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PostPosted: Wed Apr 02, 2003 1:09 pm 
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Location: Suburbia OH USA
A coworker just emailed me a link to Turner's June schedule because he knows of my Bollywood addiction:

Turner Classic Movies June Schedule - Bollywood Classics on Thursday nights!

If you scroll through Thursdays you'll see they are playing some great ones - BOMBAY, DDLJ, and DIL CHAHTA HAI (I can finally get it w/subtitles since my DVD went crap) are among the recent titles. But I'm really happy to see older hard-to-find titles like PAKEEZAH and DO BIGHA ZAMIN.

They're also usually sticklers about print quality too - maybe these will be an improvement over whats available?


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 02, 2003 3:45 pm 
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This is great news!

TCM is an awesome channel. I hope they do the transfers for these movies themselves. :)


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 02, 2003 5:41 pm 
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Thursday June 5

8:00 PM Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995)
11:30 PM Bombay (1995)
2:00 AM Amar Akbar Anthony (1977)

Thursday June 12

8:00 PM Rangeela (1995)
10:30 PM Dil Chahta Hai (2001)
2:00 AM Sholay (1975)

Thursday June 19

8:00 PM Pakeezah (1971)
10:30 PM Junglee (1961)
1:00 AM Awaara (1951)

Thursday June 26

8:00 PM Mother India (1957)
11:00 PM Do Bigha Zamin (1953)
1:30 AM Pyaasa (1957)

Kick ass! I hope that the movies that are non-OAR on DVD (Sholay, Pakeezah) are OAR in this broadcast and that Bombay is in Tamil and not Hindi.


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 02, 2003 5:54 pm 
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this is too good...
TCM is always after a proper OAR... can't wait to see the prints they have...


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 02, 2003 5:59 pm 
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Is TCM available in Canada on rogers or express vu or one has to subscribe to dish network to get them?

these movies are awesome!


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 02, 2003 6:02 pm 
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youullu wrote:
this is too good...
TCM is always after a proper OAR... can't wait to see the prints they have...

Most of the time they do, but I've seen one or two pan and scan films. They're much better than AMC, though. AMC edits films and shows commercials, and they rarely do letterbox broadcasts.


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 02, 2003 7:39 pm 
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I'll put TCM and Canada's SHOWCASE at the same level.

Mostly, these stations are given a Beta master by the distributors. I doubt they get actual film print, unless they insist for it. TV studios like TCM, most likely, have better tele-cine than what Indians use.

In case of SHOWCASE, they showed ASOKA from whatever was given to them by the distributors. They were given a NTSC Beta master which had been converted from a PAL master. SHOWCASE couldn't care less.

If you want top quality transmission from TCM, I guess you should send them e-mails asking for a high quality Film to NTSC tele-cine conversion. There is still enough time.

Rana


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2003 9:03 am 
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Quote:
Kick ass! I hope that the movies that are non-OAR on DVD (Sholay, Pakeezah) are OAR in this broadcast and that Bombay is in Tamil and not Hindi.


Bollywood means Hindi.


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2003 6:11 pm 
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Aryan wrote:
Quote:
Kick ass! I hope that the movies that are non-OAR on DVD (Sholay, Pakeezah) are OAR in this broadcast and that Bombay is in Tamil and not Hindi.


Bollywood means Hindi.

Then they shouldn't even be showing Bombay :)


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2003 6:20 pm 
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rana, if OAR pls record, them on vhs, sholay and pakeezah esp, i dont know, sub titles? or not?


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2003 5:25 pm 
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Quote:
Then they shouldn't even be showing Bombay

In a way you are right, but Bombay has been released in Hindi by the producers of the film themselves for theatrical screenings. That makes it a Bollywood film for a lot of people:)


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PostPosted: Sat May 03, 2003 8:29 pm 
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Any opinions on these (I already own all of the rest):

- Pakeezah
- Junglee
- Awaara
- Do Bigha Zamin




Edited By kstuart on 1051994076


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PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2003 2:39 am 
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kstuart wrote:
Any opinions on these (I already own all of the rest):

- Pakeezah
- Junglee
- Awaara
- Do Bigha Zamin

Pakeezah has good songs, but the movie itself is mediocre IMO.


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PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2003 2:43 am 
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Location: God's Country!
Junglee

Saira Banu's debut I think . Good songs movie okayish




Edited By JamesBond007 on 1052017226


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PostPosted: Tue May 13, 2003 11:47 am 
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Bollywood Festival on TCM in US



Bollywood festival on Turner channel in US

Tanmaya Kumar Nanda in New York | May 09, 2003 11:12 IST


It's Bollywood time in the US of A. And this time, it's free. No $10 tickets to buy to watch a film that might or might not satisfy.

In a first, Turner Classic Movies brings some Hindi film classics to the small screen as part of a month-long film festival beginning June 5, and every Thursday thereafter.

From such classics as Jaagte Raho and Pyaasa to Sholay (right) to the more contemporary Rangeela and Dil Chahta Hai, Bollywood will strut the TCM screen in its many-hued avatars for a full month, bringing an exotic new flavor to American audiences who are only recently waking up to one of the largest film industries in the world.

One major advantage for viewers will be the lack of any commercial breaks, a strategy TCM follows regularly. "We don't go for ratings like other channels and don't rely on advertising for sustenance," says Atlanta-based Charles Tabesh, senior vice president of programming for TCM.

TCM normally draws its programming from a combined library of Turner Movies and Time-Warner films, which together hold one of the largest film libraries in the world, from the 1920s through the 1980s.

Co-hosting the festival will be producer-director Ismail Merchant, who will provide history and context to each film. Merchant was picked over Mira Nair, director of such crossover films as Monsoon Wedding and Mississippi Masala and who couldn't fit the hosting schedule into her shooting dates.

Getting the films to the screen hasn't been easy, though. As Tabesh told rediff.com, "We couldn't get the prints directly from India and had to source it from Channel 4 in London."

Interestingly, the festival will be largely in reverse chronological order. "The idea is to start off with where the Hindi film industry is now and then move back to show the progression."

Unfortunately, some of the older films are being clubbed with newer ones on a late night slot due to the quality of the prints. "Amar Akbar Anthony (right), for example, had to take a 2 am slot due to the poor picture quality," Tabesh said.

Therefore, 8 pm, June 5, will have the Shah Rukh Khan-Kajol blockbuster Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge (left), leading into Mani Ratnam's Bombay at 11:30 pm and then the ultimate masala movie Amar Akbar Anthony at 2 am.

The movies were picked by Nasreen Munni Kabir of Channel 4, who Tabesh initially approached with the idea after hearing of a similar initiative by the British channel. "I had heard about Hindi films and their powerful impact but I didn't know enough so I approached LA film critic David Shute who put me on to Kabir," Tabesh told rediff.com "I was curious about Bollywood and I figured other Americans might be too."


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