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India's men's doubles participation at Aussie Open comes to an end

India's challenge at the men's doubles event of the Australian Open came crashing down in a single day with three pairs featuring Indians suffered first round defeats on Wednesday.

The 15th seeded Indian team of Rohan Bopanna and Divij Sharan, who began their partnership with a bang in Pune, lost 1-6 6-4 5-7 to the unseeded Spanish pair of Pablo Carreno Busta and Guillermo Garcia-Lopez.


It is second straight first round defeat for the new Indian team on the tour after their triumph at the Tata Open Maharsahtra. Last week, they had lost the round of 16 at the Sydney International.

Competing in his 24th Australian Open, veteran Leander Paes and his partner Miguel Angel Reyes-Varela saved a few match points but eventually fell 5-7 6-7(4) to American-Kiwi combo of Austin Krajicek and Artem Sitak.

Also making the first round exit was Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan and his partner Nicholas Monroe, who lost 6-4 6-7(8) 5-7 to Kevin Krawietz and Nikola Mektic after fighting hard for two hours and 20 minutes.

Prajnesh Gunneswaran had also made a first round exit after coming through the Qualifiers while Ramkumar Ramanathan, Ankita Raina and Karman Thandi could not make it to the singles main draw.

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best Jane Austen film adaptations

Jane Austen on screen: 12 adaptations worth seeing

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12 best Jane Austen film adaptations — ranked

Highlights:

  • A clear ranking of twelve major Austen adaptations across cinema and television
  • Balances period accuracy, cultural impact and critical consensus
  • Includes modern re-settings such as Clueless and Bridget Jones’s Diary
  • Notes why some divisive versions remain important
  • Anchored in historical legacy in an Austen anniversary year

It has been two and a half centuries since Jane Austen’s birth, and audiences still argue about what makes a “proper” Austen film. Some want fidelity to Regency manners. Some want a jolt of modern speech. Some want corsets and candlelight; others want Los Angeles malls.

Below is a ranking of the films that actually understand her, from faithful classics to brilliant updates. The order is based on a simple mix: critical respect, lasting impact, and that hard-to-define spark that makes you press play again.

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