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Sidharth Shukla to join Rashami Desai on the cast of Naagin 4?

Produced by leading content czarina Ekta Kapoor under the banner of Balaji Telefilms, Naagin is one of the most successful supernatural series that Indian television has produced in the past few years. Currently in its fourth season, Naagin has got everything that it takes to take audiences to a fantasy world where anything can happen.

Just like the previous three seasons of the series, Naagin 4 also started with a bang and has been performing consistently on TRP charts ever since its beginning. While the show started with Nia Sharma, Jasmin Bhasin and Sayantani Ghosh playing the female leads, several other actors joined the cast later as the storyline progressed. A couple of weeks ago, Bigg Boss 13 fame Rashami Desai also entered the show to play a pivotal part.


The latest we hear that another Bigg Boss 13 participant is set to be a part of Naagin 4. Yes, you heard it right! According to the latest media reports, Bigg Boss 13 winner Siddharth Shukla will soon join his ex-flame Rashami Desai on Colors’ superhit weekend show Naagin 4.

However, when Desai was asked if the rumours of Shukla entering the show are correct, she told a popular publication, “Really? I am also hearing this from you guys. I have no clue about it.”

The report goes on to add that Siddharth Shukla has already signed the show on the dotted line. He will start shooting once the Coronavirus lockdown ends and shootings for all films, television shows and web-shows resume.

If the report is to be believed, Shukla and Desai will be seen romancing each other on Naagin 4. Before Bigg Boss 13, the two actors were seen together on Colors’ Dil Se Dil Tak (2017-18), produced by Shashi Sumeet Productions.

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Two Sinners marks Samir Zaidi’s striking directorial debut

Samir Zaidi, director of 'Two Sinners', emerges as a powerful new voice in Indian film

Indian cinema has a long tradition of discovering new storytellers in unexpected places, and one recent voice that has attracted quiet, steady attention is Samir Zaidi. His debut short film Two Sinners has been travelling across international festivals, earning strong praise for its emotional depth and moral complexity. But what makes Zaidi’s trajectory especially compelling is how organically it has unfolded — grounded not in film school training, but in lived observation, patient apprenticeships and a deep belief in the poetry of everyday life.

Zaidi’s relationship with creativity began well before he ever stepped onto a set. “As a child, I was fascinated by small, fleeting things — the way people spoke, the silences between arguments, the patterns of light on the walls,” he reflects. He didn’t yet have the vocabulary for what he was absorbing, but the instinct was already in place. At 13, he turned to poetry, sensing that the act of shaping emotions into words offered a kind of clarity he couldn’t find elsewhere. “I realised creativity wasn’t something external I had to chase; it was a way of processing the world,” he says. “Whether it was writing or filmmaking, it came from the same impulse: to make sense of what I didn’t fully understand.”

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