http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/ET-Cetera/Post-Slumdog-British-filmmakers-eye-India/articleshow/4272594.cms

Post Slumdog, British filmmakers eye India

16 Mar 2009, 1846 hrs IST, PTI


LONDON: The international success of feel-good drama "Slumdog
Millionaire" has inspired many British filmmakers to explore India and
Bollywood as
the new "exotic" location for their films.

With the Bollywood-inspired story winning eight Oscars, the British
film industry seems to have fallen head over heels in love with India,
said a British newspaper.

These filmmakers are heading to India to shoot their films and are
planning to use the sophisticated but cost-effective technology of
Bollywood.

Currently, Joe Wright, the director of "Atonement", is in India on a
month-long trip scouting for locations in the country to shoot his
Partition drama "Indian Summer".

Set against the backdrop of the vast migrations and bloody
Hindu-Muslim violence of 1947, the story also includes the alleged
love affair of India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and
Edwina Mountbatten, the glamourous wife of the last British Viceroy, a
report published in the Times said.

"The country is suddenly crawling with British film-makers looking for
a slice of exhilarating, cost-effective exoticism."

According to Tim Bevan, the co-chairman of Working Title, the British
film company, India is a film destination whose time has come. "It is
the zeitgeist," he was quoted as saying by the newspaper.

He expects to shoot his film in India. "We will be working with some
of the excellent people there that worked with Danny Boyle on Slumdog
and we've got the resources of Bollywood, the second-largest film
industry in the world," Boven said.

"Slumdog Millionaire" has opened the door for Indian talent and
stories. Directed by British filmmaker Danny Boyle, the film tells the
story of a Mumbai slumdweller and his rise to fame and fortune as he
goes on to win USD 20 million in a television reality show. The film
has so far raked in 150 million pound at the international box office.

"It broke the mould. Its massive international success has indicated
that people are more open to stories from other worlds than we might
have been led to believe," David Thompson, who runs his own production
house, Origin Pictures said.

He hopes that the "Slumdog" effect will help him raise moeny for his
projects in South Asia. He has plans to make a detective story and a
film on a crazy elephant.

The others who are planning to work in India are Leslee Udwin, the
producer of "East is East". He will be shooting a sequel, "West is
West", in the Punjab later this year.

Graham Broadbent, the producer of "Becoming Jane" and "In Bruges", is
putting together an all-star cast to film Deborah Moggach's novel
"These Foolish Things", about a nursing home in Bangalore for retired
Britons

Similarly, Gurinder Chadha of "Bend it Like Beckham", is developing
two new projects set in India, while David Thompson, the former head
of BBC Films, also has two Indian films in the pipeline.

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