Saturday, 11 July 2026

Khuda Gawah publicity stills: Sridevi, Nagarjuna, Amitabh Bachchan



 

As Amitabh Bachchan had issued a media ban, not giving interviews or being part of press conferences or publicity shenanigans was the norm for most of the 1980s and early 1990s. In retaliation of sorts, it was such a huge media trend to shrink the box-office numbers to even his wildly successful movies. Hum was a huge hit, so was Khuda Gawah - the numbers don't lie. Certain editors however... 

A bizarre upmanship between the press and a reigning superstar - when AB Snr started talking to the press, so many of his quotes appear defensive. 

Take the post release interviews of Khuda Gawah - a massive film, a large-scale grand epic. Not without its flaws of course, but it had a great run. Sridevi rarely spoke to the press as it is - so Bachchan Snr spoke about the collections, how well a film was or wasn't doing. Ever articulate, ever aware, he relayed facts and figures. All those editors and magazines that criticised him, are nowhere today. Bachchan is Bachchan. Still guilding the way with his own everlasting light. 




Sridevi and Jeetendra on the sets of Ghar Sansar (1986)

The Hindi film Ghar Sansar was released on 11 July 1986 

Directed by K. Bapayya and produced by Vimal Kumar under the Shivam Chitrya banner, it is a remake of the 1983 Telugu film Maga Maharaju. The movie stars Jeetendra, Sridevi, and Kader Khan, with music composed by Rajesh Roshan. 


Sridevi in and as Malini Iyer

I've never wanted to like a show more... alas. Sridevi in, yet another title role, Malini Iyer - such wasted opportunity. Shoddy writing, direction, production... As a super fan, was so disappointed. But that was a strange year for Sridevi and family... There are a few bright spots - Sridevi looked like a dream, there are a few moments of genuine laughter... The rest.. well..

Sridevi: Roop ki Rani set in full Japanese avatar: Kimono and makeup to perfection



 

Friday, 10 July 2026

Dazzling Sridevi: Indian icon


 

How Many Kannada Films Did Sridevi Actually Do? The Truth Behind “Queen of Kannada Cinema”

As film media is prone to exaggeration - particularly in Bollywood and online film blogs - with hype often replacing reality, fact-checking being an unnecessary bane apparently... we aim to provide facts and context for everything Sridevi-related. Not to tarnish her legend, but to bolster it with accuracy, without prejudice or personal opinion.
One of the many myths about Sridevi that circulates unquestioned is that she was a legend in all South Indian film industries before conquering Bollywood. To a great extent, she was.
In Tamil and Telugu cinema, she transitioned seamlessly from child artist to leading lady. In Malayalam films, she was particularly prominent as a child star and appeared in about 25 films (her length of role varied greatly though). 
In Kannada films, however, her fame largely spilled over from neighbouring states. When you examine her filmography closely, she did very few original Kannada films. Therefore, calling her the "Queen of Kannada cinema" at any point would be an overstatement.
At age 11, Sridevi appeared in the devotional film Bhakta Kumbara (1974) starring Dr. Rajkumar. It marked her Kannada debut as a child artist. As the movie was a blockbuster, everyone associated with it gained attention - including Sridevi, despite her brief five-to-six-minute role.
She went on to appear in other devotional and religious films such as Bala Bharata (1974), Sampoorna Ramayana, Yashoda Krishna (1975), and the family drama Hennu Samsarada Kannu (1975). In 1979 (Kannada release: 1978–79), Sridevi featured in her last Kannada film, Priya, opposite Ambareesh and Rajinikanth. Priya was shot simultaneously in Tamil and Kannada.
Sridevi was indeed famous across southern states, but much of that popularity in Karnataka came through dubbed versions of her Tamil or Telugu originals.
In an interview around 2010, Sridevi mentioned she had done only one or two Kannada films. The interviewer corrected her, saying she had done about five or six. Sridevi laughed, admitting she had no recollection of those films and had never even seen most of them. In a way, she was right.
She had no involvement in the dubbing process (other artists provided her voice), was not a participant in their releases, and was barely aware of many of them.
Priya was originally a Tamil film that was also made in Kannada; its Hindi dub was titled Love in Singapore, which created further confusion.
So, in her mind, she had essentially only done Bhakta Kumbara (where she had to parrot lines in a language she didn’t speak fluently). Does that truly make her a Kannada star - especially when compared to artists who dedicated their entire careers to Kannada cinema? People who genuiniely follow Kannada cinema would list so many other leading ladies; B. Saroja Devi, Leelavathi, Kalpana, Aarathi... Sridevi doesn't make the cut in the top five in Kannada cinema. Her dubbed films ran, but didn't have the impact of native legends. 
Think about it - Aulad (1987) was dubbed and released in Thai for her fans in Bangkok. Does that make Sridevi a Thai film star? Hardly. She had no idea the Hindi film was screened and dubbed into Central Thai. Though she visited Thailand several times for family holidays, she was often surprised by the recognition she received from the local Thai community (beyond just the Indian diaspora there).
She was primarily known in the region for her work in Tamil and Telugu cinema (and to a lesser extent in Malayalam, due to geographic and cultural proximity). 
None of this diminishes her legendary status. We simply aim to be precise and factual about her filmography.
* Info referenced from Deccan Herald and other contemporary reports on the Kannada film industry’s tribute to Sridevi.

Read: Kannada Film Industry mourns the loss of Sridevi.

* If you have more to contribute to the above with facts and figures, pls comment below. Esp if any factual corrections - not opinions!