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Aishwarya offered Yashodhara’s role in Buddh
Noreen Aslam
Mumbai—Aishwarya Rai has been offered the role of Yashodhara, wife of
prince Siddhartha, in an English-Hindi bilingual film called “Buddha”
being made by a Paris-based Indian filmmaker. The star, whose portrayal
of Jodha in Ashutosh Gowariker’s epic romance “Jodhaa Akbar was
well-received, has been offered the role by director of spiritual and
crossover films Pan Nalin of “Samsara” fame. Prince Siddhartha renounced
the world, became a monk, attained nirvana and was known the world over
as Gautama Buddha.
Nalin, who was in Mumbai recently for the DVD launch of “Samsara”, told
reporters that he met Aishwarya a few times and discussed the movie’s
script with her. India-born Nalin made waves internationally with his
Buddhist crossover film “Samsara”, which had mixed cast comprising
Ladhaki, Indian, American and Chinese actors. He followed it up with
another crossover movie, “The Valley of Flowers.” Nalin has penned the
script in collaboration with Hollywood-based scriptwriter Tinker
Lindsay.
“Aishwarya has not yet said anything. But I am hopeful that she will
agree to it. It is scheduled to go on the floor in August this year,”
Nalin said. A self-taught filmmaker, Nalin’s debut film “Samsara” won 30
international awards. Bollywood star Sushmita Sen, who graced the DVD
launch ceremony, encapsulated the theme of “Samsara” saying it was about
a person’s choice between desire and satisfaction, between inner urge
and outside yearnings.
The movie tells the story of a monk, who leaves his monastery in Ladakh
after meditating for years to experience the pleasures of matrimony and
returns to his cloister after undergoing the trials and tribulations of
a commoner’s life. But unlike elsewhere in the world, “Samsara” came a
cropper at the box-office in India when Sony released it in 2006. Nalin
claimed that the movie could not generate revenue in India because Sony
managed to run it only for three weeks.
“When the box-office collections were picking up, the film had to be
withdrawn from theatres as they were booked for other movies in the
queue,” he said. “Samsara” grossed over Rs.1 billion worldwide and did
good business in Europe. Shemaroo has launched the movie on DVD in
India. “As part of our company’s policy, we are now taking the
initiative to support good cinema and independent filmmakers, making
their productions available on home video,” said Shemaroo director Hiren
Gada.
He said Shemaroo was aware that DVDs of films like “Samsara” might not
sell like those of commercial movies. “But there is a clientele for
good, sensible movies. We will be more than pleased if the DVDs of
“Samsara” do business worth Rs.2.5 million,” Gada said.
Though the movie has been made in Tibetan-Ladakhi language with
sub-tiles in English, by virtue of its theme and cinematic brilliance,
it was highly acclaimed worldwide when it was released internationally
in 2001.
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