http://www.newsday.com/coverage/current/fanfare/wednesday/nd5634.htm
He said he wants to win “broader visibility” for Indian cinema, help forge links between the American and Indian movie industries, and serve his community by helping South Asians reconnect with home. “It’s something they are missing,” he said. “They can be attached.” It may have been nostalgia that brought Shabbir Shaikh, an accountant of Pakistani background, and his wife, Saleha, to Brentwood on a night when the theater parking lot was filled with puddles and spring still seemed more a promise than a done deal.
The Shaikhs were among the first in the theater and looked forlorn when it seemed the showing of “One 2 Ka 4” would be scratched. Comedy, drama, tragedy-Shabbir Shaikh said he liked the subject matter of Bollywood movies.
“Very interesting,” he said. “They present a culture that Pakistan and India share.” “One 2 Ka 4”-“one plus two equals four” or, “things aren’t adding up”-was a typically breathless piece about two special task force cops who battle a murderous drug lord called KKV