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Nepali Movie – Kollywood 



Nepali Movie – Kollywood
Starring – Aryan SigdelPriyanka Karki, Payal Thapa, Bishnu Karki, Shishir Rana, Subrat Acharya, Malina Joshi etc.
Director – Navaraj Acharya

‘Kollywood’ is a Nepali movie by Group One Creation. The movie is about the insider’s story of Nepali movie industry.Initially Namrata Shrestha was supposed to be featured in ‘Kollywood’ and Namrata was also present in the inauguration. But, later Payal Thapa was featured instead. The movie based on the struggle of Nepali movie artists also features Miss Nepal 2011 Malina Joshi as an item girl.The movie was more focused in foreign market than the Nepali market. It started with the director Navaraj Acharya acquiring the release rights of the movie in the USA. The movie was premiered in Doha before it was released in Nepal. At the time the audio of the movie was also released. The film team organized another event at the end of 2012 in Nepal to release the audio again.  The red carpet premier of the movie was held in Qatar.



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Introduction to our Group and Nepal

                             My Nepal


It is a simple group of Nepal. We are tried to give you different information of Nepal and breaking news too. There are different folder to put other more information and other entertainment. We are try to share more information of Nepal and look the problem and try to solve that type of problem. If we all are going to help the poor and disable people of our country we are also goanna be great to other in world. For more information please search this  My Nepal  and Children star Group.
Nepal officially the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, is a landlocked sovereign state located in south Asia. With an area of 147,181 square kilometers (56,827 sq. mi) and a population of approximately 27 million (and 2 million absentee workers living abroad), Nepal is the world's 93rd largest country by land mass and the 41st most populous country. It is located in the Himalayas and bordered to the north by the People’s Republic of china and to the south, east, and west by the Republic of India. Specifically, the Indian states of Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, and Sikkim border Nepal, while across the Himalayas lies the Tibetan Autonomous Region.
Kathmandu is the nation's capital and the country's largest metropolis. Kathmandu Valley itself has estimated population of 5 million.
Nepal has a rich geography. The mountainous north has eight of the world's ten tallest mountains, including the highest point on Earth, Mount Everest, called Sagarmatha in Nepali. It contains more than 240 peaks over 20,000 ft (6,096 m) above sea level. The fertile and humid south is heavily urbanized.
Hinduism is practised by about 81% of Nepalese - making it the country with the highest percentage of Hindu followers. Buddhism, though a minority faith in the country, is linked historically with Nepal.
A monarchy throughout most of its history, Nepal was ruled by the Shah dynasty of kings from 1768, when Prithvi Narayan Shah unified its many small kingdoms. However, a decade-long Civil War by the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) and several weeks of mass protests by all major political parties led to the 12 point agreement of November 22, 2005. The ensuing elections for the constituent assembly on May 28, 2008 overwhelmingly favored the abdication of the Nepali monarch Ganendra Shah and the establishment of a federal multiparty representative democratic republic
.
Mountain Adventures
 Nepal is very rich in water and other natural resources. Ever since Nepal first opened its borders to outsiders in the 1950s, this tiny mountain nation has had an irresistible mystical allure for travelers. Today, legions of trekkers are drawn to the Himalaya’s most iconic and accessible hiking, some of the world’s best, with rugged trails to Everest, the Annapurna’s and beyond. Nowhere else can you trek for days or even weeks in incredible mountain scenery, secure in the knowledge that a hot meal, cozy lodge and warm slice of apple pie await you at the end of the day? Nepal is nirvana for mountain lovers. Other travelers are drawn here by the adrenaline rush of rafting down a roaring Nepali river or bungee jumping into a bottomless Himalayan gorge. Cannoning, climbing, kayaking, paragliding and mountain biking all o
er a rush against the backdrop of some of the world’s most dramatic landscapes.
Temples & Tigers
Other travelers prefer to see Nepal at a more gentle pace, admiring the peaks over a gin and tonic from a Himalayan viewpoint, strolling through the temple-lined medieval city squares of Kathmandu, Patan and Bhaktapur, and joining Buddhist pilgrims on a spiritual stroll around the centuries-old stupas and temples that lie scattered across the Kathmandu Valley.
Further south lie Nepal’s wild and woolly national parks, where nature bus scan the treetops for exotic bird species and comb the jungles for rhinos and tigers from the backs of lumbering Indian elephants. Whether you cross the country by mountain bike, motorbike, raft or tourist bus, Nepal oers an astonishingly diverse array of attractions and landscapes


With its ancient culture and the Himalayas as a backdrop, landlocked Nepal has a romantic image.
It is nonetheless one of the world's poorest countries, and is struggling to overcome the legacy of a 10-year Maoist insurrection.
Until Nepal became a republic in May 2008, it had been ruled by monarchs or a ruling family for most of its modern history in relative isolation.
A brief experiment with multi-party politics in 1959 ended with King Mahendra suspending parliament and taking sole charge in 1962.
Democracy's return
Democratic politics was introduced in 1991 after popular protests, but was marked by frequent changes of government. The last king of Nepal, Gyanendra, twice assumed executive powers - in 2002 and 2005.
Maoist rebels waged a decade-                                                                                   long campaign against the monarchy, leaving more than 12,000 people dead                                                                        and 100,000 people displaced according to UN figures.
When King Gyanendra's direct rule ended under public pressure in April 2006, the rebels entered talks with the parliamentary government on how to end the civil war.
A peace deal was agreed in November, although the Maoists continued to press for abolition of the monarchy.
Parliament agreed to the condition in December 2007, and the Maoists emerged as the largest parliamentary party after elections in April 2008.
The monarchy was abolished a month later, and a Maoist-dominated government took office in August.
The Maoist-led coalition government disintegrated in May 2009, and was succeeded by another coalition excluding the Maoists.
Nepal has been at odds with neighbouring Bhutan over the repatriation of thousands of Bhutanese refugees of Nepalese descent who fled violence in Bhutan in the early 1990s.
Nepal has a flourishing tourism industry, but faces problems of deforestation and encroachment on animal habitats.
Most of the population depend on agriculture, and the UN estimates that about 40% of Nepalis live in poverty.
Foreign aid is vital to the economy, and Nepal is also heavily dependent on trade with neighbouring India.


 Love it or hate it, daring Nepali film makes waves
KATHMANDU, July 26: As the curtain comes down on the most divisive and talked-about film in Nepali cinema history, half the audience stands to applaud while the rest slump bemused in their seats.

The split reaction has been common among packed theaters watching "Highway", a sweeping social commentary hailed by many as a new benchmark for the domestic film industry but dismissed by others as complicated and boring. 

"This is a terrible film. There are too many confusing strands and no action. It makes no sense," Prashant Thapa, 27, told AFP during the interval of a showing this week in a Kathmandu multiplex.

Fellow cinema-goer Ujjwal Acharya, 32, disagreed, saying "it´s a brilliant movie... really creative".

Since Highway -- co-produced by "Lethal Weapon" star Danny Glover -- opened to packed houses across Nepal it has polarised audiences, prompting more than 10,000 tweets, provoking contempt in some corners and adulation in others.


Image provided by Aadi Productions shows a scene from the new Nepali film "Highway", co-produced by US actor Danny Glover. (AFP)

"Seventy percent of people are saying it´s the worst movie they ever watched," its first-time director Deepak Rauniyar, 33, cheerfully told AFP as viewers filed out of one cinema.

"People are talking about it a lot and they are angry. If you look on the Facebook page there are two separate groups -- one who say they really love it and the other who really don´t. There are none in the middle."

Set amid the breathtaking landscapes of eastern Nepal, Highway follows the journey of nine passengers stranded on an ill-fated bus to Kathmandu trying to get through three illegal road blockades, known locally as "bandhas".

Its jumpy storytelling style makes it unique in Nepali cinema, which normally follows the familiar Bollywood narratives that are often copied scene for scene in Nepali movies.

With a third of its measly $100,000 budget funded by public donations raised via the Internet, almost everything about the making of the film bucked the prevalent movie trends in Nepal.

The country´s fledgling film industry peaked in 2000 with "Himalaya", an acclaimed story of salt traders, but directors have since been unwilling to get away from the tried-and-tested formula of romantic plots with song-and-dance numbers.

"I wanted to break the stereotypical thinking about Nepal -- everyone seeing it as just a mountain country where it snows -- and I also wanted to show the life can be no more different than in London or New York," Rauniyar said.

"We can make films on a low budget and have an industry that is recognised around the world. We should start making horror films, really commercial films, art-house cinema and start telling our stories."

The film´s dialogue, improvised by a relatively unknown cast, was inspired by a bus journey in 2009 in which Rauniyar was stranded by blockades as he tried to make it to Kathmandu.

A former teacher, Rauniyar also used to work on a national newspaper in Kathmandu and says he would often argue with movie directors who complained about unfavourable reviews for their "bad copies of Hindi films".

"A lot of our cinemas were getting stuff frame for frame from Indian cinema. We opposed this and argued against it," he told AFP.

"I always said we could make films that were world-class. I said we should go beyond Bollywood and think about our way of telling a story."

Rauniyar said Glover had backed the film through his New York company Louverture Films, which promotes movies which have a social purpose, and that the star was also involved in the editing.

"He wanted to come to the Nepal premiere but he couldn´t make it so he sent a video message to everyone," Rauniyar said.

"Highway" got off to a promising start ahead of its July 20 release in Nepal, becoming the first Nepali film to qualify for the Berlin International Film Festival´s Panorama category for new directors.

But Rauniyar believes he knows why "Highway" is not loved by all his audiences.

"You have to think, you need to work, and you need to pay attention. They hated that," he said.

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