Dangal total collection worldwide
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Dangal actor Suhani Bhatnagar dies at 19 due to Dermatomyositis: Causes, symptoms, all about rare inflammatory disease
ByZarafshan Shiraz, New Delhi
Dermatomyositis causes, symptoms, cure and all you need to know about the rare inflammatory disease behind tragic loss of Dangal actor Suhani Bhatnagar at 19
Suhani Bhatnagar, who portrayed the role of young Babita Phogat in Aamir Khan's wrestling film Dangal, succumbed to Dermatomyositis, a rare inflammatory disease, on Saturday and passed away in Delhi at the young age of 19. Her family revealed that the 19-year-old showed symptoms two months ago while she was diagnosed with the disease only ten days back.
Causes:
Suhani was admitted to All India Institute of Medical Sciences on February 7 and died on February 16 after medical complications. In an interview with HT Lifestyle, Dr Shweta Singhai, Senior Consultant - Rheumatology at Sakra World Hospital in Bengaluru, revealed, “The exact cause of dermatomyositis is unknown, but it may be due to a viral infection of the muscles, mostly due to a problem with the body's
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Aamir Khan: Diet, Workout, Body Transformation for Dangal
Aamir Khan is the ultimate Mr. Perfectionist of Bollywood and his Fit-to-Fat Transformation for the film Dangal proved so. Though the film has many exciting characters, his breathtaking body transformation for playing the role of younger and older version of Mahavir Singh Phogat, steals the show.
Aamir Khan’s weight loss journey is an absolute inspiration as for Dangal, he molded his body for two phases, for one he had to put on weight. He weighed 97 kg with 38% body fat, which he reduced to 9% in 5 months. For his weight gain, he used to eat brownies, samosas, chocolates, ice creams and cakes on a daily basis, which helped him to gain his weight from 70 kg to 97 kg.
Though he has transformed his body before, this is by far the most breathtaking transformation of his till date.
For body preparation, he took the help of wrestler Sushil Kumar’s Bengaluru-based nutritionist Ryan Fernando of Qua Nutrition to get a professional wrestler-like physique. He also consulted a dietitian, Dr. Nikhil Dhurandh
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The genre of sports movies is more trope-laden than most. The come-back-from-behind victory at the end. Adversity. Perseverance. The overcoming of personal demons. The obtaining of redemption either through one’s victory or through one’s wards. A training montage to robust background music. Dangal, inspired by wrestler Mahavir Singh Phogat and his Commonwealth-medal-winning daughters, ticks almost all those boxes, with excellent performances from the ever-reliable Aamir Khan and the actresses who play Geeta Phogat and Babita Phogat as adults, Fatima Sana Seikh and Sanya Malhotra, and those that play them as children, Zaira Wasim and Suhani Bhatnagar, suitably rousing music, some excellently choreographed wrestling sequences, and the cinematic scaffolding needed to hold it all together, taut and flabless, for two and a half hours.
And yet, Dangal, is at its weakest when it is just a sports film.
Because wrapped inside Dangal’s sports-movie tropes is a narrative that transcends the limitations of the genre, to touch one of the fundamental conflicts of the hu
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