Tuesday, prosecutors said Bryant and the two other men entered the building that evening, and then fled after the shooting. They said Bryant was seen going into the building, and his DNA was recovered at the scene.

Jay was in Run-DMC with Joseph “Run” Simmons and Darryl “DMC” McDaniel in the early 1980s. The group helped bring hip-hop music into the mainstream. Run DMC’s hits include “King of Rock,” “It’s Tricky” and a remake of Aerosmith’s “Walk This Way.”

For years, Jay’s death lingered as a cold case, with witnesses reluctant to speak up despite reward money being offered. 

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Nora Fatehi admires Helen, wants to play in her biopic

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Nora Fatehi admires Helen, wants to play in her biopic

who starred in a Bollywood blockbuster Sholay – and now wants to be play in her biopic whenever there is an opportunity, as she responded to a question on the subject.

According to Fatehi, she studied all her videos properly, even the breathing spaces of the shoulder movements, the hands and just the aura. “I had to be feminine, I had to be poised, I had to be very flirty, and I had to own it.”

Fatehi, 31, said it would be honour. “If the filmmakers ever think of me, because I feel like we have so many similarities.”
“She came from a different country, I did, it was tough for both of us, we were introduced to the world through dance and that too in a different genre of dance.”

Helen Ann Richardson Khan, now in her 80s, has appeared in over 1,000 films and is known for her supporting, character roles and guest appearances in a career spanning 70 years.

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A recipient of Padma Shri by the Government of India, she has received two Filmfare Awards and is considered as one of the most popular dancers of her time.

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