Mumbai: When the Mughals were on a decline and the British on the rise, the power game was up in the air with everyone vying for it but one Naga Sadhu was marching to his own beats for revenge: that's how director Navdeep Singh defines his latest, Laal Kaptaan.
The film, set roughly 25 years after the historical Battle of Buxar of 1764, features Saif Ali Khan as a "renegade, lone wolf, revenge-driven" Naga Warrior.
Navdeep, who has helmed NH10 and Manorama Six Feet Under, calls Laal Kaptaan an Indian Western.
The idea for Laal Kaptaan comes from a line he had read in a book as a kid, which stayed with him: 'Till a few hundred years ago, a man with ambition and brain could pick up a sword and carve out a kingdom for himself.'
Navdeep extended the idea of being able to do anything and set it in Bundelkhand in the period between the decline of the Mughals and the emergence of the British.
The director said that Laal Kaptaan is not about historical events but a personal fictional story played out against this real historical backdrop.
The germ of the story came to him when he was reading about Begum Samru, who took over the kingdom of her husband Walter Reinhardt Sombre, near Delhi.
The history book had a mention of Battle of Buxar, which cemented the role of the British in India.
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"I read about it some 15 years ago and slowly I started to read more about it, the history of Naga Sadhus. They were a fascinating group in an exhilarating period, influential politically and militarily. It was an eye-opener."