Once bitten,Wonder Woman XXX An Axel Braun Parody twice shy.
Bollywood is arguably the worst hit when bilateral relations between India and Pakistan turn sour. But Shah Rukh Khan, whose upcoming film 'Raees'features Pakistani actor Mahira Khan, has made sure that his 2017 production will not meet with the same fate as his friend Karan Johar’s 'Ae Dil Hai Mushkil' (ADHM) did in October.
SEE ALSO: Pakistan enforces blanket ban on Indian content on its TV and radio channelsKhan met Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) supremo Raj Thackeray at his residence in Mumbai late Sunday to assure him that the leading lady would not be in India for the film’s promotions. He also went on to say that he would not be working with Pakistani actors in future. Khan was accompanied by the film’s co-producer Ritesh Sidhwani of Excel Entertainment.
MNS's cinema workers' unit Chief Amey Khopkar told Hindustan Times, “ Khan has promised that he will not get Mahira Khan to promote 'Raees'. There will be no interference from our end.”
This precautionary move by Khan, whose Red Chilies Entertainment has co-produced Raees, comes on the back of controversies surrounding the presence of Pakistani actors in Indian films. The situation had turned violent during the Diwali release of Johar’s 'ADHM' featuring Pakistani heartthrob Fawad Khan.
MNS, which thrives on its nationalistic affiliations, had threatened to stall the film’s release. And producer-director Johar had to shell out Rs 50 million ($741,000) in order to pacify protesters. The move didn’t go down well with many in the industry which felt that the otherwise influential filmmaker he had given in to “political extortion”.
But Shah Rukh Khan believes in being safe than sorry. Thus, he has reached out to Thackeray well in advance of the film’s Jan. 25 release.
Meanwhile, fans are clearly disappointed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
To Believe or Not to Believe: That Is Not the Question by Peter BebergalCooking with Anzia Yezierska by Valerie StiversFlowers for Yellow Chins, Bruised Eyes, Forsaken Nymphs, and Impending Death by Katy KelleherDeborah Eisenberg’s Life in Comics by Liana FinckA Tribe Called Quest Is Gone, but HipWhat We Saw When We First Saw the WuRevisited: ‘Guernica’A Poet’s Complaints Against Fiction by Anthony MadridPoetry Rx: Suddenly Something Snaps by Kaveh AkbarRevisited: ‘Guernica’Poem for Merwin by Matthew ZapruderWhiting Awards 2019: Tyree Daye, PoetryInstagram rolls out longThe Strange Things I’ve Found inside Books by Jane SternThere’s No Dying in Baseball by Jason NovakWhiting Awards 2019: Nafissa ThompsonStaff Picks: Peasants, Postpartum, and Palestine by The Paris ReviewAt Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s Hundredth Birthday Party by Nina SparlingThere’s No Dying in Baseball by Jason NovakNothing Is Like Anything Else: On Amy Hempel by Alice Blackhurst How William Eggleston Would Photograph a Baseball Game by Adam Sobsey Another Evening Gone by Sadie Stein The Poetry of Julia A. Moore Why Migraines are the Most Glamorous of Headaches The Victorian Ghost Stories of Vernon Lee Transcending the Archetypes of War: An Interview with Phil Klay by Matt Gallagher The Morning News Roundup for November 17, 2014 On Samuel Rutherford Crockett and the Word “Draffsack” Cover Model A Penny Saved Is a Waste of Time Visit Our Holiday Pop A Fake Oral History of Allen Tate The Morning News Roundup for December 2, 2014 Emma, Cover to Cover by Dan Piepenbring Berlin’s Boulevard of Broken Dreams Overheard Haiku René Magritte Was Born on This Day in 1898 The Marquis de Sade at 200 This Week’s Staff Picks The Morning News Roundup for November 10, 2014
2.3253s , 10108.5 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Wonder Woman XXX An Axel Braun Parody】,Unobstructed Information Network