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More news →Inspector Dawood Ibrahim (IDI) Teaser Review: Overloaded Masala!
The official teaser of Inspector Dawood Ibrahim aka IDI, will be officially released on YouTube by today (July 1st) evening. But, the teaser has already been released on the official site of Eros Now. The 1.05 minutes long teaser is a power packed one, with overloaded masala elements. The teaser is filled with larger-than-life fight sequences and resembles the teasers of some heavy masala Telugu films. So, we guess that IDI is a real spoof movie which takes a dig on the so-called 'mass' films of Southern industry. Otherwise, it is a purely entertainment oriented film with some exceptional action sequences. The major surprise factor of the teaser is leading lady Shivada Nair's fight sequence. The way certain characters are featured in the teaser is very similar to Lijo Pellissery's gangster spoof film Double Barrel.
‘Tiger Woods’ body was inspected following car crash’
Washington, Jan 2 (ANI): Tiger Woods had to lift his shirt and show off his chest, back and arms to Florida State Troopers during meeting with the cops several days after crashing his SUV. The fascinating detail had never before been revealed, and has now been broken by WESH, NBC station in Orlando, reports RadarOnline. According to the station''s news report, the body inspection took place December 1 when Woods met with the FHP to pay his 164-dollar careless driving ticket. Previous reports said that Woods'' only visible injury on the fateful day was a "fat lip”. But a FPL spokeswoman has said that the new report has revealed that cops took a much closer look and has explained why they also said that the golfer had "no other injuries and no reason to believe he was the victim of domestic violence." It is believed that the ace golfer and wife Elin Nordegren had a huge fight Thanksgiving night before he stormed out of the house. Since then a parade of women have come forward with stories of affairs with Tiger. Woods has not been seen since the November 27 incident. (ANI)
300 Rly staff killed by trains every year, most of them while inspecting tracks
A railway employee dies in the line of duty on four days out of five, making his job statistically far more dangerous than that of security forces in some of India's most violent combat zones. An average 300 railwaymen have been killed in accidents every year over the past 4-5 years, S K Jain, Member (Engineering) of the Railway Board, told The Indian Express. Most of them were run over by trains as they patrolled the tracks to ensure there were no fractures in the rails, a major reason for derailments. While the railwaymen work at all times, in the scorching sun or pouring rain, the number of deaths has spiked at night and in winter, when they use flashlights to look for cracks. A total 285 railwaymen were killed in accidents in 2012, nearly eight times the number of personnel (37) that the CRPF lost fighting leftwing extremism. In addition, 800 railwaymen were injured while physically monitoring 1 lakh kilometres of tracks in the country. "Until a few years ago, over 400 people were being killed on average every year. We have been able to bring the number down, but it is still unacceptably high. A technological solution is needed," Jain said. The Railways has now reached out for a track-inspection technique patented by the South African Navy, which it hopes will help it do away with the century-old system of physically walking down the tracks. The technology, called Railsonic, involves the release of an ultrasonic wave along the rails every 10 minutes, the receipt of which by a receiver at the other end confirms the absence of fractures. The technology will be tried out on a 25-km stretch of the Konkan Railway. It will cost Rs 5 lakh per kilometre, and can be deployed fairly soon, officials said.