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Netflix is About to Make its Bollywood Debut
The streaming giant is expanding its original content with an Indian film production. Love Per Square Foot, described as a "quirky romantic comedy," will be Netflix's first Indian movie produced exclusively for streaming. Set to be available on the VOD platform in early 2018, the project about a couple who enter a marriage of convenience to buy an apartment in Mumbai will feature actors Vicky Kaushal, Angira Dhar, Ratna Pathak, Supriya Pathak, and Raghuvir Yadav. Filmmaker and stage actor Anand Tiwari will direct what will be his first feature film.
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Outlander’s Bloopers: Another Side of Starz’s Drama Series that Will Make You Love It Even More
With the third season of Outlander currently in full swing, which has us all waiting impatiently to discover what fate has in store for our beloved time-traveling couple Claire and Jamie (who, by the way, seriously took the "It's complicated" relationship status to the next level), we thought the time was right - before another tragic event hits them - to offer a lighter, happier side of Starz's historical drama by sharing a must-see, hilarious behind-the-scenes look at the popular series.
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Murder on the Orient Express
Not that we asked for it, but Agatha Christie's 1934 classic Murder on the Orient Express has been turned into yet another movie adaptation, what's more conducted by accomplished and prominent British actor/director, Kenneth Branagh. Boasting a mustache that puts Groucho Marx's to shame, Branagh for the occasion did not only direct the movie, but also chose to portray famous detective Hercule Poirot throughout the well-known story full of mysteries (if you've already read the book or seen one of the 2 previous adaptations by Sidney Lumet and Carl Schenkel, then not so much) revolving around the investigation of criminal Samuel Ratchett's (Johnny Depp) murder aboard the famous Orient Express, where each of its 13…
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The Disney/L.A. Times Feud Proves that Trying to Control the Press is a Risky Game
Last week, the Walt Disney Company, claiming that the newspaper "showed a complete disregard for basic journalistic standards," resolved to barre L.A. Times film critics from attending advance screenings of its latest movies and other media events. A controversial decision that rapidly sparked a full-blown backlash within the journalism community.











