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Friday, February 15, 2013

Tamil Director Fires on Kajal




Kajal made her debut with Kalyan Ram’s Lakshmi Kalyanam but its not her first movie. Her first movie was actually a Tamil movie under the direction of Legendary directory Bharathi Raja. 'Bommalatam' is the  name of that movie.
 
That movie didn’t release till 2008 thought it got completed in 2004. By the time that movie is out Kajal already became talk of the town in Tollywood and she was actually branded as a Telugu heroine. 
 
Kajal recently made comments on Tamil industry and all Gusagusa readers knows it. She said Telugu industry is lot better than Tamil industry when it comes to treatment given to heroines. This came as a sting to Tamilans. Later Kajal apologized and said she didn’t mean what she said.
 
Her first director Bharathi Raja recently talked on her and said she is a arrogant girl and don’t know how to respect others.

Yevadu to release in Summer


Mega Power Star Ram Charan’s forthcoming film "Yevadu" will hit the big screens before his Hindi debut film Zanjeer.His Hindi debut film Zanjeer also releasing in this summer and the moviemakers locked the April 12th to release the film.The movie is also releasing in Telugu also.
Now the Yevadu movie producer Dil Raju informed that Yevadu will be released before Zanjeer and he is not confirmed the release date.Yevadu is said to be an action thriller and it is being directed by Vamsi Paidipally.Devi Sri Prasad is composing the music.
Shruti Haasan and Amy Jackson are the female lead roles opposite Ram Charan in the film.Allu Arjun and Kajal Aggarwal are playing the guest roles in the movie.

Jr NTR in Ramudu Bheemudu remake?


We are hearing that Jr NTR is going to act in the remake of yesteryear hit film "Ramudu-Bheemudu" from long time but till now no confirmation on this.But now the latest buzz is that Jr NTR is getting ready to act in the remake of this film.Recently producer D.Ramanaidu has also registered the title Ramudu-Bheemudu at film chambers for Suresh Productions banner, actually the old version movie also produced the same banner.
NTR, Jamuna and Vijayalakshmi played the lead roles in original and NTR done the dual role in that film.So, Jr NTR also will be seen in dual roles in this remake.However, the producers are not yet confirmed about this project

Baadshah Audio Launch on March 10th!




Young tiger Jr NTR’s Baadshah is getting ready to rock the silver screens in this summer and the makers working hard to make it a big hit film at box-office.

BlackBerry to launch Z10 in India on Feb 25

A BlackBerry executive shows off the new Z10 model during its launch in Toronto on January 30, 2013. (Photo: AP)
BlackBerry India that the company is all set to host a BlackBerry 10 launch event in India on February 25, 2013.  While we are waiting for a detailed invite to reach us, the event will be addressed by Sunil Dutt, MD, BlackBerry India, along with other senior global executives.

The company will be launching the flagship smartphone BlackBerry Z10 in the Indian market. This smartphone is already available in the UK and Canada and the launch price of this device is expected to be close to Rs 38,000. 

Facebook gets unwelcome look at hackers' dark side


Facebook network hit by sophisticated attack
Intruders recently infiltrated the systems running the world's largest online social network but did not steal any sensitive information about Facebook's more than 1 billion users, according to a blog posting on Friday by the company's security team.

The unsettling revelation is the latest breach to expose the digital cracks in a society and an economy that is storing an ever-growing volume of personal and business data online.

The news didn't seem to faze investors. Facebook Inc.'s stock dipped 10 cents to $28.22 in Friday's extended trading.

The main building at Facebook's Menlo Park, Calif., headquarters lists its address as 1 Hacker Way. From there, Facebook serves as the gatekeeper for billions of potentially embarrassing photos and messages that get posted each month.

This time, at least, that material didn't get swept up in the digital break-in that Facebook said it discovered last month. The company didn't say why it waited until the afternoon before a holiday weekend to inform its users about the hack.

It was a sophisticated attack that also hit other companies, according to Facebook, which didn't identify the targets.

"As part of our ongoing investigation, we are working continuously and closely with our own internal engineering teams, with security teams at other companies, and with law enforcement authorities to learn everything we can about the attack, and how to prevent similar incidents in the future," Facebook wrote on the blog.

Online short-messaging service Twitter acknowledged being hacked earlier this month. In that security breakdown, Twitter warned that the attackers may have stolen user names, email addresses and encrypted passwords belonging to 250,000 of the more than 200 million accounts set up on its service.

Late last month, both The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal - two of the three largest US newspapers - said they were hit by China-based hackers believed to be interested in monitoring media coverage of topics that the Chinese government deemed important.

Facebook didn't identify a suspected origin of its hacking incident, but provided a few details about how it apparently happened.

The security lapse was traced to a handful of employees who visited a mobile software developer's website that had been compromised, which led to malware being installed on the workers' laptops. The PCs were infected even though they were supposed to be protected by the latest anti-virus software and were equipped with other up-to-date protection.

Facebook linked part of the problem to a security hole in the Java software that triggered a safety alert from the US Department of Homeland Security last month. The government agency advised computer users to disable Java on their machines because of a weakness that could be exploited by hackers.

Oracle Corp., the owner of Java, has since issued a security patch that it says has fixed the problem. In its post, Facebook said it received the Java fix two weeks ago.

Facebook never mentioned the word "hack" in describing the breach. That, no doubt, was by design because hacking is a good thing in Zuckerberg's vernacular.

To most people, hacking conjures images of malevolent behaviour by intruders listening to private voicemails and villains crippling websites or breaking into email accounts.

Zuckerberg provided his interpretation of the word in a manifesto titled "The Hacker Way" that he included in the documents that the company filed for its initial public offering of stock last year.

"The word `hacker' has an unfairly negative connotation from being portrayed in the media as people who break into computers," Zuckerberg wrote. "In reality, hacking just means building something quickly or testing the boundaries of what can be done."

Review: Murder 3 has some badly-acted thrills


Sex and surprise have been the backbone of Vishesh Films  for a while now.

The prototype follows a brooding man with a fringe, stubble, libido and secret, a vacuous hot woman who speaks in dubbed whispers, a serviceable Pritam esque soundtrack, a mysterious looking cop aimed to provide unintentional comic relief, a sturdy bed as the venue of predominant action and a script that is seldom, correction, never original.

Despite this unfailing predictability, the Murder franchise, like Raaz  and Jannat has proved increasingly providential for the Bhatts -- Mahesh, Mukesh and Emraan Hashmi .

 While the first two were unacknowledged rip-offs of Hollywood’s Unfaithful and South Korea’s The Chaser, Murder 3 is gracious enough to buy the rights of Columbian thriller, La Cara Oculta.

Giving him company in a grand mansion, quite lavish even for a celebrity photographer (he’s switched from capturing bare wildlife to barely-clad models) is Sara Loren playing an opportunistic waitress with the heart (and brains) of a bird.
With the Bhatts’ in-house face of lust Hashmi going the credible route through films like The Dirty Picture and Shanghai, Murder 3 banks on Randeep. Hooda blank expressions, unblinking stares, muffled dialogue delivery and a strange pixie haircut  to pull through.
There’s also Aditi Rao Hydari representing the former girlfriend gone AWOL but mostly trying to prove her potential at playing sexy. Till her entry, the screenplay moves at the pace of a three-toed sloth but gains a little momentum as her presence rings in a feeble hope of jeopardy.  
Although it’s almost a scene-by-scene replica of the original (save for the lack of explicit nudity and a ferocious Alsatian swapped for a bunch of songs that read out like a bunch of gooey Valentine cards), first-time director Vishesh Bhatt is unable to recreate the organic fear or despair of its slick source.
A scene from Murder 3For better or worse, he doesn’t try to improvise on the script either. We all know how that worked out in Abbas-Mustan’s Players, again an official remake, of The Italian Job.   
There’s no effort from the Bhatt scion to develop his one-note characters plagued by knotty emotions like insecurity and greed into someone exciting, someone greyer.  And his actors are much too ordinary to do it on his behalf.
I’ve already expressed my discontentment regarding Hooda’s accidental, non-pasty tribute to Edward Cullen.
The ladies fare marginally better. While Loren is watchable solely on the strength of her good looks, a glowing Rao Hydari brings in some vulnerability and heart to distract us from the glaring lack of chemistry -- physical or psychological -- between the leading man and both the girls.
In the middle of everything, there’s Rajesh Shringarpure tickling the bone with his hilarious intensity bolstered by a pair of squinting eyes and uptight body language mouthing inanities like, ‘Jo dikhayi nahi de raha hai dikhayi de raha hai.’
Subtlety is rarely favoured in our filmmaking where the emphasis is always on noise that lays out cues for fear and false alarms in place of sparking off anxiety through lingering pauses or prudently-timed bursts of sound and thunder. Even so, the curious twist in AndrĂ©s Baiz’s creepy drama about the repercussions of guilt and doubt, save Murder 3 from being a complete misfire.
Those who’re clueless about the Columbian movie might get a kick out of the big reveal. Those looking for more than (badly-acted) thrills, Murder isn’t likely to be your choice of franchise anyway.

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