NEW TAMIL
MOVIE based On COSTA CORCORDIA Disaster, Movie Shooting To Start Soon Near The
Wreck! In Italy!
The film is part of a new wave of Tamil cinema
known as Kollywood, which combines elements of Hollywood films with
Kodambakkam, a style originating from a Chennai neighborhood in southeast India.
An Indian film loosely
based on last year's Costa Concordia shipwreck is to start shooting this year
in the same region of Italy where the disaster happened, the Toscana Film
Commission said on Friday.
Shooting of the
Tamil-language film was due to start next month but will have to be delayed
because local sensitivities on the island of Giglio where the wreck still lies
mean it will have to be filmed on a different island.
The luxury liner crashed
into the tiny island in January last year with 4,229 people from dozens of
countries on board in a tragedy that claimed 32 lives and triggered
international concern over cruise ship safety.
"The community on
the island is understandably very sensitive. We are trying to find another
island in the archipelago where they can shoot," said Raffaella Conti from
the commission, which helps producers shoot films in Tuscany.
The film will be made by
Sri Mishri Production and is part of a new wave of Tamil cinema known as
"Kollywood" -- a combination of Hollywood and Kodambakkam, a neighbourhood
in Chennai in Tamil Nadu in southeast
India.
The basic plotline for
the film is that "a group of tourists find themselves on a desert island
as a result of a shipwreck," Conti said.
Tuscany is bidding to
become a new destination for blockbuster film productions from the world's new
economic powerhouses.
Bollywood stars have
been strutting the mediaeval streets of famous Tuscan cities like Florence,
Lucca and Siena in recent months including for the Tamil-language hit
Rajapattai starring Vikram.
A popular Brazilian soap
opera "Passion" has led to a spike in tourism from Brazil and Chinese
state broadcaster CCTV's "The China Story" has told the tale of the
phenomenon of Chinese immigration in the Tuscan fashion industry.
"We are turning to
the BRIC countries as one of our directions," said Conti, using a popular
term for global economic powerhouses Brazil, Russia, India and China.
The Toscana Film
Commission in Florence, a public-private partnership, helps filmmakers deal
with local red tape and find locations and staff. Its members have attended
film festivals in Busan in South Korea and in Hong Kong.
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