After the stupendous success of their earlier project Sivaji-The Boss, film director Shankar's Rs 100 crore multi-lingual dream project Robot, a sci-fi movie, has finally found its protoganist in superstar Rajnikanth.
The trio of Shankar-Rajnikanth and musician A R Rahman will once again join hands for the project whose rest of the cast and crew are being finalised, a release from the producers said here today. Ayngran International and Eros Multimedia will produce it.
Robot has been Shankar's dream project and the industry had been buzzing about it for some time, with talks of even the 'Badshah of Bollywood' Shah Rukh Khan coming forward to produce it under his banner, Red Chillies Entertainment, and also donning the lead role. However, Khan later backed away from the project.
Speculation was also rife that 'Ultimate Star' Ajith Kumar, fresh from his success of the Tamil remake Billa, may be roped in by the ace dirctor as the hero for the film.
"Robot will be the grand and entertaining film ever made in Indian cinema and will be produced in Tamil, Telugu and Hindi and will be a high-tech film with the use of the state-of-the-art technology," the release claimed.
However, there is no mention of the date of release as the concept is still in nascent stages, with the female lead and others including the technical crew yet to be finalised.
The budget for the film is believed to be Rs 100 crore, outdoing Sivaji's Rs 80 crore.
Allah Rakha Rahman burst on the national musical consciousness in 1992, with a score for the Mani Ratnam-helmed pan-Indian hit Roja that was markedly different from the prevailing template of film music of the time. In the 16 years -- and a shade under 100 films -- since then, Rahman has created for himself an indelible place in the minds and ears of music lovers not just in India but around the world. The year just ended, 2007, was rich with soundtracks as varied as Guru (where he collaborated yet again with director Mani Ratnam), Shivaji (the Rajnikanth starrer for which his music sold in the millions) and co-composer alongside Craig Armstrong for Shekhar Kapur's Elizabeth: The Golden Age. 2008 promises to continue the trend of quality married to quantity: The soundtrack of Jodhaa Akbar is already racing to hit status; coming up are his scores for big banner films like Yuvraj, Gajini, Delhi 6 and Rockstar. Audiences know him, love him, from and through his music alone; the reclusive genius has been reluctant to engage in extended interviews or appear in live interactions with his fans. That is set to change at 11 pm IST/0930 Eastern, Saturday, February 9, when A R Rahman will appear, live, on the Rediff Chat to interact with millions of his fans around the world. The audience will inevitably be 'standing room only', the questions will certainly be voluminous. In order that Rahman can answer as much as humanly possible, the maestro has requested that you send in your questions ahead of time -- he will, at the appointed hour, appear live on the Rediff Chat to answer as many as he can. Post your questions in the area alongside by 1800 IST Friday and watch this space for the link to the chat room, where you get to interact, live, with unarguably India's finest composer.
