Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Boss 2: Back to Rule is a 2017 India-Bangladesh joint production Bengali action thriller film directed by Baba Yadav and story written by Jeet. It is a sequel to his 2013 film, Boss: Born to Rule and the second installment of the Boss film series. The film features Jeet, Subhashree Ganguly and Bangladeshi actress Nusraat Faria in the leading roles.
The sequel is titled Boss 2: Back To Rule and retains many of the same cast and crew of the original film. Unlike the first film, which was a remake of another film, Boss 2 is an original film. The sequel is also an Indo-Bangladesh joint venture, being co-produced by Bangladesh's Jaaz Multimedia. The shooting of the film was started from ...
Jeet is an Indian Bengali actor, producer and television presenter. Jeet started his modeling career in 1993. His first acting assignment was Bishabriksha (1994–95), a Bengali TV series directed by Bishnu Palchaudhuri. He made his big screen debut with Chandu (2001), a Telugu film. [1]
Jeet Jeet in 2017 Born Jeetendra Madnani (1978-11-30) 30 November 1978 (age 46) Kalighat, Kolkata, India Nationality Indian Other names Jeetu Occupations Actor model producer entrepreneur Years active 1993–present Works Full list Spouse Mohna Ratlani (m. 2011) Children 2 Awards Full list Website jeetonline.com Jeetendra Madnani, mononymously known as Jeet, is an Indian actor, film producer ...
A home invasion in an upscale Philadelphia suburb turned fatal over the weekend after a suspect broke into a home in Lower Merion Township at 2:20 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 8, the Montgomery County ...
Geoffrey Deuel, an actor known for his work on television, including the beloved soap The Young and the Restless, and for playing Billy the Kid in John Wayne's Chisum, has died.He was 81. Deuel's ...
Lynda Carter is the ultimate cover girl for the December 2024 edition of Harper's Bazaar Vietnam.. The original Wonder Woman actress, 72, sat down with model Coco Rocha for an interview with the ...
In the 1930s, West Bengal was the centre of Indian cinema, and Bengali cinema accounted for a quarter of India's film output in the 1950s. [1] [2] A 2014 industry report noted that while approximately 100 films were produced annually in Bengali. [3] The Bengali film industry, was valued at around ₹120–150 crore in terms of revenue in 2014.