Author: Sutun Nayak

  • Soulmates: A Desert Dream of Love and Connection

    Soulmates: A Desert Dream of Love and Connection

    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 3: Soulmates by Tips Films Ltd. is a soothing, tender romance film which follows the beautiful scenery of Rajasthan. It is based on the story of a modest life of an autorickshaw driver, Hari Om (Vijay Raaz) who turns another French tourist, Isa (Camille Natta). Their lucky meeting transforms into a moving tale of romance, culture and belonging.

    Rating: ★★★½ (3.5/5) Review: Soulmates

    Bharatbalawritten by Sanjay Lafont and Bharatbala, Soulmates is a leisurely immersive experience. It allows the audience to feel the warmth of Rajasthan and the love nature between the two main characters.

    Vijay Raaz does shine through his easy-going charms, wit, and humanity. Camille Natta in the role of Isa is graceful and curious, in her role and Jean-Marie Lamour as Benoit, the conflicted boyfriend of Isa, give credible performances to the film. A.K. Hangal has a small, heart-felt performance to do, and Anupam Shyam has his Anupam Shyam being the friend, and the enemy of Hari Om.

    The film’s music stands out. The degree to which it contains a lovely story is well matched by Halki Halki (written by Shamir Tandon, words by Gulzar) and Sheher Ghumawa (written by Sunny Vik, words by Raj Fatehpur). The cinematography by Angus Hudson treats the Rajasthan poetically accurately capturing every golden dune and every dark horizon as paintings.

    Judgment Soulmates (formerly known as Hari Om) remains a fresh and topical film these many years after its premiere at the festival. It is an emotionally warm movie which is still relaxing and warming to the heart.

  • Maiden Forgings Limited Registered as Approved Supplier to Ordnance Factory Board, Murad Nagar

    Maiden Forgings Limited Registered as Approved Supplier to Ordnance Factory Board, Murad Nagar

    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 1: Maiden Forgings Limited (MFL), one of India’s leading manufacturers of bright steel bars and wires, announced that it has been officially registered as a supplier with the Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) Murad Nagar under the Centralised Vendor Registration process.

    This new registration comes in addition to MFL’s existing registration with OFB Kolkata, marking another strategic milestone in the company’s growing association with India’s defence manufacturing ecosystem. With this development, MFL strengthens its presence within the Business-to-Government (B2G) segment and further expands its participation across India’s defence production network.

    Commenting on this Achievement, Mr Nishant Garg, Managing Director of Maiden Forgings Limited, said, “We are pleased to share that MFL has now been registered as a supplier with the Ordnance Factory Board, Murad Nagar. This milestone further builds on our existing registration with OFB Kolkata and reinforces our commitment to contributing to India’s self-reliance in defence manufacturing.

    The registration with OFB Murad Nagar marks another strategic step in our expansion into the Defence and B2G segment. With our decades of metallurgical expertise, modern facilities, and strong focus on quality, we are well-positioned to serve the growing requirements of the defence sector and continue delivering high-performance products that align with national priorities.”

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  • Sigma Solve Reports 54% YoY Surge In Q2 FY25-26 Net Profit To Rs 193 Lakh

    Sigma Solve Reports 54% YoY Surge In Q2 FY25-26 Net Profit To Rs 193 Lakh

    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 1: Sigma Solve Limited (NSE- SIGMA | INE0A0S01028), a leading AI and digital transformation company, operates across the USA, Australia, and India, delivering innovative IT services and custom enterprise applications that help businesses maximise revenue, has announced its Unaudited financial results for Q2 & H1 FY26.

    Key Financial Highlights

    Q2 FY25-26 Standalone Financial Highlights

    • Total Income of ₹ 1,091.78 Lakhs, YoY growth of 19.35%
    • EBITDA of ₹ 302.70 Lakhs, YoY growth of 53.41%
    • EBITDA Margin (%) of 27.73 %, YoY growth of 616 Bps
    • Net Profit of ₹ 192.84 Lakhs, YoY growth of 53.85%
    • Net Profit Margin (%) of 17.66 %, YoY growth of 396 Bps
    • EPS of ₹ 0.19, YoY growth of 58.33%

    Q2 FY25-26 Consolidated Financial Highlights

    • Total Income of ₹ 2,715.20 Lakhs, YoY growth of 19.08%
    • EBITDA of ₹ 920.67 Lakhs, YoY growth of 29.53%
    • EBITDA Margin (%) of 33.91%, YoY growth of 274 BPS
    • Net Profit of ₹ 665.30 Lakhs, YoY growth of 28.34%
    • Net Profit Margin (%) of 24.50%, YoY growth of 177 BPS
    • EPS of ₹ 0.65, YoY growth of 30.00%

    H1 FY25-26 Standalone Financial Highlights

    • Total Income of ₹ 2,006.54 Lakhs, YoY growth of 23.37%
    • EBITDA of ₹ 500.01 Lakhs, YoY growth of 3.84%
    • EBITDA Margin (%) of 24.92 %, YoY Change of -469 Bps
    • Net Profit of ₹ 318.18 Lakhs, YoY growth of 3.01%
    • Net Profit Margin (%) of 15.86%, YoY change of -313 Bps
    • EPS of ₹ 0.31, YoY growth of 3.33%

    H1 FY25-26 Consolidated Financial Highlights

    • Total Income of ₹ 4,995.34 Lakhs, YoY growth of 45.26%
    • EBITDA of ₹ 1,631.42 Lakhs, YoY growth of 43.67 %
    • EBITDA Margin of 32.66 %, YoY change of -36 BPS
    • Net Profit of ₹ 1,183.69 Lakhs, YoY growth of 47.32%
    • Net Profit (%) of 23.70%, YoY growth of 33 BPS
    • EPS of ₹ 1.15, YoY growth of 47.44%

    Commenting on the performance, Mr. Prerak Parikh and Biren Zaverchand, Co-founder of Sigma Solve Limited, said: “The first half of FY26 has been encouraging, reflecting consistent progress across our key business segments. The demand environment for digital transformation and AI-led solutions continues to expand globally, and we are well-positioned to capture these opportunities through our strong delivery capabilities and growing client relationships.

    We continue to focus on strengthening our global footprint, deepening our technology offerings, and investing in talent and innovation to drive sustainable growth. Our strategy remains centred on scaling our core digital services while accelerating the adoption of new-age technologies that create long-term value for all”

    Key Recent Business Update

    Expansion

    • Sigma Solve opened a new Delivery and Client Engagement Centre in Pune to support its growing customer base.
    • Strengthened regional presence and client reach through the new Pune centre.
    • Enhanced growth and talent capabilities in a key technology hub.

    Equity Share Sub-Division

    • Share Split: Approved sub-division of equity shares.
    • Split Ratio: 1 share of ₹10 to be split into 10 shares of ₹1 each.

    Declared Final Dividend

    • Dividend Amount: ₹0.50 per share.
    • Dividend Rate: 5% on the face value of ₹10 per equity share.

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  • Young Filmmaker Isha Chhabra from the USA Impresses with Her New Music Video Gulistan Chale — Music by A.R. Rahman

    Young Filmmaker Isha Chhabra from the USA Impresses with Her New Music Video Gulistan Chale — Music by A.R. Rahman

    New Delhi [India], November 1: A promising new voice in cinema, Isha Chhabra, a filmmaking student from the United States, has made a striking impression with her latest directorial project — the visually stunning music video Gulistan Chale, directed and featured by Isha Chhabra herself, with music composed, sung, and written by the legendary A.R. Rahman.

    The video, now streaming on Global Glow Films’ YouTube Channel, beautifully captures a blend of emotion, storytelling, and melody — seamlessly weaving together Isha’s refined cinematic sensibility and Rahman’s soulful soundscape. With its expressive visuals and deeply evocative tone, Gulistan Chale is already earning praise for its artistic maturity and emotional depth.

    What makes this project stand out is Isha Chhabra’s ability to convey raw human emotions through visual poetry — a skill she continues to hone while studying filmography in the USA. Despite being a student filmmaker, her direction and on-screen performance reflect remarkable confidence, aesthetic precision, and a strong understanding of rhythm and emotion in visual storytelling.

    Isha

    Speaking about her inspiration, Isha Chhabra shared, “This project was born out of my desire to tell stories through emotion rather than dialogue. Working both behind and in front of the camera was a rewarding challenge. A.R. Rahman’s music gave life to every frame, making this experience unforgettable. I am so thankful to ARR for the guidance and grateful to be a part of such a beautiful song by ARR, produced by Global Glow Films. My journey studying filmmaking in the USA has allowed me to explore storytelling from a global lens.”

    Music maestro A.R. Rahman, who composed, sang, and penned the lyrics for Gulistan Chale, brings his signature emotional depth to the project. His haunting melodies and introspective words infuse the film with soul, elevating it beyond a conventional music video into a moving cinematic experience.

    The collaboration between Isha Chhabra and A.R. Rahman marks the meeting of two creative minds — one bringing fresh cinematic vision, the other timeless musical mastery — unified by emotion and artistry.

    With Gulistan Chale, Isha Chhabra establishes herself as one of the most exciting young filmmaker-actors to watch — blending her international training with heartfelt Indian storytelling. Her work signals a bright future, where new-age creators merge global aesthetics with the emotional essence of Indian cinema.

    The video Gulistan Chale is now live on YouTube (Global Glow Films) and is quickly gaining attention for its emotional resonance and visual artistry — marking a beautiful debut for a filmmaker who’s just getting started.

     Song Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch

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  • PM Modi Hails Major Milestone: Maoist-Hit Districts Drop from 150 to 3

    PM Modi Hails Major Milestone: Maoist-Hit Districts Drop from 150 to 3

    Raipur (Chhattisgarh) [India], November 1: The war against Maoism in India has turned a corner. Prime Minister Narendra Modi says the red flag of rebellion has finally bowed to the national flag – and this time, the results back him up.

    From Red to Saffron-White-Green

    In Raipur’s Atal Nagar, PM Modi didn’t mince words. “Tiranga has replaced the red flag,” he told a roaring crowd during the Chhattisgarh Rajat Mahotsav. The symbolism was deliberate – and sharp. For decades, large parts of central India were held hostage by Maoist control. Today, the Prime Minister claims, that story is ending.

    According to PM Modi, the number of Maoist-dominated districts has fallen from 150 a decade ago to just three – all in Chhattisgarh: Bijapur, Sukma, and Narayanpur. “I guarantee that the day is not far when India and Chhattisgarh will be rid of Maoism,” he said, sounding less like a politician and more like a man closing a long chapter of violence.

    The Numbers Don’t Lie

    The Union Home Ministry’s latest data backs the Prime Minister’s claim. As of October 2025, Left-Wing Extremism (LWE) impacts just 11 districts nationwide, down from 18 earlier this year. Compare that to 126 in 2013, and you start to see the scale of what’s changed.

    This isn’t political spin; it’s quantifiable progress. The government’s multi-pronged counter-insurgency approach – combining security operations, road and power projects, and surrender-and-rehabilitation programs – appears to be working.

    In just the past month, over 200 Naxals surrendered in Bastar and 20 more in Kanker. These aren’t nameless rebels either – several carried bounties worth crores. They’ve now traded jungle warfare for citizenship papers and a fresh start.

    Adivasi Areas Finally See Development

    For the first time in decades, light – literal and symbolic – is reaching remote villages. PM Modi cited Bijapur’s Chikkapali, which got electricity after 70 years, and a school being built in Abujhmarh – a first since Independence.

    That’s not just infrastructure; it’s transformation. In a region long written off as a “red corridor,” new roads, schools, and medical camps are now replacing checkpoints and encounter zones.

    PM Modi’s tone turned emotional when addressing the Adivasi community: “Those who pretended to follow the Constitution and spoke of social justice did injustice to you for political gain.” It was part empathy, part indictment – and fully on brand for a leader positioning himself as the cleaner of a national wound.

    The Cost of Maoism – And the Comeback

    Let’s not sugarcoat it. For years, Maoist violence turned entire districts into no-go zones. Teachers, doctors, engineers – anyone serving the state – were targets. Infrastructure stagnated, and development stopped at the district border.

    That’s the context behind PM Modi’s assertion: “For decades, those who ruled left you to fend for yourself while they sat in AC rooms enjoying life.” It’s political theater, yes – but it also echoes what locals have lived through.

    By contrast, the central government’s post-2014 strategy made it personal. Security forces got better intelligence, coordination between states improved, and crucially, development began moving faster than ideology. When schools, clinics, and mobile towers arrived, propaganda lost its audience.

    India’s Counter-Insurgency Pivot

    Delhi’s playbook shifted from “hunt and neutralize” to “reform and rebuild.” A combination of security pressure, welfare delivery, and surrender policies now defines India’s LWE response. The government’s target: complete Maoist eradication by March 31, 2026.

    It’s ambitious, but not impossible. What’s working in Bastar could become the template for India’s other internal security challenges – from militancy in the northeast to extremism elsewhere.

    Even former sceptics in the security establishment acknowledge the shift. “The reduction from 150 to three affected districts is not luck; it’s persistence,” a senior officer said earlier this month.

    From Fear to Festivals

    PM Modi summed it up neatly: “In Bastar, there is no fear but celebration.” That line captures the psychological turnaround more than any statistic could. When people stop whispering about ambushes and start planning cultural fairs, that’s victory of a different kind.

    Chhattisgarh’s Adivasi heartland, once synonymous with landmines and ambushes, is now on the verge of normalcy. With every surrender and every new road laid, the red flag fades a little more.

    Beyond Chhattisgarh

    India’s Maoist problem was once continental – spanning Jharkhand, Odisha, Bihar, Maharashtra, Telangana, and Andhra Pradesh. Today, the crisis has largely contracted to a handful of southern Chhattisgarh pockets.

    This contraction aligns with India’s broader growth narrative – the shift from conflict zones to emerging markets. When a region once controlled by insurgents begins building schools and solar grids, it’s not just national security; it’s nation-building.

    The Final Stretch

    There’s still work to do. The Maoist ideology won’t vanish overnight. But it’s running out of ground – both literal and ideological. The youth who once joined armed groups now have smartphones and job offers. The state’s message is clear: the gun is out of style; growth is the new revolution.

    As PM Modi put it, “The day is not far when the red flag will be history.” That’s more than rhetoric. It’s the country finally catching up to its own promise.

    Also Read: India’s War on Naxalism: A Decade of Grit and Growth

  • Three Netflix Mind-Snappers You Probably Missed — and Why It’s Their Loss (and Yours)

    Three Netflix Mind-Snappers You Probably Missed — and Why It’s Their Loss (and Yours)

    Three Netflix Films That Deserved Hype — But Got Buried Under Popcorn Flicks

    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 1: Let’s not pretend it’s easy to stand out in the endless scroll of the streaming war. Ever since the golden age of “must-watch every Wednesday” died out, what remains is more like “must-scroll with hope until something actually grabs you.” In that dreary landscape, three films on Netflix quietly slipped under most radars: The Call (2020), God’s Crooked Lines (2022), and It’s What’s Inside (2024). Each one brims with ambition, supplies one hell of a premise—and yet somehow remains underrated. We’ll look at what works, what doesn’t, and why you should maybe stop ignoring them.

    The Call – Time-twist Horror that does more than Jump-Scares

    Netflix

    Neither your usual K-thriller nor your standard time-travel flick, The Call pulls off a neat trick: two women separated by 20 years in the same house get connected through a telephone. One minute you’re in 2019, the next in 1999, and chaos ensues. Viewers on Reddit were both exhilarated and exasperated:

    “A fantastic j-horror with a genre twist… literally my jaw dropped.”

    What shines: The lead performances (especially Jeon Jong‑seo) get high praise for anchoring the thrilling premise. The atmosphere is oppressive in a good way, the throws of fate feel real, and the structural twist gives you something to chew on. Even Tom’s Guide counts it as one of the best psychological thrillers on Netflix.

    Where it falters: The ending. Many reviewers say it unravels a little too messily and leaves more questions than satisfied chills.  Also, pacing at times dips into “setup-heavy” territory—so if you’re impatient, the ride might feel long.

    Why underrated: Because while horror gets attention, horror that also demands thinking often doesn’t. In the flood of quick thrills, The Call asks you to slow down—and many don’t.

    God’s Crooked Lines – A labyrinthine Spanish Thriller that plays with your Mind

    Netflix

    Step into the eerie halls of a psychiatric hospital: a detective with paranoia checks in to investigate a patient’s death—and then things spiral. That’s the hook of God’s Crooked Lines. Reviews call it “captivating” and “you’ll be trying to decipher long after it ends.”

    What works: Intricate plotting, psychological gamesmanship, visual cues that challenge you to question what’s real. As one reviewer puts it: “tiny pointers… make viewers question everything they see.” Bárbara Lennie’s performance is another notch up in the “why you should watch this” column.

    What doesn’t: It’s long (155 minutes), dense, and critics say the payoff doesn’t quite justify the buildup. Also, the dubbing in some versions reportedly weakens the immersion.

    Why underrated: Because ambition is double-edged. A film that asks you to think and invest will always be less binge-friendly than the next loud, easily digestible action flick. In short: not snackable.

    It’s What’s Inside – Party game Horror-sci-fi that got too much ahead of itself

    Netflix

    The newest of the trio, It’s What’s Inside (2024), hit Netflix after being bought at Sundance for $17 million—the biggest sale the festival had seen that year. The premise: a pre-wedding party, a mysterious game introduced by a weird friend, bizarre chaos ensues. Some folks loved the twisted ride. Others found the execution too slick for its own good.

    What works: Original idea, audacious tone-mixing (“Talk to Me” meets “Bodies Bodies Bodies” meets “Agatha Christie”), and enough twists to keep even genre veterans watching.

    What fails: The characterisation is thin. The tone is over-the-top. The atmosphere—which is crucial in horror/sci-fi—was criticised as lacking. The twist? It registers, but maybe doesn’t land with full force.

    Why underrated: Because the loudest films aren’t always the best marketed. And in this case, the hype felt like it outpaced the emotional anchor. So it got overlooked by many, even as some enthusiasts discovered it.

    The broader angle: Why “mind-bender” films on Netflix keep slipping

    • Complexity = risk. Films that demand you to think don’t get auto-algorithm boosts the same way “watch next” slices do.

    • With streaming budgets ballooning, the pressure to deliver mass appeal is immense—so niche or genre-heavy titles often don’t get the push they deserve.

    • Global releases get even less promotion unless they’re dubbed into 10 languages or have huge stars.

    • Lastly, twist films have a shelf-life: once the twist is spoiled, many skip them—and casual viewers assume each twist-heavy film is “the same as the last.”

    More mind-bending Netflix Movies worth digging into

    • Don’t Move (2024) – A survival/psychological thriller with a high-concept twist.

    • Archive 81 – Found footage meets cosmic horror; short-lived but potent.

    • I Am Not Okay With This – Teen angst meets supernatural turn (technically a series, but mind-bender enough).

    • Maniac (2018) – Sci-fi weirdness with Emma Stone and Jonah Hill surfaces on Netflix.

    • The Platform – Spanish sci-fi/horror with a brutal social metaphor (also found on streaming).

    Final word (with PR-speak and a wink)

    In a time when every film is fighting for your two hours, consider giving these three the full attention they deserve. They’re not perfect—they each have bumps, pacing issues, endings that might leave you staring at the ceiling late at night. But they’re alive. They’re different. They’re the ones streaming quietly in the corner, waiting for someone curious enough to press “Play.”

    So yes: let’s recycle the old marketing line—“Discover the unexpected.” Only this time, we mean it.

    Your Move Now:

    Which underrated movie or series on Netflix (or elsewhere!) do you swear by—one that you tell all your friends about, only to be met with blank stares? Drop it in the comments. Maybe together, we’ll resurrect the ones that slipped away.

    PNN Entertainment

  • Glam-o-Ween 2025 at UK International London Beauty School: Celebrates Halloween with Creativity, Colour, and Confidence

    Glam-o-Ween 2025 at UK International London Beauty School: Celebrates Halloween with Creativity, Colour, and Confidence

    New Delhi [India], November 1: On 30th October at UKIBS’s head office in Noida, Glam-o-ween 2025 was conducted. It was a thrilling event of artistry and innovation through the Halloween Makeup. This Halloween Makeup Competition was hosted by the UK International London Beauty School, the best makeup academy, where the spirit of Halloween came alive. The whole academy was full of excitement, with 100+ participants & 500+ audience in complete Halloween mode.

    The Glam-o-Ween competition was conducted to provide students with a real platform and encourage them toward their profession. This event helps them to boost their confidence and creativity through hands-on practice and learning experience.

    Halloween Day – The Magic behind this Festival

    Halloween has a mysterious charm that is celebrated all over the world as a festival of transformation and imagination. This festival dates back to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain over 2000 years ago. Halloween is marked as the transformation season from harvest to winter and symbolises the changes of rebirth.

    Every year, Halloween is celebrated on 31 October. This day is celebrated with horror makeup, trick-or-treating, ghostly type of dress-ups, and fabulous horror setups. At UKIBS, Halloween has the meaning of creativity and a fantasy makeup look. At this festival, students use this as a canvas of experimentation, storytelling via their makeup, and prosthetics.

    Glam-o-Ween Competition at UK International London Beauty School

    In the Glam-o-ween Competition at UKIBS, more than 100 students participated from various courses & academies in one place and showcased their real talent. Each looks displaying students’ passion, innovation, and dedication. The whole academy was full of energy, turning the event into a spooky creative GLAM-O-WEEN filled with fear, horror, scariest moments, laughter and dance.

    This event was judged by the industry experts who have a keen understanding and reputation in the beauty industry, and encouraged each participant with their motivational speech. Eram, Riyanka, Sumalata, Riya, and Julie were announced as the winners of this competition, who rocked the stage via their fabulous SFX horror look.

    Objective of Glam-o-Ween Competition at UK International London Beauty School

    This glam-o-ween competition was not just a makeup competition. This event is all about creativity, imagination, and is conducted with objectives –

    • For providing a real platform to the students with a real crowd of audience.

    • To give hands-on exposure to a professional competition

    • Moving them classroom learning to practical exposure.

    • To promote teamwork among the students

    • To make students ready for the global fashion industry

    • To build a strong portfolio

    • To interact with the industry experts

    Conclusion

    The Glam-o-Ween 2025 was celebrated at the UK International London Beauty School on 30th October, with the aim to encourage students & their creativity. From rampwalk to winner announcement, each moment was full of innovation, confidence, and creativity. Here, the students got the opportunity to transform their hidden talent into a real platform. UK International London Beauty School is not just shaping makeup artists and providing beauty courses, but also shapes the real talent by providing them with hands-on practice under the industry experts.

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  • BKJ Airports CEO Mohit Jajoo Joins Aviation India & South Asia Summit 2025 as Panellist

    BKJ Airports CEO Mohit Jajoo Joins Aviation India & South Asia Summit 2025 as Panellist

    New Delhi [India], November 1: BKJ Airports, one of India’s fastest-growing airport management and ground handling companies, marked a significant presence at the Aviation India and South Asia Summit & Exhibition 2025, held at JW Marriott, New Delhi – Aerocity. The prestigious event brought together prominent leaders and stakeholders from across the aviation ecosystem to deliberate on the future of airport infrastructure, air traffic management, and ground services in India.

    Representing BKJ AirportsMr. Mohit Jajoo, CEO & Executive Director, participated as a distinguished panellist in the Infrastructure Panel Discussion titled “What are the challenges for India to achieve the right airport, ATM, and ground services to support and deliver growth.” Sharing the dais with eminent industry leaders including Shri Vipin Kumar, Chairman, Airports Authority of India, Mr. Videh Kumar Jaipuriar, CEO, Delhi International Airport Ltd., and Mr. Gautam Salaskar, Head – Inflight Services & Ground Operations, Fly91, Mr. Jajoo offered valuable insights on India’s evolving aviation landscape.

    Mr. Mohit Jajoo appreciated the remarkable growth of the Indian aviation industry on the global level, highlighting that the scope for expansion is exceptional owing to the visionary efforts of the Government of India and the Ministry of Civil Aviation. He further commended airport operators such as AAI, GMR, and Adani for their significant contributions in developing world-class infrastructure and preparing the aviation ecosystem for its next phase of growth. Mr. Jajoo also lauded India’s focused approach toward enhancing regional connectivity and the development of new regional airports, which are driving inclusive and sustainable progress across the sector.

    In his address, Mr. Jajoo emphasized the importance of fostering a level playing field for ground handling companies, noting that equitable regulatory frameworks are essential to encourage quality, innovation, and long-term investment in the sector. He commended the Airports Authority of India (AAI) for its proactive approach in promoting sustainability by providing the infrastructure required for electric Ground Support Equipment (GSE), which are vital for achieving carbon-neutral airport operations. Mr. Jajoo also shared a constructive perspective, highlighting that at smaller airports, the presence of three ground handlers may not be necessary, as the available business can be effectively and efficiently managed by the appointed private concessionaire. He added that this approach would not only ensure operational viability but also contribute to the sector’s sustainable and balanced growth in the long run.

    BKJ Airports also showcased its expanding operational footprint and technological innovations through an interactive exhibition stall that drew strong engagement from industry stakeholders. The company reiterated its commitment to safety, efficiency, and environmental stewardship, reflecting its core philosophy of responsible growth.

    With operations currently spanning 14 airports across India, BKJ Airports continues to strengthen its presence with a strategic vision of operating at 50 airports by 2029. The company is also leading the transition towards green aviation support with one of the largest electric ground handling fleets in the country.

    “Our participation at Aviation India 2025 reflects BKJ Airports’ steadfast commitment to building a more efficient, sustainable, and inclusive aviation ecosystem in India,” said Mr. Mohit Jajoo.

    About BKJ Airports
    BKJ Airports, part of JK Jajoo Ventures, is among India’s fastest-growing airport management and ground handling companies. Under the leadership of Chairman Mr. Jai Krishan Jajoo and CEO & Executive Director Mr. Mohit Jajoo, the company is redefining airport operations with a focus on innovation, sustainability, and customer delight. Guided by its core values — Ethics First, Innovation, Nature-Friendly, Spread Happiness, and Be Positive — BKJ Airports remains committed to shaping the future of airport operations in India.

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  • ModishOmbre Expands Retail Presence Across Delhi Metro and Airports

    ModishOmbre Expands Retail Presence Across Delhi Metro and Airports

    New Delhi [India], November 1: ModishOmbre, one of India’s fastest-growing lifestyle and electronics accessory brands, has achieved a major milestone with the successful launch of its premium range of mobile and tech accessories across all Delhi Metro retail stores and major Indian airports.

    This strategic expansion brings ModishOmbre’s innovative products — including fast-charging cables, power banks, neckbands, and premium audio gear — closer to millions of daily commuters and travelers. The rollout has been executed in partnership with some of the country’s most reputed retail chains, ensuring a world-class shopping experience for both metro passengers and airport visitors.

    “With this launch, we aim to make high-quality, design-driven accessories more accessible to our urban and traveling consumers,” said a company spokesperson. “Delhi Metro and India’s airports represent the pulse of modern mobility, and having our products available at every major station and terminal marks a proud moment in our brand journey.”

    The move strengthens ModishOmbre’s retail footprint and aligns with its vision of combining technology, style, and everyday convenience. The company plans to replicate this model across other major metro networks and airports nationwide in the coming months.

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  • Hidden Treasures on Netflix: The Brilliant, the Flawed and the Forgotten

    Hidden Treasures on Netflix: The Brilliant, the Flawed and the Forgotten

    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 1: In the algorithm’s grand kingdom — where shows live and die by thumbnails and 0.8-second attention spans — Netflix is both a benevolent god and an unpredictable executioner. One week, you’re “Top 10 in 42 countries,” the next week, you’re cancelled, forgotten, or buried under another true-crime documentary about a man who befriended his toaster.

    Yet, hidden beneath the Bridgertons and the Squid Games of the world lies a quiet graveyard of brilliance — shows that dared to think differently, feel deeper, and challenge the binge-culture beast. Some flopped because of poor marketing, others because viewers refused to read subtitles or tolerate a slow burn. But every one of them left something behind — a little art, a little ache, and a lot of “what could’ve been.”

    So, here’s to the underdogs. The unsung, the axed, the ignored. The series that deserved your screen time more than that forgettable thriller you abandoned after Episode 3.

    1. Adolescence (2025) — Netflix’s Best-Kept British Secret

    Netflix

    Released with almost zero fanfare — because Netflix apparently spent its marketing budget elsewhere (probably on more dating shows) — Adolescence is a gripping British drama that unfolds in one continuous shot. The story? A 13-year-old boy, an accusation of murder, and a single night that changes everything.

    Director Josh Brolin Jr. (yes, that Brolin family) crafts tension with surgical precision. No explosions, no cheap theatrics — just the uncomfortable silence of real consequences. It’s the kind of show critics adore but algorithms ignore. At $9 million spent on production, it’s not a blockbuster — but it’s pure cinema. One that proves a story doesn’t need CGI dragons to keep your pulse racing.

    2. After Life (2019–2022) — Gervais Laughs in the Face of Grief

    Ricky Gervais’s After Life was never built to trend. It’s raw, funny, mean, and deeply human — a meditation on loss disguised as a dark comedy. Gervais plays Tony, a man who copes with his wife’s death by lashing out at the world. It’s not about healing; it’s about surviving the absurdity of it.

    Yes, some found it cynical. Others found it manipulative. But that’s Gervais’s charm — he never gives you the satisfaction of an easy emotion. What makes After Life underrated isn’t just that it flew under the radar; it’s that it said what most people wouldn’t dare to: that grief doesn’t make you poetic — it just makes you tired.

    3. Mindhunter (2017–2019) — Too Intelligent for the Internet

    Ah, Mindhunter. David Fincher’s immaculate crime thriller that dared to move at the speed of human psychology instead of TikTok clips. Based on the birth of FBI profiling, it’s all dim lighting, long silences, and moral unease. Jonathan Groff’s performance is as clinical as it is chilling.

    Netflix shelved Season 3 because “production costs outweighed viewership.” Translation: it was too smart for mass consumption. But here’s a fact — Mindhunter didn’t need shock value to stay in your head; it was the shock value. It’s one of those rare shows that makes you wonder not “who killed,” but “why we watch.”

    4. Kaos (2024) — Gods, Glamour, and Goldblum

    Netflix

    When Jeff Goldblum was announced as Zeus, expectations shot higher than Mount Olympus. And Kaos mostly delivers — a sharp, modern reinterpretation of Greek mythology where immortals have midlife crises and humans play their own games.

    Visually stunning and wickedly witty, the series cost a cool $45 million — every penny visible in its celestial production design. Yet, critics were divided. Some loved its audacity; others found it too self-aware. Still, if absurdist humour and divine drama are your thing, Kaos is the mythological mess worth believing in.

    5. The Eddy (2020) — When Jazz Found Its Shadow

    Directed by Oscar-winner Damien Chazelle (La La Land), The Eddy is a smoky love letter to Paris, pain, and jazz. It’s not a show you “watch”; it’s one you listen to. Critics praised its authenticity, musicians loved its rhythm — but audiences? They found it “slow.”

    That’s the tragedy of The Eddy: it’s too atmospheric for casual watchers, too real for escapists. Netflix quietly moved on after one season, but cinephiles still replay those frames where light, sound, and heartbreak dance in sync.

    6. Archive 81 (2022) — The Cursed Tapes That Deserved a Sequel

    You know that feeling when you finally find a horror series that’s actually scary — and then Netflix cancels it? Welcome to Archive 81. Mixing found-footage dread with Lovecraftian paranoia, it created a universe both eerie and addictive.

    Critics called it “the best horror show since Haunting of Hill House.” Fans built theories, online communities — and then, boom, gone after one season. Apparently, the scariest monster of all was the cancellation email.

    7. Russian Doll (2019–2022) — Death, Loops, and Lyonne

    Netflix

    Natasha Lyonne doesn’t just star in Russian Doll — she devours it. Imagine Groundhog Day, but laced with trauma, philosophy, and a bottle of whiskey. Season 1 was near-perfect television; Season 2 dared to go deeper, maybe too deep for comfort.

    Still, Lyonne’s writing remains electric. The series isn’t about reliving the same day; it’s about reliving the same mistakes until you finally understand them. It’s Netflix’s existential masterpiece — and like all great art, it’s not for everyone.

    8. Maniac (2018) — Sci-Fi That Refused to Explain Itself

    Starring Emma Stone and Jonah Hill, Maniac was Netflix’s psychedelic experiment — a surreal blend of therapy, memory, and futuristic melancholy. It looked like a painting, sounded like a fever dream, and felt like emotional surgery.

    Critics adored it, audiences didn’t know what to do with it. The production reportedly cost $70 million, and every frame screamed that price tag. But in a world obsessed with clarity, Maniac chose confusion — and that’s its genius.

    9. The OA (2016–2019) — The Cult Classic That Died Too Soon

    The OA isn’t a series; it’s a philosophy. Part sci-fi, part spiritual odyssey, it follows Prairie Johnson — a blind woman who disappears for seven years and returns with sight and secrets.

    Some called it pretentious; others called it transcendent. Netflix called it “cancelled.” Yet, its fanbase remains fierce — performing flash mobs, petitions, and even dance protests. When a show makes people dance for its return, you know it mattered.

    10. Marianne (2019) — France Gave Us Horror, Netflix Gave Us Silence

    Netflix

    Before Netflix flooded our feeds with reality dating chaos, it quietly dropped Marianne — a French horror masterpiece. A writer haunted by her own fictional character — simple premise, terrifying execution.

    Critics loved it. Fans screamed. Netflix shrugged. The result? Another ghost story lost to streaming’s endless shuffle. Irony at its finest: Marianne scared everyone except the executives.

    11. The Chair (2021) — Academia Never Looked This Funny

    Sandra Oh leads this whip-smart satire about university politics and the illusion of progressiveness in academia. Sharp writing, subtle performances, and cultural commentary wrapped in dry wit.

    Its crime? Being “too intelligent” for the average binge. Netflix pulled the plug after one season, proving once again that the only course it truly majors in is “Content Economics 101.”

    12. Glow (2017–2020) — Feminism in a Leotard

    Netflix

    A show about 1980s women wrestlers shouldn’t have worked. But Glow did — gloriously. Alison Brie and Betty Gilpin carried it with power, sass, and unapologetic femininity.

    Then came the pandemic. Production delays. Budget cuts. And Netflix body-slammed it into oblivion. Yet, it remains a cult favourite — because some fights, even lost ones, deserve applause.

    So, Why Are These Shows Underrated?

    Because algorithms reward familiarity, not curiosity. Because the “skip intro” generation often skips nuance, too. Because Netflix, in all its creative chaos, has a marketing attention span shorter than its auto-play timer.

    Yet, these shows matter. They dared to be different in a landscape addicted to formulas. They remind us that streaming isn’t about quantity — it’s about connection. And sometimes, the connection is found in the quiet corners of the catalogue.

    The Takeaway

    If Netflix were a classroom, these shows would be the gifted students sitting at the back — brilliant, misunderstood, occasionally expelled for “low engagement.” But if you care about storytelling, risk, and the beauty of imperfection — these are your binge-watch commandments.

    So, dear reader, your turn now:
    Which underrated Netflix gem do you swear by? The one you tell everyone about, only to be met with blank stares? Drop it in the comments — let’s resurrect what the algorithm forgot.

    PNN Entertainment