Ranbir’s film cast on facebook

Posted In : Gossips
(added 27 Feb 2012)

Ranbir’s film cast on facebookAfter Rockstar (2011) and before Barfee (2012), Ranbir Kapoor will feature in a four-minute short film that encapsulates the last moments of a Bollywood movie. In filmi fashion, the actor sprints over around 100 Nissan Micra cars, almost crashing through the windscreen of the fourth. This action
sequence could land the film in the Limca Book of World Records.

“I got a call from the Limca team in December,” admits producer Khalil Bachooali of Offroad Films, recalling how hard it was to get 92 cars to align perfectly. “We’d allocated four hours for it, but after an hour-and-a-half, I was convinced it wouldn’t happen. When we got it with the last shot, everyone started clapping.”  
 
The shoot wrapped up in a week, went into edit for two weeks and for the last two-and-a-half months, 400 people have been working on the post-production. A 30-second trailer goes on air today. Since it’s too long to run as an ad on TV, plans are to attach it to the negative of an upcoming Bollywood biggie and post it on Facebook.

“I have a lot to thank Facebook for,” says Khalil, recalling how the project took wings on his last birthday. “On August 11, 2011, my friends and I decided we wanted to do something that wasn’t clichéd and came up with the idea of a crowd-sourced short Bollywood movie, featuring RK, 20 co-actors and 100 cars.”

A storyboard was developed, along with three original tracks. Khalil post all three tracks on FB and designed a contest whereby people were invited to download them, zero in on any one, shoot a video using a webcam and upload it as their audition.

“Within three weeks we got 2,600 entries. We then asked Facebook friends to vote for whom they wanted in the movie,” he says. “From the 76,000 responses we picked out the top 100 from which Ranbir, director Ahmed Khan and I shortlisted his 20 co-stars and took off Ramoji Rao Film City in Hyderabad to shoot the film.” Now that he has his End, and a fan club of almost 5 lakh (4,90,000 on the last count) wants to make a full-length feature film and will soon invite screenplays. Anyone from anywhere can write in and help make this short film a large feature.

(added 27 Feb 2012) / 784 views

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