31 July,2019 07:07 AM IST | Mumbai | Mohar Basu
The cast of Mission Mangal. Pic/Instagram
It's not easy for a first-time director to mount a film based on Mars Orbiter Mission, arguably Indian Space Research Organisation's (ISRO) most ambitious project to date. If Jagan Shakti was lucky to find powerful artistes - Akshay Kumar, Vidya Balan, Taapsee Pannu, Sonakshi Sinha, Nithya Menen, Kirti Kulhari and Sharman Joshi - who believed in his vision, he also credits members of India's premier space agency for helping him tell the story of Mission Mangal.
"My sister Sujata [Krishna] works there, so I did extensive interviews with the team of the Mangalyaan mission. ISRO was helpful in terms of giving us access to the material and scientists. The right balance between the art director and the VFX team helped us design the rocket, which was the most important component of the film. While we had the exact diagrams in possession, we couldn't have designed a similar-looking device," explains Shakti.
Jagan Shakti
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Producer Ekta Kapoor's show, based on the same mission, had initially hit a roadblock in 2017 owing to its central theme. Ask him if he faced any hiccups, and he says, "We were keen to shoot in ISRO's premises [in Bengaluru] but they couldn't permit that for security reasons. But most of the key points about the mission are available on their website. In the end, we are making a thematic film with that mission as the backdrop. It's a story about how ordinary men and women, who take the same bus as we do and buy vegetables with us, are capable of being so extraordinary." Quiz him why he didn't design it as a biopic, and he reasons, "The mission was a collective victory, and to attribute its success to one person would not be fair to the rest."
Ever since the sci-fi drama went on floors earlier this year, it has been battling comparisons with the Hollywood gem Hidden Figures (2016), which narrated the true story of three female scientists at NASA in the '60s. "That film was about racism; this film is inspired by the picture of women in sarees and gajras looking thrilled at the mission's launch."
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