Hindi Movies

Latest Hindi Movies Are Setting Records

From Northern India, Hindi movies, in the larger-than-life tradition of Bollywood Hindi movies, are popular internationally for their spectacle, color, and extraordinary budgets. It is difficult to find Hindi movies online, but it can be done with some research. To download Hindi movies, one must first know some information about old Hindi movies, as well as the latest Hindi movies, about their content, and form. Hindi movies songs and soundtracks can also be downloaded, with a bit of research as well.


The spectacular, sentimental, and fast paced cinematic traditions of Mumbai along with such states as Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Karnataka, Kerala, Punjab, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal all are featured prominently in Hindi film culture today. While, the more serious and naturalistic cinematic cultures of Malayalam cinema, Tamil cinema and others are not featured in the traditional “Hindi” sense.

India is the largest producer of films in the world, completing almost a thousand films every year. About half of revenue of the Indian film industry is generated by films produced in the Hindi language, 30% is in Tamil, and the rest in other dialects from around the Indian subcontinent. The business is very profitable to oversees distributing companies, such as Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox, because they cater to those of traditional Hindi backgrounds living abroad, especially in the UK and the United States, through DVD and soundtrack sales. Many distributors provide reels of new movies to Hindi movie theaters. Hindi movie downloads can be found online, usually with a monthly subscription to the downloading service. The songs featured in Hindi films generate about 4-5% of the revenue of the entire film itself.

The period from the 1940s to the 1960s is regarded as The Golden Age of Hindi cinema. Several highly acclaimed movies were made then, including: 1. Pyaasa (1957) by Guru Dutt 2. Awaara (1951) by Raj Kapoor 3. Mother India (1957) by Mehboob Khan, which won an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film 4. Neecha Nagar (1946) by Chetan Anand, which won the Grand Prize in the first ever Cannes Film Festival The critical acclaim of this era would not be matched by later Hindi films.

In the 1980s, commercial cinema grew substantially, and became more extravagant. In the 1990s, Tamil films became popular, as they appealed to greater varieties of the Indian people with multicultural music from South and East India, and a broader range of topics. As Hindi films develop today, social commentary is pervading the genre, so the urban Mumbai underworld has become the subject of a great deal of modern Hindi movies.