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Heading for Victory

Director Ajitpal Mangat brings the best Aussie cricketers to play vital roles in the forthcoming “Victory”. Rana Siddiqui speaks to the upcoming filmmaker



A Different ball game Director Ajitpal discussing a scene with Brett Lee

So, who has brought all those cricketers from Australia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, India and England onto one platform? That too in a film? It’s Ajitpal Mangat, the ad filmmaker for products of Hindustan Lever, Proctor and Gamble and Johnson and Johnson. The film is Victory produced by Manmohan Shetty and directed by Ajitpal. He has just concluded shooting in Jaipur’s Sawai Mansingh Stadium with Australian and Indian cricketers like Brett Lee, Brad Hogg, Luke Ronchi, Michael Hussey, Stuart Clarke, Simon Katich, Dinesh Karthik, R.P. Singh, Yusuf Pathan, Pankaj Singh and Praveen Kumar.

One might remember Ajitpal in Basu Chatterjee’s film Hamari Shadi, which won him a nomination for Best Actor in the National Awards and a few other unnoticed films like Khatarnak and Tera Nam Mera Nam, etc.

This is Ajitpal’s debut directorial venture with Harman Baweja and Amrita Rao in the cast. The film is already making news because real life cricketers like Lee, Hogg and R.P. Singh are “playing vital roles” in the film, says Ajitpal.

The story

“It’s about a boy from a small town (Harman) whose father (Anupam Kher) nurtures the dream of making him a national cricketer,” says Ajitpal during a break in the shooting. “How he goes on to become a star cricketer and how he copes with the pressures of stardom is the crux of the film. It is about what goes on inside a cricketer’s mind. It’s a film on cricket yet my characters are not bigger than the film.”

So how is he managing star cricketers together?

“It’s absolutely cool,” he says “Most of these cricketers have no airs because they all have come from small towns and have risen to star status. Brett Lee even asked me, ‘Whose story is this,’ because most of them related to the experiences I have shot in the film. As for acting, except Lee, who has really prepared for Bollywood, others have to be guided a little. They had to be told about the ‘expressions’. Lee is fond of make-up too. He used to take a lot of time inside the make-up room,” he shares laughing. Ajitpal says he is also persuading Lee to sing a song for this film that “that we will use in the title track.”

To bring reality to the film, Ajipal shot five whole matches in Melbourne recently.

“When the Australian Cricket Board heard that the film would promote cricket, they opened the doors. Harman could actually walk up to the ground during the match. We have taken actual shots of the cricketers’ and audiences’ reactions. I have even shot with the cricketers of the 1980s like Allan Lamb, Waqar Yunus and Allan Border, etc. I have shot in almost all cricket loving nations — Australia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and England. Believe me, these cricketers have far more respect and star status than film personalities,” he adds. Daryl Harper and Dalip Tahil play umpires in the film.

Why Harman as the protagonist? “I am a cricket enthusiast and I took Harman because he doesn’t have the baggage of an image. He is also trained under Pravin Amre,” says the director.

But Shah Rukh Khan was very successful in Chak De. “That’s because he is a coach in the film and not a player,” he quips adding, barring Goal, this is the only film in which real heroes are seen in action.

Ajitpal has reasons for not taking famous Indian cricketers opposite Lee and Hogg. “If I had taken Dhoni or Yuvraj, audiences’ attention would have been more on them than my hero. They would have taken away all the sheen.” Amrita Rao, he admits has little to do in the film. “It’s a film about cricket and not a heroine. But she does a balancing act for Harman (as Shikhawat) when he becomes a star.”

Ajitpal is not revealing the budget. “It sounds farcical but we haven’t calculated the budget; let’s accept that IPL players don’t come cheap. They charge almost double the amount of most Bollywood heroes. We would know the actual budget within a month.”

He adds that he is expecting to make up all the money with 900 prints to be released across the globe. The film would be released in September-October. Ready for Victory?

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