After The Interval (Interval Ke Baad)

Geetanjali (1989) — Enni Rojulu Bratukutaaro Teliyadu...

57 min · 23 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Geetanjali (1989) — Enni Rojulu Bratukutaaro Teliyadu...

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2607994/fan_mail/new] After The Interval (Interval Ke Baad) — Season 1, Episode 5 Remember that feeling? The theater goes dark, that first note of music hits, and for the next three hours, nothing else matters. You asked. We heard you. Today, we come home. 1989. A country cracking open. A new India is emerging. And in the misty hills of Ooty, a director who had never made a Telugu film walked onto a hillside at five in the morning to catch the light just right, and made the most beautiful love story Telugu cinema has ever seen. Bharath and Neelima rewatch Mani Ratnam's Geetanjali — the film that made Nagarjuna, discovered Girija Shettar at a wedding, gave Ilayaraja one of his greatest albums, and permanently changed what Telugu cinema could aspire to be. Why did the film that broke every rule of Telugu cinema in 1989 outlast every film that followed the rules? Why did Nagarjuna wait outside a director's door every morning for a month — and was it worth it? And what does it say about a film when its most iconic line was never in the original script? This episode: The 1989 Telugu cinema landscape and why Geetanjali succeeded where no formula could, the extraordinary stories behind the casting, the Ilayaraja soundtrack that played on every radio before the film even released, a tribute to SPB whose voice is the soul of this film, and a personal revelation about our connection to the man whose words made it all possible — Veturi Sundararamamurthy. This one is for every Telugu person who grew up far from home and still carries this cinema, this music, this language in their bones. Because the best part of any movie isn't the movie — it's always the conversation after. New episodes every week. Interval ke baad, the real conversation starts. Follow us: @aftertheintervalpod Email us: aftertheintervalpodcast@gmail.com Produced by The LuminACE Group, LLC

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6 episodios

episode Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar (1992) — Pehla Nasha, Pehla Khumaar artwork

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2607994/fan_mail/new] After The Interval (Interval Ke Baad) — Season 1, Episode 6 Remember that feeling? The theater goes dark, that first note of music hits, and for the next three hours, nothing else matters. 1992. A new India was cracking open. Zee TV had just launched. The Three Khans were in Hindi cinema simultaneously for the first time. And in the misty hills of Dehradun, a director made a film about class, rivalry, first love, and a bicycle race, and reinvented two entirely new genres of Hindi cinema in one afternoon. Bharath and Neelima rewatch Mansoor Khan's Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar — the film that defined a generation, made Aamir Khan the gold standard, and gave us what may be the most perfect song ever written about falling in love for the first time. We ask the hard questions: Why did a film that came seventh at the box office outlast every film that came before it? How did a cousin's conviction and intervention save a film that was 75% complete and about to be abandoned? And should someone make this film again in 2026? This episode: The year the era of the three Khans officially began, the casting changes that made the film what it is, the Jatin-Lalit soundtrack that belongs in any conversation about the greatest albums of the 90s, Pehla Nasha shot entirely in slow motion, the Girija Shettar thread that connects this film to our previous episode, and a full debate on who would star in the 2026 reimagining. Because the best part of any movie isn't the movie — it's always the conversation after. New episodes every week. Interval ke baad, the real conversation starts. Follow us: @aftertheintervalpod Email us: aftertheintervalpodcast@gmail.com Produced by The LuminACE Group, LLC

29 de may de 202641 min
episode Geetanjali (1989) — Enni Rojulu Bratukutaaro Teliyadu... artwork

Geetanjali (1989) — Enni Rojulu Bratukutaaro Teliyadu...

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2607994/fan_mail/new] After The Interval (Interval Ke Baad) — Season 1, Episode 5 Remember that feeling? The theater goes dark, that first note of music hits, and for the next three hours, nothing else matters. You asked. We heard you. Today, we come home. 1989. A country cracking open. A new India is emerging. And in the misty hills of Ooty, a director who had never made a Telugu film walked onto a hillside at five in the morning to catch the light just right, and made the most beautiful love story Telugu cinema has ever seen. Bharath and Neelima rewatch Mani Ratnam's Geetanjali — the film that made Nagarjuna, discovered Girija Shettar at a wedding, gave Ilayaraja one of his greatest albums, and permanently changed what Telugu cinema could aspire to be. Why did the film that broke every rule of Telugu cinema in 1989 outlast every film that followed the rules? Why did Nagarjuna wait outside a director's door every morning for a month — and was it worth it? And what does it say about a film when its most iconic line was never in the original script? This episode: The 1989 Telugu cinema landscape and why Geetanjali succeeded where no formula could, the extraordinary stories behind the casting, the Ilayaraja soundtrack that played on every radio before the film even released, a tribute to SPB whose voice is the soul of this film, and a personal revelation about our connection to the man whose words made it all possible — Veturi Sundararamamurthy. This one is for every Telugu person who grew up far from home and still carries this cinema, this music, this language in their bones. Because the best part of any movie isn't the movie — it's always the conversation after. New episodes every week. Interval ke baad, the real conversation starts. Follow us: @aftertheintervalpod Email us: aftertheintervalpodcast@gmail.com Produced by The LuminACE Group, LLC

23 de may de 202657 min
episode Asha Bhosle — Abhi Na Jao Chhod Kar artwork

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2607994/fan_mail/new] After The Interval (Interval Ke Baad) — Special Episode Remember that feeling? The theater goes dark, that first note of music hits, and for the next three hours, nothing else matters. On April 12th, 2026, we lost Asha Bhosle. Ninety-two years old. Eight decades of music. Over twelve thousand songs. A voice that could be a seventeen-year-old in love and a grandmother in grief, sometimes in the same album. Bharath and Neelima pause the rewatch series to do the only thing that felt right — celebrate her. In their own way. With their own lists. Neelima brings ten songs for ten moods. The Asha Bhosle playlist for living, from classical to psychedelic, from a 1958 cabaret to a non-film ghazal recorded across a border with a Pakistani legend. Because there was an Asha song for every single thing any of us ever felt. Bharath brings a dream. A ten-thousand-seat stadium, intimate despite its size, where time collapses, and anyone can share her stage. Kishore Kumar walks out from the wings. Lata Mangeshkar stands beside her sister. R.D. Burman is at the piano. And Asha sings ten songs — chosen not as favorites, but as a concert. With an opening, a journey, peaks and valleys, and a closing that nobody saw coming. And then, she comes back for one more. Because the best part of any movie isn't the movie — it's always the conversation after. Interval ke baad, the real conversation starts. Follow us: @aftertheintervalpod Email us: aftertheintervalpodcast@gmail.com Produced by The LuminACE Group, LLC

9 de may de 202648 min
episode Baazigar (1993) — Kabhi Kabhi Kuch Jeetne Ke Liye Kuch Haarna Padta Hai artwork

Baazigar (1993) — Kabhi Kabhi Kuch Jeetne Ke Liye Kuch Haarna Padta Hai

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2607994/fan_mail/new] After The Interval (Interval Ke Baad) — Season 1, Episode 3 Remember that feeling? The theater goes dark, that first note of music hits, and for the next three hours, nothing else matters. 1993. Bombay (Mumbai) was still healing from the riots and the bombings. A new India was cracking open — cable TV, foreign brands, liberalization. And into that grieving, dreaming country came a film in which the hero kills the heroine within the first hour. Every major star in Bollywood said no.  One man said yes. Bharath and Neelima rewatch Abbas-Mastan's Baazigar — the film that made Shah Rukh Khan, broke every rule in Hindi cinema, and somehow gave us one of the most romantic soundtracks of the decade. We ask the hard questions: Could you root for a murderer? Did SRK choose these roles out of courage — or insecurity? And is 1993 the greatest year in 90s Hindi cinema? This episode: The casting story nobody talks about enough, the two heroines who made the film work, Kumar Sanu's legendary five consecutive Filmfares, the Anu Malik soundtrack that seduced you, the Darr vs Baazigar debate, the Abbas-Mastan story that will make you love them forever, and a tribute to a voice that opened this episode and will never be replaced — Asha Bhosle. Because the best part of any movie isn't the movie — it's always the conversation after.  New episodes every week. Interval ke baad, the real conversation starts. Follow us: @aftertheintervalpod Email us: aftertheintervalpodcast@gmail.com Produced by The LuminACE Group, LLC

3 de may de 202645 min
episode Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron (1983) — Thoda Khaao Thoda Pheko artwork

Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron (1983) — Thoda Khaao Thoda Pheko

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2607994/fan_mail/new] After The Interval (Interval Ke Baad) — Season 1, Episode 2 1983. India just won the Cricket World Cup. A country learning not to expect too much — from its institutions, its politicians, or its cricket team — watched a bunch of underdogs change everything. And that same year, a group of broke, brilliant FTII graduates made a film for six lakh rupees that nobody watched, nobody distributed, and...nobody forgot. Bharath and Neelima rewatch Kundan Shah's brilliant Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron — widely considered the greatest Indian comedy ever made — and ask the hard questions: Is it still funny thirty years later? Is it a comedy or a tragedy? And how did the Indian government accidentally fund the greatest satire ever made about government corruption? This episode: The FTII generation that changed Indian cinema forever, the career arcs of Naseeruddin Shah, Om Puri, Pankaj Kapur and Neena Gupta — the Mahabharata climax that has never been matched, the casting what-ifs, the Seeti Maar moments that still make us pause and rewind, and a tribute to three of the people who made this film great and are no longer with us. Because the best part of any movie isn't the movie — it's always the conversation after. New episodes every week. Interval ke baad, the real conversation starts. Follow us: @aftertheintervalpod Email us: aftertheintervalpodcast@gmail.com Produced by The LuminACE Group, LLC

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