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Looking at the best new faces of the year is always promising.
If a trifle misleading. First films frequently cheat, giving us hope where they shouldn't. Many a newcomer has impressed in Film One only to squander it all away by Film Three, but all that is for later.
These are ten actors who impressed this year, who found themselves surrounded by more experienced thespians and came off strong enough to make their own mark.
It is a list that reads rather whimsically, one that includes actors already strong in regional cinema, actors for whom acting isn't a day job, and -- as is always the case in these parts -- somebody's kids famous for being somebody's kids.
Here, then, are 2012's freshest:
10. Alia Bhatt, Student Of The Year
Petite little Alia was well cast in Karan Johar's glossy but entirely forgettable Student Of The Year as the darling rosebud topping every schoolboy's wishlist.
Frequently adorable and often genuinely likeable, this young lady might have the charm and the talent to grow into quite a performer. She isn't there yet, but who's to say she won't be?
More than holding her own opposite that other, more sought-after DP, Penty did well in Homi Adajania's Cocktail despite being given an exaggeratedly Good Girl role.
Her Meera cried an awful lot but Penty sobbed with sincerity, and -- once in a while, when she got to smile -- stole the spotlight away from the film's drunken mess of a heroine.
She might have been the supporting actress, but she won both the man and the film.
The first time we see Ileana in Anurag Basu's smash hit, we see her witheringly old, all grey hair and wrinkles that run deeper than her smile.
It's quite an unusual way for an actress to make her Hindi film debut, but D'Cruz, who soon sparkles effervescently as she distracts the film's titular hero, is a delight who makes for quite an impression.
It's a simple role, but D'Cruz treats it with sweetness and grace, and even makes us gasp a couple of times.
One of the year's biggest success stories has been that of Khurana, a former television video jockey who charmed us all with 2012's huge sleeper hit.
In Vicky Donor, he plays a wilfully underachieving Delhi layabout with casual, confident ease.
An actor with disarming screen presence and impressive restraint, he's one of the reasons this film manages to stay grounded and authentic, while being mad and flavourful.
He lays out the film's zingy dialogue with a rat-a-tat swagger and yet comes across as very, very likeable.
A look at the IMDb page for 45-year-old writer/director Dhulia claims that he's appeared on screen a couple of times before, but Gangs Of Wasseypur marks his first Hindi film appearance, making him an ideal choice for the top slot here.
In Kashyap's film, Dhulia plays the overarching patriarch Ramadhir Singh, the film's chief antagonist who gets older and wiser as he mows down all in his path.
He knows where the bodies are buried, and he says he survives because he doesn't watch Hindi movies. A truly tough no-nonsense character, Dhulia's Ramadhir Singh is fearsome and fallible, mercurial and Machiavellian.
He's a character to loathe and to be awed by, and it takes a proper actor to inject it with the right scale, the right sense of grandeur, the right Godfatherly gravitas -- no matter how misguided his sense of grand occasion.
Many can curse well. But few can slap with that ferocious a sense of entitlement.