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New shows, new faces and renewed passion

It’s happening — slowly. Earlier, tech companies would launch their new gadgets in India very late. Not any longer. Hollywood studios would release their films in India ages after their release in America and other parts of the world. Not any longer.

Updated on: Mar 09, 2012 11:17 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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It’s happening — slowly. Earlier, tech companies would launch their new gadgets in India very late. Not any longer. Hollywood studios would release their films in India ages after their release in America and other parts of the world. Not any longer.

The-Bade-Achche-Lagte-Hain-protagonists-share-a-light-candid-moment
The-Bade-Achche-Lagte-Hain-protagonists-share-a-light-candid-moment

Could the same be happening in television? Most viewers who follow English shows and series here complain bitterly that they are, more often than not, forced to watch old seasons. We may be watching season one or two of a show here, but abroad it may be in its seventh season.

So here’s the good news. Star World is actually premiering a new Disney series, Missing, in India on Sunday even before its launch in the US (four days earlier, to be precise). The show, starring Ashley Judd (her TV debut), is, at its heart, the story of a mother searching for her missing son. But it also seems to be a tight espionage thriller because the mother is a retired CIA agent and there are many old secrets to be unraveled. It sounds worth a watch and I’m looking forward to catching it on Sunday. But more than that, I’m looking forward to the fact that we might be on to a good thing — that is, getting to see shows on time and not much after everyone else has seen them.

On another channel (Life OK), Tum Dena Saath Mera’s young newly married couple also had an elaborate lovemaking sequence. In Star Plus’s Iss Pyaar Ko Kya Naam Doon, we saw the lead pair do a sensual dance (or was it borderline lovemaking on stage?) to the song, Teri meri prem kahani.

Naturally, it’s all very soft-focus, but hey, no complaints. If love and romance on the small screen are actually incorporating physical desire and sexual tension as part of the deal, well then, television is — finally — taking baby steps to growing up. (And about time too. Otherwise, what we’ve been hearing forever is that because TV beams into the living rooms of single-TV households, and everyone from grandmothers to the children, watch it together, producers can’t and don’t show a lot of things. This was always seemed a specious argument, because if that were the case, what of all the domestic torture? How is that okay? Or is it that showing abhorrent kitchen politics is okay but showing attraction and passion isn’t?)

On another note, actor Mohnish Bahl is out of Sony’s Kuch Toh Log Kahenge (the serial that is allegedly a remake of Pakistani serial Dhoop Kinare, but frankly the resemblance ends at the fact that the two leads are doctors). An ‘accident’ has just taken place because of which everyone thinks Dr Ashutosh (the lead character played by Bahl) is dead, but as we know from years of experience, he will return with a new face. (Actor Sharad Kelkar takes over from Mohnish Bahl and will hopefully breathe new life into the character as well).

 
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Catch every big hit, every wicket with Crickit, a one stop destination for Live Scores, Match Stats, Infographics & much more. Explore now!.

Get more updates from Bollywood, Taylor Swift, Hollywood, Music and Web Series along with Latest Entertainment News at Hindustan Times.
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