Pleasurewithoutguilt
Recent Highlights
All Stories for Pleasurewithoutguilt
Confessions of shy bride: How I turned to films to survive the chaos of my winter wedding
Raginid •To beat the chaos of my wedding prep, I turned to films, especially centred on weddings. Not to look for any aesthetic ideas, but to soak myself into an emotional marathon.
What makes Jackie Shroff interviews a genre: Good mix of worldly wise and frank talk with a sprinkle of cuss words
Bh Harsh •Jackie Shroff remains deliriously unafraid of these pitfalls, always speaking straight from his heart in trademark tapori language, without anyone taking any offense. The fun lies exactly in hearing a popular celebrity speak without any trace of self-consciousness.
How pro-wrestling’s combination of sports and spectacle won me over (and helped me understand America)
Devarsi Ghosh •At the turn of the millennium, when most Indian households such as ours did not have access to the internet, it was pro-wrestling that helped me understand what America was thinking on a weekly basis.
Old Bollywood songs are a treasure trove for every mood, every occasion, every relationship
Sneha Bengani •Even when I was as young as five years old, I could sing word for word several of Lata Mangeshkar, Mohammad Rafi, Kishore Kumar, RD Burman, and Asha Bhosle songs. I didn’t know what they meant, which movies they were from, or who acted in them, but I knew them by heart.
Farooq Shaikh's 1986 comedy Peechha Karro never tries to overreach its universe of sheer silliness and inanity
Namrata Joshi •Released 35 years ago, Pankaj Parashar's madcap comedy Peechha Karro used stupidity to a great effect, turned it almost sublime, and made screwball transcendental.
Jhoom Barabar Jhoom soundtrack was the chef's Kiss of Love in what was otherwise a recipe for disaster
Poulomi Das •The music of Shaad Ali's 2007 dud Jhoom Barabar Jhoom — composed by Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy and lyrics supplied by Gulzar — is everything the film isn't. It is irreverent, kooky, and sensational.
Love, drama and jalebis: How Iss Pyar Ko Kya Naam Doon? added a dash of romance to a TV serial
Aishwaryasahasrabudhe •The enduring popularity of Iss Pyar Ko Kya Naam Doon? lies in how this very textbook romance in effect became the first “full blown love story” to appear on the small screen.
Hot wheels, shiny dials, gearshifts that could launch you into orbits: Why I can't put a break on my love for Fast & Furious
Karishmaupadhyay •You’d have to be a zombie to not have your adrenaline pumping through each one of those drag races and car chases in the Fast & Furious franchise.
The wholesome, unadulterated joy of watching cinema in fragments — where parts are often greater than their sum
Jai Arjun Singh •I am now unembarrassed about my propensity to watch and re-watch specific scenes, especially the ones with great background score. Being able to take pleasure in the small moment is, I find, as important and valid as anything else.
Storm in a coffee cup: What makes Koffee with Karan an exercise in not taking life too seriously
Shreemayee Das •Koffee with Karan takes itself too seriously. And that's exactly why we don't.