On-device intelligence disrupts cloud monopoly narrative, prioritising ownership over scale in maturing AI ecosystem.
Author: Naquiyah Maimoon
This theatrical compilation reopens old wounds for fans, blending nostalgia with emotional depth as anime booms in India. Risks and rewards of the release explored.
Film prioritizes thematic ambition over mass appeal in competitive market.
Film survives quietly against spectacle competition with emotional believability and budget discipline.
2025 horror escalates with mood over gore: Man Finds Tape, Ugly Stepsister, Dream Eater among divisive standouts.
Christmas movies normalize unrealistic joy, mandatory forgiveness, and seasonal healing while quietly interrogating loneliness and capitalism beneath the tinsel.
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], December 25: Not every Christmas release arrives with tinsel and nostalgia. Some come carrying ambition, industry anxiety, and the quiet pressure of representation. Mission Santa: Yoyo To The Rescue is one such film — an Indian animated feature that doesn’t just want to entertain children for 90 minutes, but wants to make a point: Indian animation deserves a theatrical seat at the global holiday table. Let’s start with the obvious irony. Christmas, traditionally dominated by Hollywood animation juggernauts, is now hosting an Indian animated Santa who doesn’t look apologetic about existing. Mission Santa arrives with a nationwide…
Telugu film Champion explores ambition costs and failure pressures via restrained performances and realistic sports sequences.
Vande Bharat Via USA blends nostalgia and nuance in a US-set Gujarati drama, targeting overseas Gujarati viewers amid evolving regional cinema trends.
Avatar: Fire And Ash earns $450-470M worldwide by day 7, with premium formats driving revenue despite familiar narrative and regional competition in India.

