A Bollywood movie will aim to recreate the magic of a 1980s blockbuster television serial based on the
ancient epic Hindu text Mahabharat.
Ravi Chopra, the director of the legendary series Mahabharat, which ran for 94 episodes between 1988 and
1990, is getting behind the camera again to make two, three-hour films with special effects he says will rival
those produced in the West.
"This is something which I always wanted to do because it's a great epic and was made into a hit serial
which international audiences should get to see on the silver screen," Chopra, 60, told.
"I will start shooting the film in 2008. I am still finalising the script and then I'll select the cast. The film will
be made with great special effects like those people saw in The Lord of the Rings."
Amitabh Bachchan may play the role of Bhishm Pitamah in a six-hour movie based on the great epic. The
news report also said that Rani Mukherjee may portray the character of Draupadi.
The movie is expected to cost 1.5 billion rupees.
"I will release it in two parts - part one on Friday and the second part on the following Friday,'' Chopra was
quoted as saying.
"We are going to get a special effects team from Hollywood and the movie will have an international look so
that we can market it abroad also,'' he said.
The Mahabharat TV series was inspired by the epic Mahabharat, one of two Sanskrit epics of ancient India,
and was one the biggest television hits in Indian broadcasting history.
The most sacred Hindu text -- the Bhagavad Gita -- forms a part of the Mahabharat, a tale of how two
branches of a royal family fight over their kingdom.
People were glued to their television sets and streets emptied of people as its one-hour long episodes were
aired.
Trains were delayed at stations as passengers refused to board during broadcasts, while TV sets were
installed at weddings to ensure guests turned up.
The tale, one of the world's longest written epics, has been translated into different Indian languages and its
commentary on goodness, charity and prudence is read out to many children by their parents.
"The people loved the television serial and now they should also taste the same at the cinema. I will make it
a world-class movie but will not digress from the Indian spirit which the Mahabharat has," Chopra, son of the
legendary Bollywood filmmaker B.R. Chopra, said.
Tuesday, November 14, 2006 12:19 IST