Showing posts with label dirty picture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dirty picture. Show all posts

Vidya in her The D!rty Picture avatar...!!!

0 comments


We have all seen Vidya Balan sizzle in the promos of the highly awaited The Dirty Picture. The excitement only reaches fever pitch as another new picture of the actress emerges on the web.

Vidya will be seen playing southern siren Silk Smitha and will be seen with not one or two but three heroes — namely Naseeruddin Shan, Tusshar Kapoor and Emraan Hashmi.

Dirty or not, the movie surely has the audiences hooked.

The original s3x siren --- Silk Smitha(Bio.)(D!rty picture movie plot)..

0 comments


The original sex siren
South’ssiren of yesteryears, Vijayalakshmi aka Silk Smitha, got her first major breakin 1979 in Vandichakram’ (wheel). The film brought her not just criticalacclaim, but a new title Silk after the name of the character she portrayed inthe movie. That was the birth of Silk Smitha, south’s first original sex siren.Considered an epitome of Indian glamour as seen only in sculptures of oldendays, Smitha ruled almost every male’s heart in the South.
Symbol of sensuality
SilkSmitha went on to star in over 200 Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada and a fewHindi films. Her dance numbers and her bold performances in films like MoondruMugam made her the ultimate symbol of sensuality in Tamil, Kannada. Malayalamand Telugu cinema. Her item numbers in films like Amaran were also celebratedat the box office.

Adult-film actress?
Some filmcritics, historians and journalists have referred to her as a 'soft core'actress. The vast majority of her movies are softcore and a common theme is herplaying a freakishly strong agent in skimpy bikinis beating up huge thugs. Evenin the rare non-sexual roles, she impressed critics and audiences, such as herrole of a wife hurt by her husband's infidelity in Seethakoka Chilaka (1981).Her most respected film is Moondram Pirai, remade as Sadma.


Fan following

Thoughshe did roles that portrayed her like a sex bomb, she's proved herself to be areasonable good actress with films like Moondraam Pirai and AlaiygalOyvathillai. The spell she had on the film industry can be gauged from the factthat her last film in the lead, 'Thanga Thamarai', was completed 11 years afterher death (1996) and still got a theatre release.


Silk Smitha revolutionised southern India's prolific film industry throughher song-and-dance and cabaret numbers in some 300 films.
She performed these numbers so provocatively that leading Tamil, Telegu andMalayalam distributors from the south would only accept films which includedher sultry and erotic cabarets, irrespective of whether the story linewarranted them or not. For her efforts and her rather ample, though supple bulkshe was christened "Thundering Thighs".
Smitha initially played serious lead roles inseveral Telegu films, but, over-partial to revealing, sequinned bodices andlow-slung, tight-fitting saris, she was eventually typecast as the ultimatesex-siren, utterly desirable but just out of reach. Then, after nearly 20 yearsof playing such roles, Smitha's career floundered and she moved, rather disastrously,into producing movies. Two of her Telugu films (her last films)flopped at the boxoffice while the third, was also a failure. Smithahad borrowed heavily to make these films and this, combined with her unhappypersonal life and alcohol dependency, finally led to her committing suicide. 


Born into a poor family in Eluru in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh in 1960, she was christened Vijayalakshmi but, at an early agechanged her name to Smitha. After Vandi Chakkaram ("The Wheel"), herfirst Tamil film in 1979, Smitha began calling herself "Silk" afterthe bar girl of that name she played in the movie. Silk is also an anglicisedword for "silku", used colloquially in parts of south India to mean an"endearing flirt with a touch of glamour", a sobriquet which suitedher screen persona.
Smitha left school after the fourth standard determined to become a filmstar, and at the age of nine moved in with her aunt in Madras, the centre ofsouthern India's booming film industry. Madras easily rivals Bollywood, India'sfilm capital city of Bombay, not only in the number of films it producesannually and its lavish studios, but also in the number of box- office hits itproduces. Southern India's film industry also has a firmer grip on the localsthan anywhere else in the country. The cult of the film star M.G. Ramachandran,better known as MGR, who became the chief minister of Tamil Nadu state on thestrength of his acting career, was so all- encompassing that scores ofTamilians committed suicide by setting themselves on fire or jumping out ofmoving trains when he died in the mid- Eighties. Smitha too became a household name after Tamil films likeMoondram Pirai ("Third night of the New Moon"), Moondru Mugam("Three Faces") and Kozhi Kuvuthu ("The Cock is Crowing").Besides Tamil cinema she also featured in scores of Telegu, Malayalam and evenmainstream Hindi films in Bollywood. Smitha's personal life, however,contrasted sharply with her screen persona. She was deeply religious and likemany pious Indians had her own little temple at home where she prayed severaltimes a day.


Death
In 1996, Smitha was found dead in her Chennai apartment. In the previous yearshe had tried to shift career in order to become a film producer. Financialproblems, a disillusionment in love and an alcohol dependency apparently led todepression. It is suspected that Smitha committed suicide. 

How Vidya became a Simpleton to S*XY Siren...!!!

0 comments

Forget the bespectacled Radhika of the "Hum Paanch" series, the demure Lalita of "Parineeta" or even the rustic Krishna of "Ishqiya"!

An evolved Vidya Balan paints "The Dirty Picture" red with her killer pout, sultry dance, deep cleavage and her bold stance, leaving you sighing and singing "Ooh la la! Ooh la la".

When producer Ekta Kapoor told "I would be surprised if I don't get unbelievable critical acclaim for 'Dirty Picture' and a national award for my actress, Vidya Balan", she sure didn't mean it for nothing.

The story of southern sex siren Silk Smitha -- her rise as a glamour girl thanks to her bold and semi-nude roles in movies, and her gradual fall owing to new entrants in the market, her financial crisis and personal problems -- "The Dirty Picture" is set to have Vidya at her glamorous, boldest and sultry best.
If the first poster of the film, with Vidya showing off her cleavage in an itsy bitsy red blouse, didn't spell fire, the one minute 30-second trailer sure makes you go "Ooh la la" - in tune with disco king Bappi Lahiri's spicy rendition of a song which says "Tu hai meri fantasy...".

The Munnis and the Sheilas of Bollywood can take a backseat for a while because the 33-year-old Vidya, even with her not so washboard abs, might just become every man's fantasy with her titillating moves, curvaceous frame, playfulness, and sensuous ways in her scenes with Naseeruddin Shah, Tusshar Kapoor and Bollywood's very own serial kisser Emraan Hashmi.

With its into-the-face dialogues, the trailer itself might leave many gasping like Tusshar when Vidya says: "Mujhe jo chahiye uska mazza raat ko hee aata hai" and many ogling like Naseer does when she decks up for a film shoot.

Perhaps what the trailer misses is the dark side of Silk Smitha's story, which the film is expected to highlight. But it does its job and it does it well.

It's been just six years since Vidya made her Bollywood debut with "Parineeta", but in the short period, the actress showed her fearless streak by roles that are as different as chalk and cheese like "Ishqiya" and "Paa". 

er choice of unconventional scripts with experimental roles that challenge the actor in her has continued to set an example of what it takes to strike the right balance between commercial and parallel cinema.

If it was a lonely lover in her first movie, Bengali project "Bhalo Theko", Vidya went on to show her subtle and romantic side in "Parineeta". In "Lage Raho Munnabhai", she was seen in a conventional role, but she played it unconventionally.

Her performance in "Guru" as a multiple sclerosis patient may have been short, but it didn't go unnoticed. Her films "Salaam-e-Ishq", "Heyy Babyy" and "Kismat Konnection" may not have done much to boost her film career, but Vidya remained dauntless.

She broke all doubts about her dancing skills through her performance on the song "Ami je tomar" in "Bhool Bhulaiyaa".

For a brief period, her choice of dresses was talk of the town and was much criticised, but Vidya kept to her work and when she returned as single mother in "Paa", her high-voltage performance shut the wagging tongues.

"Ishqiya" further strengthened filmmakers' belief in her versatility and capacity as an actor. In Abhishek Chaubey's film, Vidya convincingly played a conniving and manipulative woman who doesn't shy away from using her sexuality to fulfil her goals.

And then "No One Killed Jessica" saw her in a completely different avatar. Based on the real-life Jessica Lall murder case, the movie saw her as a grieving sister who runs from pillar to post to get justice for her sister.

After entertaining viewers with her plain Jane look, Vidya has now picked up a contrasting role in "The Dirty Picture". She oozes oomph like never before and one wonders if the movie will be Vidya's next stepping stone to her ever-rising success story.

Directed by Milan Luthria, the film will release Dec 2, which is Silk Smitha's birth anniversary.

EXCL :: VIDYA BALAN in "DIRTY PICTURE" ***LATEST***

0 comments





Vidya Balan "The Dirty Picture" First Look

0 comments






















































Check out Dirty Picture's poster --- Vidya Balan Tooo Hott...!!!

0 comments



Vidya Balan has never exposed as much - but in the first look of "The Dirty Picture", inspired by late southern sex icon Silk Smitha's life, she has painted a perfect picture in an itsy-bitsy red blouse matched with luscious red lipstick.

The actress stands undaunted even as three men - Naseeruddin Shah, Tusshar Kapoor and Emraan Hashmi - get too close for comfort in the poster, which was released on social networking sites Friday.

"The poster and the logo of the film has a very 1980s feel to it because the movie is set in that period. We will be launching the first trailer of 'The Dirty Picture' in Mumbai August 30," Girish Johar, head of acquisition and distribution, Balaji Motion Pictures, told IANS over the phone from Mumbai.

The film is set to release Dec 2, the birth anniversary of Silk Smitha, who became a symbol of sensuality after featuring in bold and semi-nude roles. Later, financial crises and personal problems took a toll on her life.

It is this moving story that has been captured in this latest offering by Ekta Kapoor.

In tune with the period that the movie is set in, the Balaji unit has chosen to launch the first trailer at Galaxy, a single screen theatre in Mumbai.

"It is because the movie has the 1980s charm of Indian cinema, we chose not to go to any five star hotel or a multiplex to launch the first teaser. The theatre will be set up in a way that reminds people of good old times," said Johar.