- Colour Range
Be inspired by Infinity Collections
All Collections - Large Slabs
- Professionals
- About us
Experience Infinity products firsthand
SHOWROOM - Sustainability
- Resources
Plaster reinterprets the materiality of hand-worked plaster, transforming it into a design that blends craftsmanship and innovation.
Formats
160x320 cm (63”x127”)
162x324 cm (63¾”x 127½”)
Infamous for two reasons: a lead actor (Kamaal R. Khan) who famously cannot act, and a poster that features a gun pointed at the Indian flag. The film tries to tackle “North vs. South” and “outsider” politics but devolves into screaming, illogical fight scenes, and a scene where the hero’s glasses act as a lie detector. It’s aggressively incompetent, yet strangely prescient about the politics of xenophobia in Indian cities.
Infamy can also be a byproduct of political timing. Gulzar’s Aandhi was rumored to be based on the life of then-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Although the filmmakers denied the connection, the physical resemblance of the lead actress, Suchitra Sen, to Gandhi was undeniable. infamous hindi movies
No list is complete without the cult emperor, Gunda . Directed by Kanti Shah, this film is the Citizen Kane of so-bad-it's-good cinema. Featuring Mithun Chakraborty as the impossibly named "Shankar" (who fights with a coconut), it gave us characters like "Bullu the Donkey" (a man who literally brays), "Chutiya," and "Pote." The dialogue delivery is robotic, the violence is slapstick, and the plot is nonexistent. Gunda isn't watched; it is endured as a rite of passage for bad movie connoisseurs. Infamous for two reasons: a lead actor (Kamaal R
Here’s a proper look at three tiers of Hindi cinema infamy. Gulzar’s Aandhi was rumored to be based on
Mira Nair's "Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love" was a historical epic that explored the themes of love, desire, and relationships. However, its sensual content and explicit scenes led to a ban in India, making it one of the most infamous Hindi movies of all time. The film's artistic merit and cultural significance have been widely acknowledged, but its explicit content remains a point of contention.
While it made money (due to the SRK-Kajol pairing), Dilwale is infamous for being a landmark in "betrayal cinema." Fans felt cheated. After waiting 5 years for a SRK-Kajol reunion, they got a CGI-heavy, logic-free, gangster-turned-mechanic mess where a car flies through a moving helicopter. It holds a 4% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and is used as a textbook example of style over substance.
– KRK’s magnum opus. Aggressively dumb but weirdly memorable. The lie-detector glasses scene alone is legendary.