logo
Ramayana Music Composers AR Rahman, Hans Zimmer Pose For A Selfie; Fans Say 'GOAT'

Ramayana Music Composers AR Rahman, Hans Zimmer Pose For A Selfie; Fans Say 'GOAT'

News18a day ago
AR Rahman, India's Oscar- and Grammy-winning maestro known for films like Slumdog Millionaire, Lagaan, and Dil Se, infuses a grounded Indian spiritual energy and lyrical depth. Together, Rahman and Zimmer are expected to create a soundtrack that not only bridges East and West but also redefines cinematic sound for Indian epics.
Hollywood stalwarts have worked in Ramayana
Hollywood's top stunt directors — Terry Notary (Avengers, Planet of the Apes) and Guy Norris (Mad Max: Fury Road, Furiosa) — are choreographing the epic battles between gods and demons. The visual splendour of ancient India is being reimagined by renowned production designers Ravi Bansal (Dune 2, Aladdin, etc) and Ramsey Avery (Captain America, Tomorrowland, etc), delivering an immersive cinematic experience on an unprecedented scale.
All about Ramayana
The teaser introduces a grand narrative, showcasing the divine trio of Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva, and culminating in the iconic Rama vs Ravana battle. Ranbir Kapoor takes on the role of Lord Rama, Sai Pallavi portrays Sita, and KGF star Yash plays Ravana. Sunny Deol features as Hanuman, while Ravie Dubey assumes the role of Lakshman. The key characters are introduced via top-notch VFX and music by AR Rahman and Hans Zimmer. Ramayana is being filmed for IMAX and will be released worldwide: Part 1 in Diwali 2026 and Part 2 in Diwali 2027.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Midnight's warrior: Salman Rushdie's literary battles on and off the page
Midnight's warrior: Salman Rushdie's literary battles on and off the page

Indian Express

time40 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Midnight's warrior: Salman Rushdie's literary battles on and off the page

Consciously or not, Salman Rushdie, celebrated for Midnight's Children (1981) and infamous for The Satanic Verses (1988), has consistently been a man at war. Whether battling censorship, religious extremism, or cultural hypocrisy, he has never hesitated to wield his pen like a sword. And, has paid a steep price for it: a fatwa that forced him into hiding, a lawsuit brought by a prime minister, and most recently, a knife to the eye in an assassination attempt. Over the years, the 78-year-old winner of the Booker of Bookers (1993) and the Best of the Booker (2008) has been involved in several feuds, be it with political regimes: Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini (1989) and former Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, or fellow writers and literary critics: John Updike, Marathi Jnanpith laureate Bhalchandra Nemade or John Carrie. Here are some of the feuds drawn from his own pen, his Twitter account, and public record: While Indira Gandhi and Salman Rushdie never met, their cold war was relegated to literary history after the latter immortalised the former Prime Minister as 'the Widow' in Midnight's Children. She was painted as a menacing, witchlike figure with whose 'hair has a centre-parting it is green on the left and on the right black,' who imprisons and castrates the titular Children of Midnight. Gandhi was far from amused and brought a libel suit in 1984 over a line that accused her of neglecting her late husband, Feroze Gandhi, to the point of hastening his death. Rushdie defended his choices: 'Literature can and must give the lie to official facts.' In an interview, he laughed off Gandhi's outrage: 'You are having a quarrel with a fictional character, with a boy who has a nightmare about a widow when he's a child, and then feels that she comes to life … don't ask me, ask him.' He was satisfied that the label 'Widow' had entered popular usage: 'It's always very nice to give an insult to the English language.' While Gandhi's legal team demanded redress, Rushdie said, 'I felt that I should have sent her a thank-you telegram for having completed my novel for me,' he quipped, referring to Gandhi's decision to end the Emergency and call elections, which allowed him to conclude the novel as he wished. In 2006, John Updike opened his New Yorker review of Shalimar the Clown with a groan. 'Why, oh why, did Salman Rushdie, in his new novel, call one of his major characters Maximilian Ophuls?' The name, Updike was suggesting, made it difficult to disentangle the character from the historic German film director, Max Ophüls, and by using the name he had turned both the man and the character into a caricature. 'Why not? Somewhere in Las Vegas there's probably a male prostitute called John Updike,' responded Rushdie, in an interview with The Guardian. He went on to criticise Updike's novel Terrorist as 'beyond awful' and suggested the critic return to 'his parochial neighborhood and write about wife-swapping, because it's what he can do.' Perhaps his most enduring feud was the one with the British author John le Carré, best known for his espionage novels. It all started in 1997, when le Carré, writing to The Guardian, complained about accusations of anti-Semitism in his novel The Tailor of Panama (1996). Rushdie responded by saying that le Carré had shown little solidarity when Rushdie faced the fatwa following the publication of The Satanic Verses. From there, the exchange spiralled. Rushdie called le Carré 'a pompous ass,' and Le Carré retaliated by accusing Rushdie of 'self-canonisation.' Their very public war of words continued for weeks, through the pages of The Guardian. Two decades later, Rushdie extended an olive branch at a literature festival, saying: 'I wish we hadn't done it. I think of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy as one of the great novels of postwar Britain.' Le Carré responded in kind, saying: 'If I met Salman tomorrow, I would warmly shake the hand of a brilliant fellow writer.' Thus the two British authors put the feud to bed. Grumpy old bastard. Just take your prize and say thank you nicely. I doubt you've even read the work you attack. — Salman Rushdie (@SalmanRushdie) February 6, 2015 In 2015, after Marathi novelist Bhalchandra Nemade won the Jnanpith Award, he said Salman Rushdie and VS Naipaul were 'pandering to the West' and declared that Rushdie had 'written nothing worthwhile since Midnight's Children.' Nemade was also in favour of eliminating English from Indian school curricula and dismissed the idea of Indian-English literature as inferior to vernacular writing. Rushdie took to Twitter to respond. Calling him a 'grumpy old' man, he wrote: 'Grumpy old … Just take your prize and say thank you nicely. I doubt you've even read the work you attack.' The same year, six writers—Peter Carey, Michael Ondaatje, Rachel Kushner, Teju Cole, Francine Prose, and Taiye Selasi—boycotted a PEN American Center gala honouring Charlie Hebdo, following the deadly terrorist attack on the magazine's staff. .@JohnTheLeftist @NickCohen4 The award will be given. PEN is holding firm. Just 6 pussies. Six Authors in Search of a bit of Character. — Salman Rushdie (@SalmanRushdie) April 27, 2015 Carey said the award 'went way beyond PEN's role of protecting writers against government oppression,' accusing the organisation of 'cultural arrogance.' Rushdie, a longtime champion of PEN and defender of free speech, responded with a misogynistic slur: 'Just 6 …… Six Authors in Search of a bit of Character,' he tweeted. He later said: 'These six writers have made themselves the fellow travellers of [fanatical Islam]. Very, very bad move.' Aishwarya Khosla is a journalist currently serving as Deputy Copy Editor at The Indian Express. Her writings examine the interplay of culture, identity, and politics. She began her career at the Hindustan Times, where she covered books, theatre, culture, and the Punjabi diaspora. Her editorial expertise spans the Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Chandigarh, Punjab and Online desks. She was the recipient of the The Nehru Fellowship in Politics and Elections, where she studied political campaigns, policy research, political strategy and communications for a year. She pens The Indian Express newsletter, Meanwhile, Back Home. Write to her at or You can follow her on Instagram: @ink_and_ideology, and X: @KhoslaAishwarya. ... Read More

Sitaare Zameen Par Box Office Collection Day 17: Aamir Khan's movie nears  ₹150 crore mark, mints THIS amount on Sunday
Sitaare Zameen Par Box Office Collection Day 17: Aamir Khan's movie nears  ₹150 crore mark, mints THIS amount on Sunday

Mint

time42 minutes ago

  • Mint

Sitaare Zameen Par Box Office Collection Day 17: Aamir Khan's movie nears ₹150 crore mark, mints THIS amount on Sunday

Sitaare Zameen Par Box Office Collection Day 17: Aamir Khan's Sitaare Zameen Par is less than ₹ 5 crore shy of achieving the ₹ 150 crore mark by the end of three weeks at the Indian box office. The movie, which had a significant hold on urban cities earlier, is now facing tough competition from Anurag Basu's Metro In Dino, which, too, focuses on the same target audience. However, the potential of both Sitaare Zameen Par and Metro In Dino in metro cities is being impacted by stiff competition from the Hollywood biggies – Jurassic World Rebirth and Brad Pitt's F1. According to industry tracker Sacnilk, Sitaare Zameen Par earned ₹ 3.23 crore till 5 PM on Sunday, Day 17. With this, the movie's total earnings have climbed to ₹ 145.78 crore, which is nearly ₹ 4 crore away from the ₹ 150 crore mark. These are just early estimates from Sitaare Zameen Par's Sunday earnings. The numbers will be revised later to include evening and night show collections. Therefore, a decent jump in the second half of the day may help the Aamir Khan and Genelia D'Souza starrer to cross the mark by the end of the day. By the end of Saturday, Day 16, the movie had collected ₹ 142.55 crore, of which its Tamil version garnered ₹ 74,00,000 and its Telugu variant earned ₹ 44,00,000. Sitaare Zameen Par saw an overall 13.83% occupancy on July 6. For the Hindi version, the occupancy was as follows: The numbers for the evening and night shows are yet to be released. Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Mumbai, and Pune recorded the highest footfall for the day. Sitaare Zameen Par, directed by RS Prasanna, has earned a solid ₹ 217.5 crore globally in 16 days. Its overseas collection stood at ₹ 51.7 crore, while its India gross was ₹ 164.8 crore. The numbers are yet to be updated for Day 17.

$200K Mukaish Coat: How Dior 'Stole' the Show with Indian Craft  Vantage with Palki Sharma
$200K Mukaish Coat: How Dior 'Stole' the Show with Indian Craft  Vantage with Palki Sharma

First Post

time43 minutes ago

  • First Post

$200K Mukaish Coat: How Dior 'Stole' the Show with Indian Craft Vantage with Palki Sharma

$200K Mukaish Coat: How Dior 'Stole' the Show with Indian Craft | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G $200K Mukaish Coat: How Dior 'Stole' the Show with Indian Craft | Vantage with Palki Sharma | N18G After Prada's Kohlapuri controversy, French luxury brand Dior is facing backlash after unveiling a $200,000 coat featuring traditional Indian Mukaish embroidery at Paris Fashion Week. Despite reportedly employing 12 skilled Indian artisans who spent over a month crafting the piece, Dior failed to acknowledge the Indian heritage or credit the craftsmen. This isn't Dior's or luxury fashion's first controversy involving cultural appropriation, sparking debates on the ethics of high fashion borrowing from traditional crafts without recognition. See More

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store