Subscribe To Print Edition About The Tribune Code Of Ethics Download App Advertise with us Classifieds
search-icon-img
  • ftr-facebook
  • ftr-instagram
  • ftr-instagram
search-icon-img
Advertisement

‘Pushpa 2’ has a ‘huge canvas’; fans can ‘definitely expect’ a third part: Allu Arjun

Los Angeles, February 16 South Indian star Allu Arjun spoke about the plans of expansion for his ‘Pushpa’ franchise, which was first released in 2021. Talking about the August release ‘Pushpa 2: The Rule’, Arjun said: “You can definitely expect...
  • fb
  • twitter
  • whatsapp
  • whatsapp
Advertisement

Los Angeles, February 16

South Indian star Allu Arjun spoke about the plans of expansion for his ‘Pushpa’ franchise, which was first released in 2021.

Talking about the August release ‘Pushpa 2: The Rule’, Arjun said: “You can definitely expect part three, we do want to make it a franchise and we have exciting ideas for the line-up.”

Advertisement

“A sizzle reel from the Pushpa franchise is being screened on the sidelines of the Berlin European Film Market in order to seed it as a brand for international audiences. There will also be a fan screening of ‘Pushpa: The Rise — Part 1’, added the actor, while talking to Variety.

Berlin will be Arjun’s first time in Germany and his first time at a film festival.

Advertisement

“I just want to see how people abroad are going to see this film, and try to understand how they view Indian cinema, just understand how film festivals are and what kind of films are watched and what is the mindset of the people that come there,” Arjun said.

Directed by Sukumar, the film talks about the rise of Pushpa Raj (Arjun), a labourer who rises through the ranks of a red sandalwood smuggling syndicate and faces off against an egotistical police officer.

After being a hit at home in India and in diaspora markets like the US, UK and the UAE, ‘Pushpa: The Rise — Part 1’ found a new lease on life when it began streaming on Prime Video.

“More than the theatrical reach of ‘Pushpa,’ the OTT (streaming) reach has been multifold,” Arjun said.

“A lot of people maybe during the theatrical release have only watched it once or twice. But after it’s available on OTT platforms like Amazon, people have watched it multiple times. And because of the OTT platform, there’s a lot of crossover audience from other languages, and other regions and neighbouring countries. And also it made a noise because it was the biggest film (in India) of 2021.

“I didn’t find much of a difference the way urban Indians have watched the film and people overseas. And I think urban Indians are similar to global audiences. So all the things that they have liked in terms of the candidness of the film or the performances, I’ve got similar feedback from urban audiences in India and overseas,” Arjun said.

‘Pushpa 2: The Rule’ is due to release August 15, during the Indian Independence Day holiday frame.

“‘Pushpa 2’ is going to have a very different shade of Pushpa than what you’ve seen in ‘Pushpa 1,’ because it is the lower end of the spectrum that you’ve seen,” Arjun said.

“You’ll see the highest end of the spectrum in terms of characterisation. So you’ll see him on a very high note, you’ll see him on a very high scale, in terms of characterisation, in terms of this scale and presentation and the canvas of the problems are going to be much bigger than what it was compared to ‘Pushpa 1.’ It’s going to be a bigger canvas, and there is a different dimension to the characterisation.”

Towards the end of the first part, the character Pushpa assumes de facto control of the syndicate.

“Till then it was playing on a regional scale, now it will play on a national and international scale,” Arjun said.

In ‘Pushpa 1’, police officer Bhanwar Singh Shekhawat, played by Fahadh Faasil, emerges as a hiccup for Pushpa.

The conflict between them is going to “escalate to a much bigger, bigger scale,” Arjun said.

After ‘Pushpa 2’, Arjun hasn’t zeroed in on anything but says that there are some interesting projects in the pipeline.

“Those will definitely be on an epic scale. I don’t want to drop the ‘Pushpa’ scale at all — I want to hold that ground as much as possible,” Arjun said.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
tlbr_img1 Home tlbr_img2 Opinion tlbr_img3 Classifieds tlbr_img4 Videos tlbr_img5 E-Paper