India's Hindi Movie Industry, Bollywood, Booms (Movie theatres) in 2006
India's prolific Hindi movie industry, popularly known as Bollywood, recovered from a long slump in 2006. Not only did the industry produce a series of big hits, but market avenues such as Internet and television also began contributing more money to the trade.
Rubik's rises again. The multicolored cube that swept the U.S. when it was first released in 1980 is surging in popularity, buoyed by a cameo in the recent hit movie, "The Pursuit of Happyness," and a renewed interest in back-to-basics toys.
NEW YORK Dont tell Jamie Foxx a big-budget Hollywood movie about blacks and starring blacks cant be a hit with anybody besides blacks. Ray, which starred Foxx as R&B legend Ray Charles, proved the point, earning two Academy Awards (one of them for Foxx) and domestic and foreign grosses of more than $120million.
Bollywood Movie Stills, Watch out Bollywood Sites.
LOS ANGELES, California (Hollywood Reporter) -- Box office slump? What box office slump?
THE LONG TAIL has touched down at MovieFone. The AOL service was previously all about movie theater times, but now it has expanded to become an online DVD and film reference.
Variety reports that Steve Alten's prehistoric shark story Meg may finally move forward in 2007.
Rubik's rises again. The multicolored cube that swept the U.S. when it was first released in 1980 is surging in popularity, buoyed by a cameo in the recent hit movie, "The Pursuit of Happyness," and a renewed interest in back-to-basics toys.
NEW YORK Dont tell Jamie Foxx a big-budget Hollywood movie about blacks and starring blacks cant be a hit with anybody besides blacks. Ray, which starred Foxx as R&B legend Ray Charles, proved the point, earning two Academy Awards (one of them for Foxx) and domestic and foreign grosses of more than $120million.
Bollywood Movie Stills, Watch out Bollywood Sites.
LOS ANGELES, California (Hollywood Reporter) -- Box office slump? What box office slump?
THE LONG TAIL has touched down at MovieFone. The AOL service was previously all about movie theater times, but now it has expanded to become an online DVD and film reference.
Variety reports that Steve Alten's prehistoric shark story Meg may finally move forward in 2007.









