I am coming to Kannada, maybe through mini-series: Rana Dagupati

The actor is thrilled that the Baahubali is still doing well in Karnataka in 52 theatres.
I am coming to Kannada, maybe through mini-series: Rana Dagupati
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People are still talking about Rana Dagupati’s Bhalladeva in Baahubali series, and the actor is thrilled that the movie is still doing well in Karnataka in 52 theatres. But, he quips, he slips out characters “very fast” and that he has even tailored himself to suit the character in his next movie Nene Raja Nene Mantri, which is to release this week.

The actor was in Bengaluru recently, and he came in character, in spotless white dhoti, vest and shirt. “I have never worn a dhoti before,” he says, “but now this seems to have become my style.”

Bengaluru is not a strange city to Rana, and he observes that this is a place where many cultures meet. “This has been so for the past three decades,” he says. “No other city gives you such a vibe. The mind of this city is young and upbeat, which is what I love. People here, irrespective of what they do or who they are, want to see and experience new things. That is the fun part of Bengaluru.”

He has been watching Kannada movies and the last he watched was Pawan Kumar’s U-Turn. “I liked it very much,” he says. Does he have plans of coming to Sandalwood? There have always been rumours.
Rana says, yes, of course he is keen to work in Kannada. “There is one project I am working on what AMR Ramesh’s Aaspota,” he says, “It is being discussed and this might take off... But I don’t know whether it will be a film or a mini series, we are yet to decide on that.”

Rana calls this “a cool and interesting piece about Rajiv Gandhi’s assasination”. He says, “Ramesh has documented this very well. Today with Netflix and Amazon videos, a storyteller has so many opportunities. We are now considering if the story should be told as a mini series or as a film. We will take a call once I am done with my other commitments.”

Nene Raja Nene Mantri is special for this actor because it has him teaming up with his father and producer Daggupati Suresh Babu for the first time. Rana has done 12 films before working for his father’s banner.
“We have different tastes when it comes to stories,” says Rana. “We have been listening to so many for months and years, and we even had a 10th draft ready to go... but then that did not come through. We waited for so long because we both were keen doing a good film together, we didn’t want to go wrong. I like alternative story-telling format while my father is more a fan of mainstream cinema. Nene Raju Nene Mantri was a perfect fit, including both the aesthetics, and we are happy how it has turned out.”

Teja is set for bigger success, says Rana

Teja, a popular director from Telugu industry, has been lying low with a series of flops and filmmakers of Nene Raja Nene Mantri have brought him back to the industry. Rana says that he is confident about the director’s talent. “I did a film with Rajamouli, the biggest director in the country, and immediately after that I worked with Sankalp Reddy, the director of Ghazi, which was beautiful cinema,” he says. “Teja is a great craftsman, one of biggest DOPs in India, who made Raja Hindustani, Ghulam and such films. Then he came to Telugu and became a big director. Having watched two of Teja’s films, I didn’t need to dwell on his recent past. I value the insights Teja brought into Nene Raja Nene Mantri. For me, film is a collective artand only he could have done this film because it has a big character graph.” Rana says that Teja is sure to go big in this industry. “I always knew this and I was convinced while working with him in Chennai, recently,” he says. “He started in this industry cleaning floors in AVM Studio, he pushed trolleys and later grew to become one of the greatest DOPs. He has a long journey ahead, whether he sees successes or failures along the way. He has seen poverty and fame, and Nene Raja.. needed him.”

‘Political thriller with the soul of family drama’

Rana says that he has little interest in politics. “If not for the character in this movie, I would not have even used half of this words,” he says. “But politics is the secondary plot in the film. The soul is the life and relationship between a husband and wife. The film dwells on the saying ‘power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely’. Even if a good guy is thrown into this bad world, he will be sucked into this other world... this is what the film is about.”

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