I'm thrilled to offer 35mm film as an add-on to my wedding packages. All packages include your choice of black and white or color, original negatives and digitized copies. I also include prints of every image so one day you can sit down on an afternoon with someone you want to know your story.
Kirkland and Peter hosted family and friends at the beautiful Beltane Ranch in Sonoma County for both their welcome dinner and their wedding day. I had the great pleasure of being there for both events.
How it works... When you add-on 35mm film to your wedding package you get complete digital coverage as well as scattered moments throughout the day on film. The goal is to use film to enhance the storytelling of your digital files. I am supplementing film throughout the day and every moment is fair game. I love getting out the retro flash and am constantly developing and expanding how I utilize this tool during a wedding.
As far as film type, my go to is Portra 400 or 160 as it seems to pair with my digital photography the best. I find also find the tones to be the nicest. The film type is really up to you though. Color, black and white, or I can help pick a fun one like Extar or some of the tinted hues based on your day and details.
The film is also known for its super hit songs, especially "Nisha, Nisha, Nisha". The other songs "Sheeshe Ke Gharon Mein" and "Kitne Bhi Tu Kar Le Sitam" were also hits.R. D. Burman won his first Filmfare Best Music Director Award for Sanam Teri Kasam.[5]
Sunil Sharma (Kamal Haasan) aka Sunny is a playful young lad who lives with his mother. He is unemployed and uses his leisure time singing in many colleges in Bombay (now Mumbai). His father Rammlal went missing twenty years ago after he fatally injured a man by accident. Rammlal has now changed his identity to 'Manoharlal'. He is a successful millionaire in Shimla and takes care of his friend's daughter Nisha (Reena Roy).
Sunny's friend comes to Bombay to visit him, but is ragged by Nisha's girl gang due to a misunderstanding. To take 'revenge' for his friend's humiliation, Sunny pranks the girls by pretending to be a tour guide and promises to show them around Bombay. Instead, he lands them in a tricky situation and runs away. Nisha and her friends realise that Sunny is not a tour guide and that he has pranked them. In a fit of rage, the girls vandalise Sunny's friend's car.
Sunny gets a job opportunity from Shimla. With his mother's blessings, he leaves to Shimla. On the way, he stops at a hotel where Nisha and her friends are staying. The hotel keeper tricks people by giving the same room to two different people and collects the money from both parties. In this manner, Sunny accidentally enters Nisha's room. She thinks that he is stalking her and screams, thereby alerting everyone. The hotel manager apologizes to them, but Nisha develops a hatred toward Sunny.
After such hilarious encounters, Sunny finally reaches Shimla. Turns out that the job vacancy is at Manoharlal's home! Sunny requests Nisha not to complain about their previous fights, as it would cost him his job. Nisha is amused by his sudden change in behaviour and agrees to keep it a secret. Eventually, Sunny and Nisha fall in love with each other.
A criminal named Wilson gets to know that Manoharlal is alive and has become a millionaire in Shimla, and wants to seize his wealth. He hatches a plan and makes his son Robinson pretend to be Sunil Sharma and brings him to Manoharlal. Thinking that Robinson is his real son, Manoharlal is very happy and wants him to marry Nisha. One day, Robinson sees Sunny and Nisha embracing and immediately reports it to Manoharlal.
Manoharlal thinks that Sunny is pretending to love Nisha just for her wealth. He quickly gets Nisha engaged to Robinson, who is still posing to be Sunil Sharma. Sunny's mother writes him a letter, through which Wilson and Robinson realise that Sunny is the real Sunil Sharma. In the meantime, Robinson's girlfriend Reeta comes and asks him to marry her as her brother is very hostile to their relationship. Robinson uses this opportunity to get rid of Sunny completely.
He tells Sunny that Reeta is claiming to be his girlfriend. Sunny is shocked and denies any relationship with Reeta! Robinson tells him to go to Reeta's home to talk and clear the misunderstanding. Sunny agrees and goes to Reeta's home, only to find her lying dead in her wedding dress. Robinson quickly calls the police and makes it seem like Sunny has killed Reeta!
Nisha hears about this, but still trusts that Sunny would never do such a thing. She deciphers that something strange is going on. But despite her pleas, Manoharlal arranges her wedding with Robinson, still believing that he is his son Sunil. When Sunny's mother comes, Wilson's gang blackmail her and threaten to take Sunny's life if she exposed their evil plan.
Sunny's mother meets Nisha and tells her the truth about the situation, but begs her to do something because it involves the life of her estranged husband Manoharlal and son Sunny. Fearing for Sunny's life, Nisha reluctantly agrees to marry Robinson. During the wedding, Sunny arrives and stops the wedding from happening. Manoharlal thinks he is lying and hits him very badly, but Sunny's mother remains silent because she is threatened by the villains that they will kill Sunny if she tells the truth.
At the right time, the police inspector arrives with Reeta, who is alive and well. Turns out that Reeta didn't die that day, but was unconscious. She testifies against Robinson and his father Wilson and exposes their plan. Finding a way to escape, Wilson holds the gun to Sunny's mother and threatens to shoot her if anyone moves. Using her as a hostage, they escape and demand 2 million as ransom. With the help of a few friends and the police, Sunny and Nisha find their hideout and they nab the crooks.
Kamal Haasan, besides acting as the male lead, also choreographed one dance sequence in the film: "Yadhuvamsa Sudhambudhi Chandra".[6][7] While filming a sequence at Juhu Beach, Reena Roy introduced Kamal Haasan to Sarika, who later went on to marry him.[8]
The film was released on 14 May 1982. It was a box office success and had a theatrical run of 175 days.[9] The film was later dubbed and released in Tamil-language as Paadagan during the early 1990s.[10][11]
Hatcher was born on December 8, 1964, in Palo Alto, California, the only child of Esther Beshur, a computer programmer who worked for Lockheed Martin and Owen Walker Hatcher, Jr., a nuclear physicist and electrical engineer.[1][2] Her father is of Welsh ancestry, while her mother is of French, German and Syrian ancestry.[3]
In March 2006, she alleged that she was sexually abused from the age of five by Richard Hayes Stone, an uncle by marriage who was later divorced by Hatcher's aunt. She said her parents were unaware of the abuse.[4] In 2002, she assisted Santa Clara County prosecutors with their indictment of Stone for a more recent sexual offense that led his female victim to commit suicide at 14.[1][4] Stone pleaded guilty to four counts of child sexual abuse and was sentenced to 14 years in prison.[5] Hatcher said she told the prosecutors about her own abuse because she was haunted by thoughts of the 14-year-old girl who shot herself, and feared Stone might escape conviction. Stone died of colon cancer on August 19, 2008, after serving six years of his sentence.[6]
Hatcher studied acting at the American Conservatory Theater.[7] One of her early jobs (in 1984) was as an NFL cheerleader with the San Francisco 49ers.[1][2] From September 1985 to May 1986 she joined the cast of the TV series The Love Boat as Amy, one of the Mermaid showgirls. It mainly involved dancing and singing as part of the Mermaids show routine, but she had short comedic lines in some episodes, and in one episode was part of one of three storylines opposite a male guest star.[citation needed] From 1986 to 1989, she appeared in six episodes of the TV series MacGyver as talkative but naive Penny Parker opposite Richard Dean Anderson's eponymous hero.[7]
In 1987, she played the sensible, intelligent 18-year-old daughter of Patty Duke's lead character in the short-lived Fox comedy Karen's Song, and had a guest-star role in an episode of Night Court. In 1988, she made a short guest appearance in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode The Outrageous Okona as Lt. Robinson. In 1989, she guest-starred in an episode of Quantum Leap, "Star Crossed", as the main character's mathematician/scientist future wife; and guest-starred as a nude beauty pageant winner in an episode of L.A. Law. That year she also made her motion picture debut with a minor role as a young opportunistic actress in The Big Picture, starring Kevin Bacon. She then played Sylvester Stallone's younger sister, a dancer, in the big-budget police action-comedy Tango and Cash, also starring Kurt Russell; it was a critical and box office disappointment.
After a short guest appearance in an episode of Murphy Brown in 1990, Hatcher's next TV series role, in 1991, was in the Norman Lear creation Sunday Dinner, a comedy. She co-starred as 30-year-old lawyer in a mostly physical relationship with a widowed businessman twice her age, played by Robert Loggia. The series had a brief run on CBS that summer but was not renewed. She also acted in the television crime movie Dead in the Water (1991) in which she plays Bryan Brown's lawyer's young, attractive temptress secretary, and in the low-budget erotic thriller The Cool Surface (not released until 1994), wherein she plays a young actress who has an ill-fated romance with an enigmatic, unsettled screenwriter. In late 1991 Hatcher was featured as Michael Bolton's love interest in the music video for Bolton's hit song "Missing You Now". In 1992, Hatcher tried out for the role of Jamie Buchman on Mad About You and made it to the final two choices, but lost the part to Helen Hunt.[8]
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