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After Aayush and Zaheer, Salman plans to launch his bodyguard’s son Tiger

Megastar Salman Khan is a Bollywood royalty who has made many people’s lives ever since attaining superstardom in showbiz! If he says something, he ensures he sticks to his words no matter what.

We hear that when the son of his bodyguard Shera, who is always with the superstar like his shadow, was born, Khan had said he would make him a hero one day. The child has grown up to become a handsome man called Tiger, and Salman, to fulfil his promise, is planning a grand launch for him.


Yes, according to reports, the superstar will launch Shera’s son Tiger under his home banner, Salman Khan Films. However, it will take some time before the project is announced officially.

Khan will first launch his brother-in-law Aayush Sharma with romcom Loveratri. The shooting of the movie is over and currently, it is in the post-production stage. After Loveratri, his production house will bankroll a project for another debutant Zaheer Iqbal, who is Khan’s friend’s son. The project with Tiger will take off thereafter.

“Salman will ensure Tiger’s debut is as promising as Aayush’s. Shera can give his life for Salman. This is the least Salman can do for him,” one of Salman’s close friends has been quoted as saying.

Tiger has assisted filmmaker Ali Abbas Zafar on Tiger Zinda Hai, which starred Salman Khan in the lead role.

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Yash says Ravana in Ramayana must connect with Western viewers as film eyes global audience

Highlights

  • Yash says he humanised Ravana to help global audiences relate to the character.
  • Asura designs in the first glimpse drew criticism for looking too Western-inspired.
  • Producer Namit Malhotra compares the film's tone to Lord of the Rings and Gladiator.
Yash, who plays the demon king Ravana in Nitesh Tiwari's Ramayana, says his portrayal was shaped by one clear goal: making the character relatable beyond Indian audiences.
Speaking at CinemaCon in Las Vegas this week, where the film was presented alongside major Hollywood releases, the actor said he worked to strip away the purely mythological reading of the role.

"I have tried to internalise the whole essence of Ravana and tried to make him as human as possible at times," Yash told Reuters.

"It is important for people to relate to him, and since we have global ambitions, we need to make it familiar to a Western audience as well."

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