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Gangubai Kathiawadi: 5 dialogues from the teaser that leave an impact

Gangubai Kathiawadi: 5 dialogues from the teaser that leave an impact

By Murtuza Iqbal

The much-awaited teaser of Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Gangubai Kathiawadi was released today. The movie stars Alia Bhatt in the lead role, and the teaser is simply fantastic.


From Alia’s performance to background score to sets, everything in the teaser has impressed us a lot. Well, there’s one more thing that has grabbed our attention and that’s the dialogues in the teaser.

So, let’s look at the list of dialogues from the teaser of Gangubai Kathiawadi that leave an impact…

Kehte hai Kamathipura mein kabhi amaavas ki raat nahi hoti, kyunki waha Gangu rehti hai…

Gangu chaand thi aur chaand hie rahegi…

Izzat se jeene ka, kisi se darne ka nai, naa police se, naa MLA se, naa mantra se, naa bh*dwo se, kisi ke baap se nahi darne kaa…

Zameen pe bathi bahot achchi lag rahi hai tu, aadat daal le, kyunke teri kursi toh gayi…

Main Gangubai, president Kamathipura. Kuwari aapne chhoda nahi aur shrimati kabhi kisine banaya hie nahi…

Gangubai Kathiawadi is slated to release on 30th July 2021.

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Yash says Ravana in Ramayana must connect with Western viewers as film eyes global audience

Highlights

  • Yash says he humanised Ravana to help global audiences relate to the character.
  • Asura designs in the first glimpse drew criticism for looking too Western-inspired.
  • Producer Namit Malhotra compares the film's tone to Lord of the Rings and Gladiator.
Yash, who plays the demon king Ravana in Nitesh Tiwari's Ramayana, says his portrayal was shaped by one clear goal: making the character relatable beyond Indian audiences.
Speaking at CinemaCon in Las Vegas this week, where the film was presented alongside major Hollywood releases, the actor said he worked to strip away the purely mythological reading of the role.

"I have tried to internalise the whole essence of Ravana and tried to make him as human as possible at times," Yash told Reuters.

"It is important for people to relate to him, and since we have global ambitions, we need to make it familiar to a Western audience as well."

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