#Gangs of wasseypur real story movie
In the late ‘90s, he took over a movie based on the life of serial killer Gowri Shankar, better known as “Auto Shankar”, who was hanged for murdering six people in Madras in the late ‘80s. Though he’s now one of the most well-known Indian directors internationally and among the select few auteurs Bollywood has in the early 21st century, Kashyap had a rocky start to life in the film industry. And I like working with people who are comfortable with the process and accept the process, because every time I’ve stepped away from the process, something or the other has gone wrong,” Kashyap says. The last bit has got nothing to do with the lockdown, it’s his routine. He films in the morning and edits in the evening, working with an editor at his home. “There’s a constant process of storytelling that I have,” Kashyap adds. While that’s new, it’s also a continuation of Kashyap’s old and more recent ways. It will be his fourteenth feature-length directorial venture overall, but it’s the first Kashyap film to skip theatres entirely and directly release on a streaming service. The 47-year-old Kashyap - perhaps best known for the 2012 two-part epic crime saga Gangs of Wasseypur - delivers his next movie, the aforementioned Choked, Friday on Netflix. Even when we were making Choked, my actors were staying with me in the house.” “Like in a movie like Ugly or Sacred Games, I like my actors to be with me. “I like to work with people who have all the time,” Anurag Kashyap tells Gadgets 360 over the phone from his home, sheltering in place thanks to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.