English Entertainment
Zee Café premiers Japanese anime Guin Saga
Mumbai: Zee Café has announced the premiere of anime Guin Saga on their channel. Just like the previous presentations, this show will also be available in Hindi along with English from Friday 24 February 2022 at 2 pm. Zee Café introduced Anime in its programming. The shows like Marvel Anime: Blade and Marvel Anime: Ironman and Marvel Anime: Wolverine and Kurozuko entertained the viewers to the fullest, making them crave more.
The anime fever in the country is on an ascent and there seems no nearby end to it. The characters, the unique art style and the engaging storylines tend to bind the audience and transport them to an all-new land depicted in the shows.
The series is based in mystical times when the Kingdom of Mongaul conquered the kingdom of Parro. The only people who survive and escape the destruction of the palace are princess Rinda and prince Remus. While on their hideout in the jungle, they meet and befriend an amnesiac warrior with the body of a man and the head of a leopard.
English Entertainment
Ellison takes his Paramount-Warner Bros case straight to theater owners
The Skydance chief goes to CinemaCon with promises and a skeptical crowd waiting
CALIFORNIA: David Ellison strode into a room packed with thousands of cinema owners and executives at CinemaCon in Las Vegas on Thursday and did something rather bold: he looked them in the eye and asked them to trust him.
The chief executive of Paramount Skydance vowed that his company would release a minimum of 30 films a year if regulators greenlight its proposed $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery, a deal that has made theater owners deeply, and loudly, nervous.
“I wanted to look every single one of you in the eye and give you my word,” Ellison told the crowd. “Once we combine with Warner Bros, we are going to make a minimum of 30 films annually across both studios.”
It was a confident pitch. Whether it landed is another matter. Cinema operators have already called on regulators to block the deal, and scepticism in the room was hardly concealed.
Ellison pushed back by pointing to recent form. Paramount, born from the merger of Paramount Global and Skydance Media last August, plans to release 15 films this year, nearly double the eight it put out in 2025. Progress, he argued, was already underway.
He also threw theater owners a bone they have long been chasing: all films, he pledged, would run exclusively in cinemas for a minimum of 45 days, drawing applause from a crowd that has spent years fighting for exactly that commitment across the industry.
“People can speculate all they want,” Ellison said, “but I am standing here today telling you personally that you can count on our complete commitment. And we’ll show you we mean it.”
Fine words. The regulators, however, will have the last one.








