The origin story of the Predator in the world of the Comanche Nation 300 years ago. Naru, a skilled female warrior, fights to protect her tribe against one of the first highly-evolved Predators to land on Earth.
An accursed promiscuous bird of prey
I hope the series respected and the sTrOnG FeMaLe lEaD kinda thing don't feck up the picture.
Well this is interesting! A Bollywood take on Forrest Gump
A CLASSIC RETOLD In 1994, Robert Zemeckis’ Forrest Gump became an Oscar-winning smash hit, charming audiences around the world with its story of a simple man whose goodness improves the lives of all he meets. Its story has lost none of its power. Arguably, its message of kindness has never been more important. That story is given a new spin by legendary Bollywood actor Aamir Khan in Laal Singh Chaddha, the realisation of a long-held dream.
Giving the story an Indian twist manifested itself in changes both huge and small. Where Forrest Gump wove its story through some of the biggest moments in 20th Century US history, including the Vietnam War and Watergate, Laal’s life takes him through the biggest moments in Indian 20th Century history, including the Kargil War. But there were also other poignant changes that made the story quintessentially Indian too, like changing Forrest’s famous box of chocolates for a tempting dish of the popular street food, Golgappa – a small sphere of deep-fried flatbread, stuffed with comforting fillings and spiced water, made for sharing.
AN UNSEEN INDIA Though it’s an intimate story, Laal Singh Chaddha is told on an epic canvas. Laal’s life takes him all across India, from Delhi to Mumbai to Kerala and beyond. The film shot in over 100 different locations. “Honestly, I was a bit shocked when the location list got approved,” says Chandan. “We were asking for the moon, assuming we wouldn’t get it. I was hoping I might get half! It was really a dream come true, getting every location I wanted to shoot in.”
All those locations give the film an extraordinary beauty, but they also explore unseen parts of India. “We wanted to go to beautiful parts of India, but places that hadn’t really been shot before,” explains Chandan. “I didn’t want to go to places that tourists already go to. We wanted to film the kind of places tourists should be going to.” He and the film’s production team spent a long time finding places that would be breathtaking and new. One of the most spectacular places they shot was in Jatayu Nature Park in Kerala. There they filmed around an enormous statue of the mythical bird Jatayu, who helps Rama and Sita in the Indian legend. “I feel it’s one of the most underrated locations in India,” says Chandan. “It’s epic.”
The director also got very lucky with some of his choices. “We shot in a place called Narkanda. I really wanted to shoot in natural snow for one of our sequences. We experimented with snow machines, but I wanted to shoot with a drone, so you can imagine how many machines that would take! We decided to just go there and hope, but if it didn’t snow, we couldn’t wait around. On the morning we arrived, it suddenly started snowing and continued all through the shoot. It was lovely.”