Naseeruddin Shah gears up to play Rabindranath Tagore
7:26 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta
Argentinean filmmaker Pablo Cesar's historical drama will explore the Nobel laureate's relationship with Victoria Ocampa
Sanyukta Iyer (MUMBAI MIRROR; November 27, 2015)
Argentinean filmmaker Pablo
Cesar, who conducted a special 'Master Class' at the 46th International
Film Festival of India in Goa, revealed that he will be visiting the
festival with a film inspired by Indian culture next year. Cesar, who
has lived on a diet of Indian cinema, rolls with his directorial,
Thinking Of Him, in February 2016. It is based on the life of
Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore.
“The film is set in 1924 when Tagore is 63 and will be shot in Shanti Niketan and Argentina next summer. The scenes showing the present will be filmed in color and the flashback portions in black-and-white,“ he told Mirror.
Cesar whose repertoire boasts of internationally acclaimed films like Banks, Hunabku, Aphrodite: The Garden of Perfumes and Unicorn: Garden Fruit, insists only Naseer will be able to do justice to the role and is flying down to Mumbai to meet the veteran actor to lock the project and prep up the 66-year-old-actor to step into Tagore's shoes. “I am a Naseeruddin Shah fan and have watched Nishant, Manthan, Bhumika, Junoon and Sparsh many times. He inspires me,“ the filmmaker admits.
Cesar who always films in 35mm since he loves the aesthetic appeal of films shot in the smaller format as compared to Bollywood's 70 mm, is basing the plot of his next on Victoria Ocampo. The Argentinian author was an ardent admirer of Tagore who visited Shantiniketan when she was 34 and fell in love with his teaching style and poetry. The film draws extensively from her book of essays, Tagore On The Banks Of The River Plata and another book, Tagore En Las Barrancas de San Isidro' (Tagore On The Ravines Of San Isidro). Next, Cesar will curate an Indian film festival in Argentina in collaboration with the country's National Film Instutute to acquaint the South American audience with Bollywood's new crop of filmakers and Indian culture. “It will showcase the choicest Indian films in different languages. Filmmakers like Satyajit Ray and Shyam Benegal are held in high regard in my home country,“ the filmaker reveals with his brightest smile.
“The film is set in 1924 when Tagore is 63 and will be shot in Shanti Niketan and Argentina next summer. The scenes showing the present will be filmed in color and the flashback portions in black-and-white,“ he told Mirror.
Cesar whose repertoire boasts of internationally acclaimed films like Banks, Hunabku, Aphrodite: The Garden of Perfumes and Unicorn: Garden Fruit, insists only Naseer will be able to do justice to the role and is flying down to Mumbai to meet the veteran actor to lock the project and prep up the 66-year-old-actor to step into Tagore's shoes. “I am a Naseeruddin Shah fan and have watched Nishant, Manthan, Bhumika, Junoon and Sparsh many times. He inspires me,“ the filmmaker admits.
Cesar who always films in 35mm since he loves the aesthetic appeal of films shot in the smaller format as compared to Bollywood's 70 mm, is basing the plot of his next on Victoria Ocampo. The Argentinian author was an ardent admirer of Tagore who visited Shantiniketan when she was 34 and fell in love with his teaching style and poetry. The film draws extensively from her book of essays, Tagore On The Banks Of The River Plata and another book, Tagore En Las Barrancas de San Isidro' (Tagore On The Ravines Of San Isidro). Next, Cesar will curate an Indian film festival in Argentina in collaboration with the country's National Film Instutute to acquaint the South American audience with Bollywood's new crop of filmakers and Indian culture. “It will showcase the choicest Indian films in different languages. Filmmakers like Satyajit Ray and Shyam Benegal are held in high regard in my home country,“ the filmaker reveals with his brightest smile.
This entry was posted on October 4, 2009 at 12:14 pm, and is filed under
Bollywood News,
Naseeruddin Shah,
Pablo Cesar,
Rabindranath Tagore,
Thinking Of Him
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