Have foreign tourists really ditched Goa? Not quite, UK travel agency releases its findings on India

A UK-based travel agency has named India as the top emerging travel destination for 2025, with interest soaring over 100% year-on-year. And, Goa is the top destination capturing global travellers’ interest. Goa recently made headlines after an entrepreneur, citing data, claimed that foreign tourist arrivals here had dropped significantly in the last few years. Goa’s tourism department rejected the data, saying the numbers were misleading.   Related ArticlesNow, Away Holidays, a global travel agency, has come up with findings that suggest that India is the most favoured destination for 2025 and Goa maintains its top position. “Goa – maintains its position as the top destination, with searches increasing by 22% year-on-year. Known for its stunning beaches, vibrant nightlife, and laid-back charm, Goa remains a must-visit for sun-seekers and party-goers alike.”

“Driven by a surge in enquiries, travel experts at Away Holidays have named India as the top emerging destination for 2025, with interest soaring over 100% year-on-year. The top five destinations capturing global traveller interest are Goa, Udaipur, Rajasthan, Delhi, and Jaipur,” the agency said. 

According to its findings, Rajasthan, Delhi, Haryana, Uttarakhand, and Arunachal Pradesh have all seen a significant rise in tourist interest, showing impressive growth within the past year. India is shaping up to be one of the hottest destinations for 2025, with a surge in enquiries, more than doubling year on year, it said. 

The most popular travel destinations in India are Goa, Udaipur, Rajasthan, Delhi, and Jaipur. While Goa leads the list, Rajasthan and Delhi have witnessed an extraordinary 82% jump in global travel searches. However, Udaipur and Jaipur have seen an 18% decline in interest. 

“The growing interest in places like Rajasthan and Delhi points to a renewed excitement for India’s iconic historical and city highlights, while spots like Udaipur and Jodhpur might feel the pressure as travellers branch out to discover new and different parts of the country,” the travel agency said. 

The agency’s numbers are based on search trends, while the debate around Goa is on actual arrivals from 2019 to 2023. Gautam Munjal, founder and CEO of Minimalist Hotels, recently told Business Today that foreign arrivals in Goa have dropped compared to what it was 10 years ago, but it is in line with the overall trend in India.

The travel agency also identified five up-and-coming Indian destinations — Rajasthan, Delhi, Haryana, Uttarakhand, and Arunachal Pradesh. Rajasthan leads with an impressive 82% growth in searches, with popular spots like Jaipur, Udaipur, and Jaisalmer continuing to attract attention.  

Haryana, Uttarakhand, and Arunachal Pradesh have emerged as unconventional favorites. Uttarakhand and Arunachal Pradesh each recorded a 50% increase in global searches. “Uttarakhand is becoming a favourite for those seeking spiritual and natural getaways. Known for its sacred towns like Rishikesh and Haridwar, as well as the scenic hill stations of Nainital and Mussoorie, the state offers a serene escape into nature,” the report highlighted. 

For Arunachal Pradesh, the report said that this easternmost state is attracting travellers looking for off-the-beaten-path experiences. 

Gianni Leone, Senior Product Director at Away Holidays, said it’s clear that travellers are seeking more than just the usual holiday hotspots – they’re after destinations that offer a deeper, more authentic experience. “We’re also seeing a strong trend towards exploration of lesser-known regions like Haryana, Uttarakhand, and Arunachal Pradesh. These areas provide a unique mix of natural beauty, spiritual depth, and off-the-beaten-path adventures.” 

The Wicked Movie Will Knock Your Slippers Off

Adapting a beloved stage musical for film is a dicey business. Sometimes a near-flawless screen translation of a classic show, like Steven Spielberg’s 2021 reimagining of West Side Story, fails to click with audiences. Other times, a contemporary musical like In the Heights can’t quite seem to fit into the frame of a classic Hollywood-style movie musical. What feels on the stage like soaring exuberance can come off in close-up as corny cringe (or, in the case of 2019’s Cats, a sort of eldritch horror). And finding the right casting—stars who are famous enough to be a draw at the box office, while also possessing the technical song-and-dance chops of a Broadway performer—has stymied many a would-be successful adaptation.

The project of turning the Tony-winning smash hit Wicked into a movie—or two of them, since the on-screen title of this installment is Wicked: Part I—has been underway for well over a decade, with a revolving door of possible filmmakers, stars, and writers attached at one time or another. After considering directors Rob Marshall (Chicago), James Mangold (Walk the Line, Logan), J.J. Abrams (Cloverfield, Star Wars: The Force Awakens), and Stephen Daldry (Billy Elliot, The Hours), the producers eventually went with Jon M. Chu, who made In the Heights, along with Crazy Rich Asians and the second and third films in the Step Up series. The screenplay, credited to Winnie Holzman and Dana Fox, was adapted from Stephen Schwartz’s music and lyrics and Holzman’s own book for the stage musical, itself originally based on a bestselling novel by Gregory Maguire.

As for the cast—well, the cast is a great example of the above-mentioned dilemma about whether to fill the lead roles of a musical adaptation with seasoned stage veterans or supernova-size stars. Wicked: Part I splits the difference. As Elphaba, the title character who’s a youthful version of The Wizard of Oz’s Wicked Witch, we have Cynthia Erivo, already a Tony and Grammy winner for the Broadway revival of The Color Purple but a less well-known figure to movie audiences, though she has done acclaimed work in films like Widows and Harriet. And as Galinda, the pre–Wizard of Oz incarnation of Glinda the Good Witch, there’s Ariana Grande-Butera, pop diva and former Nickelodeon TV kid, a singer with a four-octave range who’s been releasing hit albums and filling arenas for more than a decade, but who has rarely acted on the big screen (she played a small role as a pop star in Adam McKay’s 2021 satire Don’t Look Up).

The verdict on which casting philosophy works best, for this viewer at least, falls on the side of the old-school thespian. Playing Elphaba, a lonely outcast turned anti-authoritarian rebel, Erivo marshals a formidable arsenal of skills: She can sing like an angel and convey a full spectrum of emotions—dejection, outrage, longing, triumph—using only her face and body. As Galinda, who when we first meet her is a harebrained girlboss along the lines of Mean Girls’ Regina George, Grande is charming and often quite funny. Her agile soprano voice is just right for the character’s virtuosic solos, and her lithe body moves with the grace of a dancer’s and looks sensational in the eye-popping costumes by Paul Tazewell. But when it comes to capturing the wit and nuance of Schwartz’s lyrics, Grande’s enunciation and declamation—her ability to act through singing—are not always up to the challenge. Next to the powerhouse that is Erivo, Grande’s big solo scenes can at times seem one-note. But luckily the two of them in combination create such believable chemistry as frenemies, romantic rivals, and dueling divas that each performance winds up elevating the other. As for the movie that surrounds them, a lavish old-Hollywood spectacle bursting with gorgeously designed sets and bravura supporting turns, it’s so buoyant it lifts both witches-to-be, along with the audience, into the stratosphere.

It’s so buoyant it lifts both witches-to-be, along with the audience, into the stratosphere.

The opening flashback goes all the way back to Elphaba’s birth and early childhood, making it clear to fans of the stage show that they are no longer in Kansas but rather in the Wicked expanded universe. The film unfolds on a far larger canvas than the play, which ran about as long in its entirety as the first installment of the movie series alone. Two hours and 40 minutes is a long time to sit in a movie theater with no breaks. (If we’re really going to bring back the roadshow-style epic, can we consider reintroducing intermission?) But the film is skillfully paced enough to feel much shorter. It could lose a redundant dialogue scene here and there, but it would have felt wrong to cut any of the musical numbers, which provide much of the show’s dramatic action.

That scene-setting flashback introduces us to the Thropps, a respectable Oz-ian couple who are aghast when their first child is born with bright-green skin. Elphaba loses her mother at an early age and grows up as a kind of second-class citizen within the family, with her father (Andy Nyman) openly preferring her younger sister Nessarose (Marissa Bode). Nessa (like Bode herself) uses a wheelchair, and their father is so overprotective and anxious about her well-being that when she is dropped off at Shiz University, the Harvard-meets-Hogwarts of the land of Oz, Elphaba is expected to stay with her sister as a kind of assistant, with no chance to take classes herself. But soon Elphaba’s latent magical powers, which she barely understands yet, are spotted by the school’s headmistress Madame Morrible (a regal Michelle Yeoh).

Elphaba is offered private tutoring in the magical arts, provoking a wave of jealousy from her roommate, Galinda, a hypercompetitive perfectionist who’s so popular she has a retinue of adoring sycophants (among them the always-welcome Bowen Yang). The two young women enter into a mostly unspoken rivalry that intensifies when they both get a crush on a hunky new student, Prince Fiyero (an absolutely delightful Jonathan Bailey, star of the Bridgerton TV series as well as the London stage). Meanwhile, Nessarose is being romanced by the shy Munchkin youth Boq (Ethan Slater, Broadway’s SpongeBob and now Grande’s beau).

But college romance is not the only intrigue afoot at Shiz U. In a subplot that’s considerably more developed here than in the play, Oz is undergoing a political crisis that has created chaos on campus. The old world, in which animals and humans could speak the same language and live as equals, is giving way to a ruthless new order in which animals are being caged and deprived of their capacity to talk. The school’s history teacher, a wise goat marvelously voiced by Peter Dinklage, becomes a victim of the institution’s crackdown on animals, enraging Elphaba and eventually sending her to the Emerald City in search of help from the Wizard (an unusually wistful Jeff Goldblum).

This animal-rights story arc sometimes feels like a cumbersome imposition on the central female-friendship plot, but it’s easy to see why the filmmakers decided to amplify it so as to raise the movie’s stakes. As with many hit musicals, the book of Wicked was never its strong point. The dialogue scenes are mostly there to hold things together in between the songs, and it’s in and through the singing that the real storytelling happens. Wicked helped to form a new generation of theater kids for a reason: It’s a timeless musical that goes far beyond the recycling of IP to truly reimagine The Wizard of Oz’s moral universe, asking big questions about friendship and justice along the way. And it’s hard to think of another 2000s musical with as many memorable stand-alone songs, classics that need no context to be worthy of belting in the shower or at the karaoke bar. The film’s staging of these big numbers is almost always just right: intimate or grand-scaled according to the song’s requirements, with witty choreography by Christopher Scott performed against a backdrop of spectacular and intricately detailed sets by production designer Nathan Crowley. For some scenes, “backdrop” is too weak a word: One dance number set in the school’s library features circular revolving bookshelves that the characters swing through and dance inside as if in book-filled hamster wheels, to ingenious effect.

Wicked serves up many such moments of visual and auditory pleasure. Despite the movie’s arguably excessive run time, it takes seriously its mandate to keep the audience not just entertained but dazzled. Though it might make for a long and somewhat scary sit for small children, it seems like a natural pick for family holiday viewing. (This year’s Barbenheimer-style battle between Wicked and Gladiator 2 is really no contest.) The premise should hold at least some interest for anyone who loves The Wizard of Oz, surely a Venn-diagram bubble that overlaps with much of the earth’s population. If there were any justice in the world, or at least at the box office, this would be a blockbuster hit. But as I started off by noting, with musicals you never know.

Related From Slate

Dana Stevens
Are You Not Entertained? I’m Really, Really Not.
Read More

In Wicked: Part I, as in the play, Elphaba’s fierce power anthem “Defying Gravity” serves as the heartstopping curtain-closer—but this time, the song marks the end not of the first act but of the whole movie. The curtain won’t rise again till next November, when Wicked: Part Two is set for release in theaters. After a first chapter this unexpectedly thrilling, I for one will be pacing the lobby of my mind, treating the next 12 months as an extended intermission.

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Angelina Jolie sets to play role of ‘aspiring filmmaker’ in upcoming film

Angelina Jolie’s new role unveiled after her remarkable performance in ‘Maria’ Angelina Jolie appears to be preparing for a new movie role following her remarkable performance in the film, Maria. According to Variety magazine, the Oscar-winning actress will star in a unique fashion film titled Stitches [Coutures]. The movie’s synopsis shared that it revolves around…

Jerry Hopkins: Good books

Vacations, the Sabbaths, holidays and time-off are good for us. We need times away from the routine and regular labors of life that we might return to those with new vision, vigor and vitality. For those involved in education and related activities, these breaks are usually set aside as vacation times when we can get away to rest and refresh. Our family has not often taken extended vacations. One summer several years ago we took a week. We drove up to Branson, Missouri to be together for a few days, enjoy some special events, and to do some shopping. The important thing about the trip was the time that we spent together, talking, eating, enjoying one another. As families we need such recreation times and especially to talk with one another, to gain deeper understanding and greater appreciation for intellectual things.One day we were shopping in a specialty store when I was drawn to a display of books by the author Harold Bell Wright. The name was familiar, but I didn’t remember anything about him. One of the books aroused some interest and seemed to be familiar, but I didn’t recall its significance immediately. That book was The Shepherd of the Hills. I picked up this “Collectors Edition” of the book and leafed through it, reading some, glancing through the biographical information included in the newly re-issued volume. I bought the two books displayed — That Printer of Udell’s and The Shepherd of the Hills.In the evening I began reading The Shepherd of the Hills that had seemed so familiar. As I read the book, memories began to come of an earlier time. As a young person in the eighth grade I had a teacher who encouraged me to read. Mrs. Mildred Randolph believed in reading and she often insisted that her students read good books, encouraging us to think about what such books taught. Most important she encouraged us to write, not just to read, but to write about what we read. In the summer after my eighth grade experience, I often rode my bicycle along the country lanes in the foothills of the Cumberland Mountains in Kentucky. One of the roads along which I traveled frequently that summer lived my teacher. I stopped occasionally to visit with her and share my reading.This was vacation time, but it should not be, Mrs. Randolph insisted, a time when we did not read, think and write. We should continue reading and thinking through the summer, particularly we should write. One of the books that she loaned me that summer of 1960 happened to be The Shepherd of the Hills. She insisted that I read this book and that I think about it, particularly that I write something about its message. Somewhere in my files I have a young person’s report on this book that I read in the summer of 1960 because my teacher insisted that I needed to read a “good book.” I recall that she specifically said that we should not waste our time during the summer by not reading and thinking. She again insisted that we should write something. You need to read “great books” and this is one of those books that you ought to read and profit from. Now, many years later, I was again reading this book with new eyes, new understanding, and a deeper appreciation for the message of the author.#placement_588539_0_i{width:100%;margin:0 auto;}At the first reading I didn’t know very much about the author Harold Bell Wright. All I had was the hardback book loaned to me by my teacher. I took her counsel and I read the book. It was a well-crafted story and powerful in its lessons. The setting was the Ozark Mountains in Missouri. This was important for me because I lived in the mountains of eastern Kentucky. There are similarities that all mountain peoples share wherever they are. Through the years I have come to appreciate other books about the mountains — The Trail of the Lonesome Pine, Night Comes to the Cumberland, Cold Mountain, Heaven is a Long Way Off, The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come, To the Far Blue Mountains, The Thread That Runs So True, The Enduring Hills, and many other similar books and novels. The authors of these varied stories come from different backgrounds, a variety of experiences and varied cultural settings, but all are in some way associated with the mountains and their unique environment.Wright’s story was published in 1907 presenting the lives, loves and hardships of the people living in the Missouri Ozarks in the late 1800s. This unique and inspirational story became an immediate bestselling book. It became so popular that people began travelling to the area of Branson so eloquently presented in Wright’s novel. Reenactments of the story began in the early 1920s, staged on the homestead of the main characters near the log home known as “Old Matt’s Cabin.” In time the growing crowds and curiosity seekers resulted in Old Matt’s Barn being opened as a gift shop. Guided tours were initiated, and ultimately a play was inaugurated. This story has intrigued people for well over 100 years now.In light of these memories at this time of Thanksgiving when we once again have some “time off” from life’s routine work and labor, I would like to join my old teacher’s urging to read, to think and to write about what we read. This is how we can grow and gain great truth in life’s journey and how we can ultimately profit more from our community conversation. I would like to encourage you to join me in reading, writing and sharing what we learn with one another. This is one of may reasons why I write these columns and share what I’m thinking.I would like to hear from those who enjoy such novels and books about the mountains. If you have read the novel and have some thoughts about it, I would appreciate you sharing your thoughts about The Shepherd of the Hills with me. Share your ideas and views about the mountains with me.

Turkmen language university receives books as a gift from the Chinese Embassy in Ashgabat

The Turkmen National Institute of World Languages named after Dovletmammet Azadi received book publications as a gift from the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China in Ashgabat. This was reported by “Turkmenistan: Golden Age”.

At the ceremony, representatives of the PRC diplomatic mission presented textbooks, teaching aids, dictionaries, collections of works and poems of outstanding Chinese poets to teachers of the Department of Oriental Languages and students studying in the Chinese language and literature specialty.

The language university was visited by Advisor to the Ambassador of the PRC to Turkmenistan Zhong Hua, First Secretary Qian Wei, Attaché Chang Min and Li Jiangyin.

During the meeting, speeches were made on the friendly and comprehensively developing relations between Turkmenistan and China.

At the end of the event, the participants expressed confidence that the donated literature will expand the students’ opportunities in learning the Chinese language, the source notes.

Angelina Jolie to Star in Alice Winocour’s Next Movie “Proxima” about Paris Fashion Week

Wed 20 Nov 2024 | 09:27 AM

Yara Sameh

Following her critically acclaimed performance as legendary opera singer Maria Callas in Pablo Larraín’s “Maria,” Angelina Jolie will return to Paris to star in Alice Winocour‘s first English language directorial effort. The movie, titled “Coutures” (Stitches), is set in the world of high fashion and unfolds in Paris. Jolie stars in the movie as a filmmaker and is one of three women whose lives will collide during Fashion Week.Principal photography is expected to begin at the start of next year with Charles Gillibert‘s Paris-based banner CG Cinema producing in partnership with Zhang Xin and William Horberg of Closer Media. The movie also reteams Winocour with French production-distribution powerhouse Pathé Films following her well-received movie “Paris Memories,” which world premiered at Cannes’ Directors Fortnight and earned its star Virginie Efira a Cesar Award (France’s equivalent to the Oscar) for her performance as a survivor of a brutal terrorist attack. Pathé Films will distribute “Coutures” in France. UTA Independent Film Group structured the financing for the pic and is representing global and North American rights. Hanway Films is handling international sales.The movie will shoot in both French and English, in line with Winocour’s previous movie “Proxima.” The latter starred Eva Green as an astronaut preparing for a year-long stint on the International Space Station, coping with the guilt of leaving her young daughter and navigating a male-dominated environment. Green was nominated for Cesar Award for this role and the movie won the platform prize at Toronto, as well as the jury award at San Sebastian. Jolie was last in Paris for the filming of “Maria,” which reimagines the iconic Greek opera singer during her final days in the 1970s. The movie world premiered at the Venice Film Festival and earned an eight-minute standing ovation.The performance has put Jolie in the best actress race for the first time in 15 years. She was last nominated in 2009 for her her work in Clint Eastwood’s “The Changeling,” and won an Oscar for best supporting actress in 2000 for “Girl, Interrupted.” “Maria” reunites Larraín and writer Steven Knight following their work on the Oscar-nominated “Spencer.”