कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
NEW BLOODLINES IN OLD BOTTLES
THE WEEK India
|August 10, 2025
How one could be fooled into thinking that the rise of two nepo kids-Zahan Kapoor and Ahaan Panday- signals a quiet revolution in Bollywood
Some revolutions start with firecrackers. Others with declarations. Some with hashtags. And then there is the slow, murmuring sort—the kind that whispers its way into the cultural bloodstream and leaves everyone wondering whether something actually changed or if they just got better at pretending it did.
Enter Zahan Kapoor and Ahaan Panday. Two young men, two recent debuts, and two distinct paths in an industry that is always looking to reincarnate itself. At first glance, both seem like the kind of fresh-faced actors who show up at press events and insist they auditioned But scratch a little, and you will see that they are representatives of a new evolutionary offshoot in Bollywood's genealogy—the nepo-sapien 2.0. Not quite the privileged insider, not quite the scrappy outsider. Instead, they live in a curious grey zone: distant relatives of fame trying to prove themselves in a world that quietly wants them to succeed.
Zahan Kapoor is a Kapoor. That should be enough, right? Except he is that Kapoor—the grandson of Shashi and son of Kunal, a name that has not quite echoed in cinema halls the way the names of his uncles or cousins have. There is something refreshingly low-pitched about his arrival. His debut in Hansal Mehta's Faraaz (2022), a real-life hostage drama based on the attack of a Dhaka cafe in 2016, was stripped of the usual fanfare. No Switzerland, no chiffon, no chart-busters.
Zahan’s performance, spare and simmering, was more theatre workshop than a trailer launch. It seemed almost designed to avoid comparison—he wasn’t mimicking the Kapoor swagger; he was building something quieter, rawer.
Then came
यह कहानी THE WEEK India के August 10, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
THE WEEK India से और कहानियाँ
THE WEEK India
WHERE THE STORM NEVER REALLY PASSES
Guantánamo Bay, once a symbol of the ‘war on terror’, has emerged as a flashpoint in Donald Trump’s immigration battles, exposing deep tensions between America’s security, legality and moral commitments
10 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
Moderation is the key
Most people do not believe me, but I am a moderate man.
3 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
OCEAN THERAPY
The Modi-Putin summit unveils a cooperation strategy that will rewire sea trade routes and expand India's maritime connect to the Arctic
3 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
Indian Army men fighting for the British against the Japanese were also patriots
Readers in India may be misled by the title of Gautam Hazarika's new book, The Forgotten Indian Prisoners of World War II: Surrender, Loyalty, Betrayal and Hell. It is not about the INA prisoners who were put on trial in the Red Fort by the British. This book is about those Indian soldiers who fought the Japanese in Singapore, Malaya and Burma alongside the British, and who had to surrender, were taken prisoner, put to torture and hard labour by the Japanese, refused to join the INA, and faced death or managed to escape. While recounting their stories, Hazarika also gives an insight into the INA movement. Edited excerpts from an interview with the author:
4 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
CHAT WITH NEHRU, QUERY KALAM...
The Prime Ministers' Museum & Library showcases the life and contributions of prime ministers and nation-builders
3 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
The art of shifting gears in investing
“Hope is not a strategy,” Hayes growls in one memorable scene, dismissing a teammate’s starry-eyed optimism.
3 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
Trouble on the tarmac
It is not IndiGo but Indian aviation that has become too big to fail
4 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
SHUX AND BLUE MARBLE
THE 18 DAYS IN SPACE MIGHT HAVE MADE HIM A HOUSEHOLD NAME, BUT GROUP CAPTAIN SHUBHANSHU SHUKLA IS AS GROUNDED AS EVER. AND BEFORE HE SUITS UP FOR HIS NEXT MISSION, THE WEEK'S MAN OF THE YEAR SHARES STORIES FROM HIS LIFE AND SPACE, INCLUDING HOW HE BECAME A 'WATER BENDER'
9 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
The parietal lobe
If the frontal lobe is where we decide what to do, the parietal lobe is where we understand where we are. It is the brain's internal GPS, the quiet navigator that lets you put your hand exactly where your teacup is, find the edge of a staircase without staring at it, or scratch the correct side of your head when it itches. When it works well, we move through life gracefully. When it falters, life becomes slapstick comedy.
2 mins
December 21, 2025
THE WEEK India
Area of the globe? Pie is cubed
Floating in his private pool, China's helmsman Mao Zedong shared his strategic vision with visiting Soviet strongman Nikita Khrushchev in 1958: \"You look after Europe, and leave Asia to us.\" Obviously, he expected the US to withdraw into its prewar Monroe world of the Americas, thus making the world tripolar.
2 mins
December 21, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
