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దక్షిణాది చిత్రాలపై అక్షయ్ కుమార్ మోజు - CINEMA NEWS
హీరో అక్షయ్ కుమార్.. 'బెల్ బాటమ్' అనే కన్నడ చిత్ర రీమేక్లో నటించనున్నాడని సమాచారం. త్వరలో అధికారిక ప్రకటన రానుంది.
హీరో అక్షయ్ కుమార్
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Published : Nov 9, 2019, 6:11 PM IST
బాలీవుడ్ నటుడు అక్షయ్ కుమార్... ఏదైనా సినిమా కొత్తగా కనిపిస్తే చాలు ఇట్టే పట్టేస్తాడు. అలా దక్షిణాది చిత్రాలను తనదైన శైలిలో రీమేక్ చేసి మెప్పిస్తుంటాడు. ఇప్పుడు ఓ కన్నడ సినిమాను హిందీలో తెరకెక్కించనున్నాడని సమాచారం.
అక్షయ్.. ప్రస్తుతం 'కాంచన' రీమేక్ 'లక్ష్మీబాంబ్'లో నటిస్తున్నాడు. ఇప్పుడు 'బెల్ బాటమ్' అనే కన్నడ చిత్రాన్ని రీమేక్ చేసే ఆలోచనలో ఉన్నాడు.
ఈ సినిమాకు రంజిత్ తివారి దర్శకత్వం వహించనున్నాడట. ప్రస్తుతం స్క్రిప్టుపై కసరత్తులు చేస్తున్నారు. 'బెల్ బాటమ్' పేరుతో పాటు మరికొన్ని టైటిల్స్ పరిశీలిస్తున్నారని సమాచారం. వీటిపై అధికారిక ప్రకటన రావాల్సి ఉంది.
ఇది చదవండి: స్టార్ను అనే విషయాన్ని పట్టించుకోను: అక్షయ్
బాలీవుడ్ నటుడు అక్షయ్ కుమార్... ఏదైనా సినిమా కొత్తగా కనిపిస్తే చాలు ఇట్టే పట్టేస్తాడు. అలా దక్షిణాది చిత్రాలను తనదైన శైలిలో రీమేక్ చేసి మెప్పిస్తుంటాడు. ఇప్పుడు ఓ కన్నడ సినిమాను హిందీలో తెరకెక్కించనున్నాడని సమాచారం.
అక్షయ్.. ప్రస్తుతం 'కాంచన' రీమేక్ 'లక్ష్మీబాంబ్'లో నటిస్తున్నాడు. ఇప్పుడు 'బెల్ బాటమ్' అనే కన్నడ చిత్రాన్ని రీమేక్ చేసే ఆలోచనలో ఉన్నాడు.
ఈ సినిమాకు రంజిత్ తివారి దర్శకత్వం వహించనున్నాడట. ప్రస్తుతం స్క్రిప్టుపై కసరత్తులు చేస్తున్నారు. 'బెల్ బాటమ్' పేరుతో పాటు మరికొన్ని టైటిల్స్ పరిశీలిస్తున్నారని సమాచారం. వీటిపై అధికారిక ప్రకటన రావాల్సి ఉంది.
ఇది చదవండి: స్టార్ను అనే విషయాన్ని పట్టించుకోను: అక్షయ్
RUSSIA BUNKER MUSEUM
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 7:22
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Moscow - 18 October 2019
1. Wide of tunnel in Bunker 703 Museum, historian and Scientific Director of Bunker Museum Dmitry Yurkov sounding nuclear warning siren
2. Various of empty tunnel
3. Wide of three safes that remained in bunker, Yurkov speaking
4. Close of safe door handle
5. Close of Yurkov opening suitcase with sign reading (Russian) "Top secret" and taking out folders with documents
6. Close of folder reading (Russian) "Classified. Copy No 4, 30 April 1966, original doc No 31."
7. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Yurkov, Historian, Scientific Director of Bunker Museum:
"It's a huge amount of documents, these are not only non-secretive and well-known agreements, such as the notorious Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, which defined the whole structure of international relations, but also classified reports from the ambassadors, which remain a secret. And though the bunker itself is declassified, what was kept in here, the whole list of documents we won't know for at least another 20-30 years perhaps as they are still a state secret."
8. Tilt-up of safe, Yurkov putting suitcase inside and closing it
9. Tracking shot of Yurkov walking along corridors of bunker
10. Tilt-down from vertical shaft into tunnel to Yurkov opening bunker door
11. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Yurkov, Historian, Scientific Director of Bunker Museum:
"It is widely believed that in such bunkers people can survive for years, while the mutants are running up there in a radioactive desert, in fact, this is not true. Strategic bunkers are designed for a maximum of several weeks, after that the radiation level on the surface quickly drops down, you need to get to the surface, to evacuate material assets, to start building some kind of peaceful life."
12. Tilt-down from ceiling with cables to old telephone on table
13. Close of telephone
14. Wide of bunker corridor
15. Close of lamps in corridor
16. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Yurkov, Historian, Scientific Director of Bunker Museum:
"What we see now is the main entrance to the site, the first frontier - a blast-proof door, it is designed in a way that during a nuclear explosion in the city, the masking house will be demolished, the shock wave will flow in here and will be stopped by this ten-tonne door."
17. Yurkov pushing button opening main entrance door
18. Close of door sliding open
19. Wide of bunker corridor with Yurkov walking up stairs
20. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Yurkov, Historian, Scientific Director of Bunker Museum:
"This is the central control panel for all the bunker systems, so the ventilation, and draining, and heating or cooling the air were managed from here, everything that was needed for life support during peacetime was managed from here."
21. Close of switch in control panel being turned by Yurkov
22. Close of metering devices in bunker
23. Various of water sprinkler
24. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Yurkov, Historian, Scientific Director of Bunker Museum:
"There is water around us, water-saturated soils, the water is under pressure and in the end it finds its way inside. It's like a submarine."
25. Various of water running down wall
26. Wide of bunker corridor, pennant on wall with portrait of former head of Soviet Union Vladimir Lenin reading (Russian) "Communist labour collective."
27. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Yurkov, Historian, Scientific Director of Bunker Museum:
"This was absolutely not noticeable to people around. The locals had no idea at all. They all then went on a tour, and all with round eyes, saying "We lived here and couldn't even think what we had here, under our feet." For the outside world there were restoration workshops here? Such a disguised word, boring, if someone knocked on the gate and asked about what it was here, he was told, restoration workshops, do not disturb we are working."
28. Wide of tunnel with cast-iron tubing, Yurkov walking
29. Close tilt-up of tubing
30. Close of tubing element
31. SOUNDBITE (English) Viktor Baranov, Museum Guide:
"Our main idea is to keep it and preserve it how we found it. So we don't want to paint it with new paint, we don't want to make some new polished surfaces, no. We want to preserve it how we found it in 2018, that's what people actually want to see."
32. Various of visitors on tour of bunker
33. SOUNDBITE (English) Viktor Baranov, Museum Guide:
"Actually, the interest is very high, especially among Russians. Especially on weekends we have tours from very early morning, up to, I don't know, 11pm. So it's tour after tour after tour."
34. Wide of visitors walking along tunnel with tubing
35. Wide of bunker room with accessories and individual protection means
36. Wide of gas masks
37. Mid of visitors trying out individual dosimeters
38. SOUNDBITE (English) Claudio Alvarez, visitor from Chile:
"It's like being in the middle of a secret cold war, during the 60s I guess, from Chile or the occidental (western) people this is something unbelievable."
39. Various of visitors posing for photographs in tunnel
40. Close of lighting in tunnel
41. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Elizaveta Triskrel, visitor:
"It gives me the feeling of safety, I understand the topic is not very nice, but I like it, I feel safer that we have such things, that we have the opportunity to hide in case something happens."
42. Wide of street where entrance to bunker is located
43. Close of entrance to bunker
44. Close of barbwire on top of gate to bunker
LEADIN:
Russian tourists are flocking to a secret bunker in central Moscow which used to house 120 tonnes of secret documents held by the Russian Foreign Ministry.
The bunker, which contained papers relating to the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact, only became a museum in 2018 after the documents were removed and declassified.
STORYLINE:
A nuclear warning sign is sounded in 'Bunker 703' in Moscow.
Now desolate and empty with haunting blue lighting, it was once home to a colossal secret collection of key foreign policy documents held by the Soviet Union.
These safes were among many which once filled the funnels, holding 120 tonnes of documents including state secrets.
They were stored away to avoid destruction either through war or another emergency.
Dmitry Yurkov, is a Historian and Scientific Director at the bunker.
"These are non-secretive and famous agreements, such as the notorious Molotov Ribbentrop Pact, which defined the whole structure of international relations," he says.
The Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was a Soviet-Nazi aggression pact signed in 1939 that allotted the three independent Baltic nations and part of Poland to the Soviet Union
It's still not known what information many of the documents contained and it remains a secret.
The Russian Foreign Ministry used the building to store the documents from 1961 until 2005 when they were eventually removed after water leaked into the bunker.
There were a total of 12 staff members in the building in charge of guarding and maintaining the documents.
The bunker is specially designed to house people for several weeks in the event of a nuclear war.
"Strategic bunkers are designed for a maximum of several weeks, because then radiation on the surface quickly drops down, you need to get to the surface, to evacuate material assets, to start building some kind of peaceful life" says Dmitry.
He walks through the various passages and staircases in the bunker area, which as a whole spans about 1,000 square metres, and has a depth of 43 metres.
Many of the features designed to make it habitable for people escaping nuclear war have been preserved.
He points out a shockproof door at the main entrance to the site.
"It is designed in such a way that during a nuclear explosion over the city, the masked house will be demolished, the shock wave will flow in here and will be stopped by this ten-tonne colossus."
He gestures towards a central control panel for the bunker, which managed the ventilation, draining, heating and cooling air.
"This is the central control panel for all the bunker systems, so both the ventilation, and draining, and heating or cooling the air were managed from here, everything that was needed for life support during peaceful time was managed from here," he says.
The bunker is located in central Moscow, it remained inconspicuous and nobody ever guessed its existence.
"If someone knocked on the gate and asked about what it was here, he was told - restoration workshops, do not disturb we are working," says Dmitry.
After it was declassified in 2018, the bunker became a museum and opened its doors to the public.
Tourists have flocked to get photographs, their dark silhouettes against the blue hue from the light and smoke in the tunnel create a striking selfie image.
"We have tours from very early morning, up to, I don't know, 11pm, so it's tour after tour after tour." says Victor Baranov, who is a guide at the museum.
He's determined to preserve the bunker's authenticity.
"We want to preserve it how we found it in 2018, that's actually what people want to see," he adds.
"It gives me the feeling of safety, I understand the topic is not very nice, but I like it, I feel safer that we have such things," says visitor Elizaveta Triskrel.
Visitors can even see a few copies of papers owned by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
But its just a tiny amount compared to what was stored here before.
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