Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Adipurush (transl. The First Man ) [ a ] is a 2023 Indian mythological action film inspired by the Hindu epic Ramayana . [ 9 ] The film is directed and co-written by Om Raut , and produced by T-Series and Retrophiles.
This ranking lists the most expensive films in Indian cinema, based on conservative production budget estimates reported by organisations classified as green by Wikipedia. [a] The figures are not adjusted for inflation and represent only the actual filming costs, excluding promotional expenses (such as advertisements, commercials, posters, etc.).
Adipurush [j] ₹350–392.70 crore 2023 [39] [40] 11 Hanu-Man ₹301–350 crore 2024 [41] [42] 12 Ala Vaikunthapurramuloo ₹262–280 crore 2020 [n] 13 Sarileru Neekevvaru ₹260 crore 2020 [46] 14 Sye Raa Narasimha Reddy ₹240 crore 2019 [43] 15 Waltair Veerayya ₹236.15 crore 2023 [47] 16 Sankranthiki Vasthunam * ₹225–300 crore 2025 ...
Adipurush: Netflix / Amazon Prime Video ₹250 crore 2023 [12] 7 OG: Netflix ₹92 crore 2025 [citation needed] 8 Game Changer: Zee5 / Amazon Prime Video ₹160 crore 2024 [13] 9 Devara: Part 1: Netflix ₹150 crore 2024 [14] 10 Thug Life: Netflix ₹150 crore 2025 [15] 11 Singham Again: Amazon Prime Video ₹130 crore 2024 [16] 12 Indian 2 ...
Om Raut (born 21 December 1981) is an Indian film director, writer, former child actor and producer. [1] He has received the 68th National Film Awards for Best Popular Film for the film Tanhaji.
Here is a list of notable English translations of the Ramayana in chronological order: Griffith, Ralph T. H. (1870–1874). The Ramayan of Valmiki. Trübner – via Sacred-texts.org. (Project Gutenberg). Griffith's translation was one of the earliest complete translations of the Ramayana into English. Dutt, Romesh Chunder (1898).
Shurpanakha (Sanskrit: शूर्पणखा, IAST: śūrpaṇakhā, lit. ' she whose fingernails are like winnowing fans '), is a rakshasi (demoness) in Hindu epic.Her legends are mainly narrated in the epic Ramayana and its other versions.
Shukla was born on 27 February 1976 into a Brahmin family in Gauriganj, Amethi, Uttar Pradesh, India, where he attended a HAL School Korwa [clarification needed]. [2] [3] After graduating from Allahabad University in 1999, he moved to Mumbai to seek work, and subsequently entered the TV and film scene following an opportunity to write for Kaun Banega Crorepati.