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Shruti Haasan is Reinventing Her Favourite Tamil Classics

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Singer-songwriter and actor Shruti Haasan. Photo: Courtesy of the artist

When actor and singer-songwriter Shruti Haasan takes on a film project with a tight timeline, she often experiences what she calls a “premature breakup” with her character. “Sometimes, you just don’t know how to deal with it,” she admits.

For her British thriller film The Eye (2023), director Daphne Schmon had seen an Instagram snippet of Haasan playing the piano and asked her to write a song for the rolling credits. “She asked if I could rewrite that song but for the character I played, which was super intense,” Haasan says. “That song was a way of me cathartically saying goodbye to the character. That’s the first time in a long time, I felt my two worlds meeting so seamlessly, and I felt really glad to have two different jobs that can meet in the middle somewhere.”

Now gearing up for her performance at Odeum by Prism in Hyderabad on April 26, 2025, Haasan is finding another way to merge her music and film worlds. This time, she’s crafting darker, heavier renditions of her favorite Tamil songs—including those featuring her father, legendary actor Kamal Haasan—with her band. “That’s something fun that we’re trying out for the first time in a mixed set. I’m super stoked about that because I’m really proud of my roots. So it’s about bringing it into my world as well in a way that I find comfortable,” she says.

While keeping most details under wraps, Haasan hints that at least one of the film songs she’s performing is a composition by the legendary Ilaiyaraaja. Alongside these reimagined Tamil tracks, she will also dive into her English catalog, delivering the industrial rock energy of “Monster Machine” and powerful songs like “She Is A Hero,” “In Between Place,” and “Edge.” She’ll be joined on stage by guitarist-producer Karan Parikh, drummer Karun Kannampilly, keyboardist Shivam Trivedi (“We love him; he’s the entertainment of the band,” she jokes), and bassist Yohann Coutinho. “We work predominantly out of Island City Studios, which is really like a second home. The whole team there is just amazing. It’s a lot of fun to go back into that environment,” she adds.

Shruti Haasan in a black dressShruti Haasan in a black dress
“I’ve just not been getting around to releasing it because I have this epic music video in mind,” Haasan says of her song “Bury Me.” Photo: Courtesy of the artist

When it comes to preparing for the Hyderabad show, Haasan is focused on building “physical agility” to maintain stamina—a practice she relates to her acting roles. “It’s just about switching gears and getting into a different headspace to collaborate musically versus cinematically,” she adds.

Her set will run just over an hour—a conscious choice. “I actually cross very little above an hour because when I go to gigs, I like an hour of show. I’m not much of a talker, either. I like the songs to do the talking. When I go to gigs as well, and there’s people telling me what that song is about for eight minutes, I’m like, ‘Okay, you know, let us figure it out.’ That’s the beauty.”

Fans can also expect unreleased material, including Bury Me, a cinematic trip-hop Hindi-English track she has been performing live since 2018. The delay in its release? Haasan has a vision for an “epic music video” and won’t put the song out until she can do it justice. “If I don’t get that video, I’m not releasing the song,” she states firmly.

Given the scale of her 2023 release Monster Machine, it’s safe to say the wait will be worth it. “There are about 20 songs which are unreleased. I’m just not mad about releasing stuff, which I should be, because every artist should release as frequently as possible,” she says. While Hasaan finds social media’s fleeting attention spans frustrating (“like that of a housefly,” she quips), she acknowledges the benefits of streaming platforms in making music more accessible.

Currently, Haasan is revisiting her own scratch tracks and demos while also exploring new music. She’s been listening to heavy sounds from Bring Me The Horizon and Architects, alongside New Delhi metal band Bloodywood, whom she saw at the U.K.’s Download Festival in 2023. At the same time, she’s broadening her sonic horizons. “But on the other side, I’m also like trying to expand my ears because that’s just the duty of any good musician, to keep your ears open and listen to other genres.”

Her Hyderabad gig follows the completion of her latest South Indian film, Coolie, an ensemble project featuring Rajinikanth, Nagarjuna, Upendra, Soubin Shahir, and more. “I’ve been shooting nonstop till about a week ago. Because there’s so many actors in the film and stuff, it was really hard to get to a gig. So now, I’m excited for the next couple of months where it’s just going to be me gigging and playing music and spending time writing new music,” she shares.

Shruti Haasan will perform at Odeum by Prism in Hyderabad on April 26, 2025. Details here.



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Shehzad Khan reveals his father Ajit Khan warned him for mimicking his voice in ‘Andaz Apna Apna’: ‘Ainda aisi himakat mat karna…’ | Hindi Movie News – The Times of India

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Actor Shehzad Khan recently opened up about his father’s initial reaction after watching him mimic his voice in Aamir Khan and Salman Khan’s ‘Andaz Apna Apna‘. He played the role of Vinod Bhalla in the cult classic, which left a strong impression on the audience.
In a recent conversation with Radio Nasha, Shehzad shared details about the casting process for ‘Andaz Apna Apna’. Director Rajkumar Santoshi had rejected the initial casting of the film, but for the role of Vinod Bhalla, producer Vinay Kumar suggested Shehzad’s name. “When I went there, Raj told me about the role and said that I had to use my father’s voice for the character, and that’s how the journey started,” Shehzad stated.
Actor Ajit was unaware of his son’s involvement in the film until others brought it to his attention. Shehzad recalled, “I never told my father about the film, and some people told him, ‘Your son’s new film has come out. A lot of people are talking about it. He has used your voice.’ Then he saw the film and told me, ‘Ainda aisi himakat mat karna (Don’t ever repeat this).’”
‘Andaz Apna Apna’ has achieved cult status, with fans fondly remembering its unique blend of slapstick humour and quirky characters. Alongside Shehzad Khan, the film features an ensemble cast including Aamir Khan, Salman Khan, Karisma Kapoor, Raveena Tandon, Paresh Rawal, Shakti Kapoor, and Viju Khote.
‘Andaz Apna Apna’ is set to return to select cinemas on April 25, 2025.





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Mali Turns Cult Leader in Eerie ‘Dr. Dust’ Video 

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Mali in the ‘Dr. Dust’ music video. Photo: Courtesy of the artist

Mali dons robes and commands an army of followers as a cult leader in the music video for her latest song “Dr. Dust.” 

The Chennai-origin, Mumbai-based artist takes a trippy, dark sonic route—heard first in songs like “Mango Showers” in 2019 and “Age of Limbo” from 2020—with producer Rohan Rajadhyaksha and a video directed by filmmaker Hitaali Dharamsh. The video, set in a seemingly secluded resort, features Mali’s titular character with a scepter in hand surrounded by a coterie of followers, healing circles and bonfire rituals. 

A press release for the video notes that the audience is privy to a “sacrificial ceremony,” in which Mali makes way for a successor. It adds, “The narrative explores the cyclical nature of control, identity, blind faith and dependence—underscoring the question: who’s pulling the strings?” 

True to the narrative—part cautionary tale, part in on the symbolism—Mali picked fans to feature in the video via social media.

Mali says in a statement that the song was inspired by reading and watching “lots of material related to cults.” She adds, “The more I sat on it, the more I was intrigued by this world where people, especially the young generation, fall prey to these luring cult spaces. It also brings up more relatable questions about controlling relationships in our everyday lives. It is concerning but real, and I felt the need to say something about it. To make it more fun, I even included some of the fans in the video. I really hope that it finds its people like my previous work has!”

Her first single of the year, Mali’s highlights in 2024 included winning Best Indian Act at the MTV European Music Awards as well as performing at SXSW Sydney in Australia.

Watch the video for “Dr. Dust” below. 





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‘Until Dawn’ movie review: David F Sandberg conjures a fun, blood-curdling time-loop horror

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That David F Sandberg, the director of Lights Out and Annabelle: Creation, is returning to horror should pique your interest. But the hype behind his latest film adaptation of the Until Dawn video game had to be studied. Having not played the original game, it was only right that I researched what the deal was all about, and boy, did Sandberg land upon a gold mine of material that lets him flex his genre-filmmaking muscles.

Sandberg’s adaptation, apparently like the game, is designed with just one goal: to instil fear, not the kind you feel of a spirit lurking in the dark, but the visceral feeling that makes you feel grateful for having company around you. The screenplay by Blair Butler and Annabelle writer Gary Dauberman gets its cues sharp and doesn’t beat around the bush. Is it an innovatively narrated genre-defining piece of work? No. Does it scare and engage you throughout? It certainly isn’t for the weak-hearted.

A group of five friends embark on a journey to a remote valley. We have Clover (Ella Rubin), a woman battling a cycle of grief and hope over the mysterious disappearance of her sister Melanie (Maia Mitchell); Max (Michael Cimino), Clover’s ex-boyfriend who clearly hasn’t moved on; Megan (Ji-young Yoo), with a penchant for New Age spiritualism and rituals; Nina (Odessa A’zion), who is suppressing attachment issues; and Nina’s three-month-old boyfriend Abel (Belmont Cameli), the stock horror movie doofus. The group is backing Clover’s wish to go on the trip to where her sister vanished a year ago, searching for closure. Clover’s love for Melanie, Max’s attempts to win back Clover, and Megan’s general sense of kindness towards all form the emotional foundation to back these characters for the next 100-odd minutes — there simply isn’t enough time for more tango, as they would be busy staying alive, keeping each other safe, or at times, even having to kill.

A still from ‘Until Dawn’
| Photo Credit:
Sony Pictures Entertainment

Clover gets a clue about Mel’s last known whereabouts, following which they meet a deserted cottage called Glory Valley, tucked into the woods and fenced by a weird weather anomaly. Just as the gang investigates the clues in the cabin, the film’s atmosphere begins to take shape, and a wildly fun ride begins. Each of the five gets killed in some creatively gruesome fashion — firstly, there’s a masked brute with an axe; escaping who you would meet gnarly creatures called wendigos all around the valley, waiting to feast upon the humans; and there’s a witch that can possess you and make you do some killing work on its behalf. Did I mention that the water in the valley can explode you from within? After a point, cinematographer Maxime Alexandre’s capturing of these combustions borders on sickly dark humour.

When the fifth character dies, all five go back in time to the cottage, and the dreadful night begins again. And oh, if you were to attempt to escape via road, a giant Slender Man-ish creature towers over the trees. That the characters are themselves becoming wendigos with each successive time-loop makes the ticking time bomb of this horror.

Until Dawn (English)

Director: David F Sandberg

Cast: Ella Rubin, Michael Cimino, Odessa A’zion, Ji-young Yoo, Belmont Cameli

Runtime: 103 minutes

Storyline: Five friends, in search of a missing woman, get trapped in a time loop at a deserted cabin in the woods as they search for an escape all the while looping back to a dreadul night over and over again

First off, Until Dawn isn’t for an audience searching for refined storytelling flourishes. But that doesn’t make it a less novel cinema either. It’s a film that plays as an exercise in reducing horror to its bare essentials: being scary. The screenplay takes a no-frills approach to horror, and an episode ofGoosebumps would have more twists and jumps in time than this slasher Groundhog Day; much of it is just a series of gruesome attacks and almost-there escapes, made interesting purely by how shockingly creative the kills become in each successive time loops.

Until Dawn also proves to be deserted of impactful character writing, as none build upon their initial promises. Nina and Abel make meta horror-movie comments before becoming genre-cliched annoyances, and Max is just the knight in shining armour Clover didn’t need. Megan is as immaterial as the plot serves her abilities, and it is only in the showdown that Clover gets some material to grow beyond a final girl cliche. If this is for the human characters, the wendigos and the boogeyman stick to their jump scares and slashing through people, and it gets quite tedious to the extent you begin to wish for the Witch to come back.

A still from ‘Until Dawn’
| Photo Credit:
Sony Pictures Entertainment

Yet, one must confess that these complaints may not matter while watching Until Dawn, especially if you have been craving a pure horror film that doesn’t try to be anything more. In a way, this is the fast-food version of the horror genre; with each time-loop, the gang is allowed to discover new details about this world, where Sandberg and co find space to bend through sub-genres, like when the film takes a found-footage turn.

Until Dawn is meant to scare and engage you, and it does so using one of the oldest tricks in the book — bread-crumbling information, letting us sit with our unanswered questions until the grand reveal that tells it all. One would also nibble comfortably on the many ambiguities it leaves you with. After all, it’s only intentional that you are told nothing more than what our leads witness, as if it’s all a first-person VR game with no cut-away scenes. Like was the case with Lights Out, Sandberg (and, one must credit the film’s production design team) leaves you wishing for more stories in the world of the film.

If you had to look up the Until Dawn video game, you might come across articles by gamers who are already livid with Sandberg’s adaptation. Regardless of where you fall on that argument, it’s only intriguing how the film, as well as the gaming community’s perception of the adaptation, inadvertently shines light on the source material. Perhaps it’s time to check out that game, and perhaps like the film, the game should arrest you in a chokehold for much of its gameplay.

Until Dawn is currently running in theatres



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