New Delhi: Bollywood has surely come off age. With so much space for new genres of films being made now, there is much hope for filmmakers to experiment.


COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

One such recent film which garnered much attention of late was 'Angry Indian Goddesses' by director Pan Nalin. This female-oriented film might even see a sequel being made soon.


ALSO READ: 'Angry Indian Goddesses' director gets threats


"Right now we are totally engrossed in the success of the film. But I would really love to do a sequel. Even the actresses are saying that the journey should continue and I cannot stop it. The film's story is endless and we will always keep finding some journey similar to this," Nalin told PTI.


ALSO READ: Super sad, hurt because of cuts: 'Angry Indian Goddesses' director


"We are visiting theatres and are still in dialogues with the audience, understanding what they liked, how are they reacting to the film. That gives us a clear picture of what to do next and take the story forward," he said.


"Angry Indian Goddesses" stars Sandhya Mridul, Tannishta Chatterjee, Sarah Jane Dias, Anushka Manchanda, Amrit Maghera, Rajshri Deshpande and Pavleen Gujral. The director revealed that a major Hollywood network has shown interest to adapt the film into a TV series.


"We have got an offer from a big Hollywood network which is coming to India. Right now I cannot divulge any details, but they loved the film. They have asked to adapt it as a TV series because the content is great," he said.


Nalin is "humbled" with the response as he had to struggle a lot to get his "small film with epic ambitions" get a release.


"It is humbling that people are connecting with the film. It is a small film with epic ambitions. We had to struggle to ask the distributors to give at least one show for the film, at least give the audience a chance to watch it. Whether they love it or hate it, let them decide," he said.


The director feels that smaller films like "Angry Indian Goddesses" need to make their own space between the movies of Khans and Kapoors.


"Indian audience should not be judged, that is extremely wrong. Sure, we love watching the Khans and the Kapoors and they will always be there, but they come up with one film a year. What about other weeks? There are 52 weeks and we need to keep the momentum rolling," he said.


Nalin is right now overjoyed with the response to his film and is looking forward for its international release lined up for next year, including a German-dubbed version. 


(With PTI inputs)