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While the Ramayana: Part 1 budget equals Black Panther: Wakanda Forever and Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol 3, it is also higher than Superman ($225 million) and Jurassic World Rebirth ($180 million)
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Ever since the title glimpse of Ramayana featuring Ranbir Kapoor, Yash, Sai Pallavi, Ravie Dubey, and Sunny Deol among others has been released, the jaw-dropping visuals have created excitement among the audience.
While the world eagerly awaits the epic face-off between Ranbir Kapoor as Lord Rama & Yash’s Ravana, the producer of Ramayana and the creative mind behind this humongous project shared that the combined budget of the two parts is Rs 4000 crore, which is about $500 million. While the Ramayana: Part 1 budget equals
_Black Panther: Wakanda Forever_ and Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol 3, it is also higher than
_Superman_ ($225 million) and Jurassic World Rebirth ($180 million).
Namit Malhotra is the founder and non-executive director of Prime Focus Limited & DNEG, the VFX company behind masterpieces like Inception, Dune, and Interstellar and others.
“So, when we set out to make it, six, seven years ago, just after the pandemic, when we started to really get serious about mounting it and producing it, and budget-wise, it was like everybody thought I’m a lunatic. Because no Indian film, by a long distance, comes close to it. So, to put it simply, it’ll be about $500 million by the time we’re done, on both films put together, part one and part two, which is over Rs 4,000 crore,” said Namit while talking to Prakhar Gupta.
“So, I say it like this: we’re making the largest film in the world for the greatest story, the greatest epic, that the world should see. And I still think it’s cheaper than what it cost to make some of the biggest Hollywood films. So I think we’re making a bigger film at a lower cost. Because that Indian in me still believes that we’re not being irresponsible financially. We’re not being irresponsible with money,” he added.
“I’m taking the greatest belief system of our country. We’re taking something that we have pride in. It’s a foundational piece of our culture. And I’m going to mount it and present it in the grandest form possible. And it’s going to cost whatever it costs. Why is that a risk? When I think about Ramayana, I’m like, is it really a risk? All I’m doing is, I have to just make sure we do justice to people’s expectations, and beyond. There has to be pride that must come through, in every Indian first, and then every other person in the world, to say: that’s a great piece of culture. I genuinely think the relevance of Ramayana today in the world, not just India, is massive. Look at the wars in the West. Look at the way the countries are operating. I’ve lived in America. I’ve lived in the UK. I’ve hesitated to send my kids abroad to study,” said Malhotra, sharing that Ramayana is his way to honour India’s foundational cultural ethos.