ETV Bharat / sitara
ఆర్జీవీకి హీరోయిన్ దొరికేసిందా..!
స్వీయ దర్శకత్వంలో రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ నటిస్తున్న సినిమా 'కోబ్రా'. ఇందులో ఆర్జీవీ పక్కన హీరోయిన్గా ఇర్రా మోర్ నటించనుందని సమాచారం.
కోబ్రా సినిమాలో హీరోయిన్గా నటించనున్న ఇర్రా మోర్
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Published : Apr 10, 2019, 4:45 PM IST
దర్శకుడిగానే కాకుండా నటుడిగానూ మెప్పించేందుకు సిద్ధమయ్యాడు రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ. ప్రస్తుతం 'కోబ్రా' అనే సినిమాలో ఇంటెలిజెంట్ ఆఫీసర్గా నటిస్తున్నాడు. 'భైరవగీత' ఫేం ఇర్రా మోర్ ఇందులో హీరోయిన్గా కనిపించనుందని సమాచారం.
రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ కోబ్రా సినిమా పోస్టర్ 'ఓ క్రిమినల్' జీవితం ఆధారంగా తెరకెక్కుతోంది సినిమా. అగస్త్య మంజుతో కలిసి రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ దర్శకత్వం వహిస్తున్నాడు. ఇంతకు ముందు వీరిద్దరూ 'లక్ష్మీస్ ఎన్టీఆర్'కు దర్శకత్వం వహించారు.
భైరవగీత సినిమా తర్వాత మరో చిత్రం చేయలేదీ హీరోయిన్. ఇందులో ఆమె నటనతో మెప్పించి మరిన్ని అవకాశాలు సంపాదిస్తుందేమో చూడాలి.
ఇది చదవండి: మరో బయోపిక్కు రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ సిద్ధం..!
దర్శకుడిగానే కాకుండా నటుడిగానూ మెప్పించేందుకు సిద్ధమయ్యాడు రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ. ప్రస్తుతం 'కోబ్రా' అనే సినిమాలో ఇంటెలిజెంట్ ఆఫీసర్గా నటిస్తున్నాడు. 'భైరవగీత' ఫేం ఇర్రా మోర్ ఇందులో హీరోయిన్గా కనిపించనుందని సమాచారం.
రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ కోబ్రా సినిమా పోస్టర్ 'ఓ క్రిమినల్' జీవితం ఆధారంగా తెరకెక్కుతోంది సినిమా. అగస్త్య మంజుతో కలిసి రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ దర్శకత్వం వహిస్తున్నాడు. ఇంతకు ముందు వీరిద్దరూ 'లక్ష్మీస్ ఎన్టీఆర్'కు దర్శకత్వం వహించారు.
భైరవగీత సినిమా తర్వాత మరో చిత్రం చేయలేదీ హీరోయిన్. ఇందులో ఆమె నటనతో మెప్పించి మరిన్ని అవకాశాలు సంపాదిస్తుందేమో చూడాలి.
ఇది చదవండి: మరో బయోపిక్కు రాంగోపాల్ వర్మ సిద్ధం..!
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Sao Paulo - 9 April 2019
1. Various of people and stalls in Sao Paulo's Municipal Market
2. Various of Flora Cristina Martins walking through the market
3. Various of fish on sale
4. Various of Martins buying fish from trader
5. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Flora Cristina Martins, 52, elementary school teacher:
"We need the new (Brazilian) president (Jair Bolsonaro) to get into action as fast as possible for our economy but not only for the economy. I think the economy is a priority issue but I think we are living through certain things, and if they are not solved soon... I believe that things will get worse, as a Brazilian."
(Reporter question: "What things?)
"Those things are education, health and security."
6. Martins speaking to trader
7. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Flora Cristina Martins, 52, elementary school teacher:
"For me, the economy is still very difficult, very tricky. We were in a very bad era some time ago, now it's improving but in small steps still."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Sao Paulo - 26 March 2019
8. Various of thousands of unemployed people in line for job fair
9. Camila Duarte joining line with her four-month-old daughter and husband
10. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Camila Duarte, 19, unemployed:
++AUDIO AS INCOMING++
"The tendency is (for the economy) to get worse. This government doesn't bring any incentives for our country. I just see them doing bad things. In a short amount of time, a lot of (bad) things have happened."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Sao Paulo - 9 April 2019
11. Various of traders working in office at investment company Necton
12. Various of Andre Perfeito, Necton chief economist, working at desk
13. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Andre Perfeito, Necton chief economist:
"What I find interesting is the following – the government of an orthodox economist such as (Brazilian Finance Minister) Paulo Guedes normally doesn't work in the showing off of the macroeconomy but in the quietness of the microeconomy. That is, those are small changes that you make. But even in the microeconomic agenda it (the government) has not advanced too much. So what we have is a government that is rehearsing, it's trying to find a way but, so far effectively, it hasn't delivered anything concrete neither to the market nor to the society."
GOVERNMENT TV - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Brasilia - 9 April 2019
++INCLUDES LOGO FROM SOURCE++
14. Bolsonaro walking to podium to speak at event with city mayors and members of Brazilian Congress
15. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Jair Bolsonaro, Brazilian President:
"We will rescue the future of Brazil. In the next months we will be travelling to China, to the Arab countries, back to the United States. I want, if it depends on me, but obviously as the democratic rules determine, it has to go through the Brazilian parliament, we want to 'rationally' explore our Amazon."
16. Zoom out of Bolsonaro shaking hands with members of his cabinet
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Sao Paulo - 9 April 2019
17. Rubens Glezer, Brazilian political analyst and constitutional law professor at Fundacao Getulio Vargas, working at his desk
18. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Rubens Glezer, Brazilian political analyst:
"I haven't seen an aptitude of the government to construct the consensus that will allow it the support in the legislature (Congress) to pass the structural reforms that he (Bolsonaro) is promising to do. To the contrary, I think he has increased the conflict with those powers (Congress and the judiciary). He is not able to mediate in the conflict between the legislature and the judicial branch, that could increase the economic and political instability in the country. And he has used an extremist speech because that guarantees a support of his electoral base without having to carry out reforms."
ASSOCIATED PRESS- AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Rio de Janeiro - 7 March 2019
19. Screen shot of a tweet posted by Bolsonaro, reading (Portuguese) "I feel uncomfortable showing it, but we have to expose the truth for the population to know and always make its priorities. This is what many street parties in Brazil's Carnival have become. Comment and draw your conclusions" (attached was a video of a Sao Paulo street party in which a man wearing a jockstrap touches himself sexually, then lowers his head while another man urinates on him) ++MUTE++
20. Newspaper headline reading (Portuguese) "Bolsonaro posts a porn video that causes criticism"
21. Bolsonaro saluting soldiers
22. Bolsonaro walking past military guard
23. Bolsonaro standing with military officials during ceremony
24. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Jair Bolsonaro, Brazilian President:
"That, democracy and liberty, only exists when the armed forces want it."
ASSOCIATED PRESS- AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Sao Paulo - 8 March 2019
25. Demonstrators marching on International Women's Day with banner with a photo of killed Rio councilwoman Marielle Franco reading (Portuguese) "Women against Bolsonaro. Alive for Marielle. In defence of the pension, the democracy and the rights!"
ASSOCIATED PRESS- AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Rio de Janeiro - 8 March 2019
26. Demonstrators marching on International Women's Day, banner reading (Portuguese) "No to the violence. No to the pension reform. Socialist women against the attacks of Bolsonaro, Witzel (Wilson Witzel, Rio's governor) and Crivella (Marcelo Crivella, mayor of Rio)
27. Demonstrators marching
ASSOCIATED PRESS- AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Sao Paulo - 8 March 2019
28. Various of demonstrator with a Bolsonaro mask with devil horns and phrase on his forehead reading (Portuguese) "Enemy of the workers and retirees"
STORYLINE:
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro's first 100 days in office have been marked by infighting in his administration, insults to adversaries and allies, praise for Brazil's 1964-1985 dictatorship and a scarcity of bills passed by Congress – pretty much the same as his record as a congressman and as a candidate.
So far, the anti-corruption and pro-gun outsider who is frequently compared to US President Donald Trump has scored only a few major victories to keep his far-right base excited.
Bolsonaro's electoral triumph in October sent Brazil's left to its biggest defeat in almost two decades.
But for many, so far Bolsonaro's administration is heavy on discourse and light on concrete accomplishments.
Bolsonaro has achieved some of his campaign promises – he has signed a decree easing restrictions on gun ownership as an anti-crime move, privatised some state-run companies and installed a Cabinet with eight members of the military.
On an international level, he has built strong ties with Trump and Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu while distancing Brazil from Venezuela's socialist leader, Nicolas Maduro.
Bolsonaro has also begun moves to weaken environmental restrictions on development, as promised.
Still, as he marks his 100th day in the presidency on Wednesday, he has also given critics a lot of material to work with, and corruption suspicions against the president's family have emerged.
The former army captain has been widely criticised for celebrating the 1964 coup that launched Brazil's military regime and for labeling Nazism as a leftist ideology while in Jerusalem.
He managed to offend even allies with a pornographic tweet of a Carnival party in response to revelers who had mocked him.
What is widely seen as his most crucial challenge – fixing the country's costly pension system – remains trapped in Congress with other proposals, including a highly touted revamp of the anti-crime and anti-corruption systems.
Rubens Glezer, Brazilian political analyst and constitutional law professor at Fundacao Getulio Vargas, said he had not seen the "aptitude" from the government to build enough support in Brazil's legislature.
During 27 years in Congress, Bolsonaro was noted for inflammatory speeches but presented only two bills that became law.
The Datafolha polling institute reported Sunday that Bolsonaro's approval rating has slipped to 32%, the lowest for any elected first-term Brazilian president, though still far above the single-digit approval rating his predecessor, Michel Temer, had at the end.
Business leaders and stockbrokers initially welcomed Bolsonaro's victory, but so far there has been little sign of economic improvement.
Unemployment officially is still at 12%, a record 4.9 million Brazilians stopped searching for jobs in March and an initial stock market rally was erased following some of the president's Twitter-made rifts with allies.
The government research institute recently reduced its 2019 economic growth expectations from 2.7% to 2%.
Andre Perfeito, chief economist at investment company Necton, said Bolsonaro's government had not "delivered anything concrete neither to the market nor to the society".
The man once hailed as an anti-corruption hero by supporters is facing suspicions of familial wrongdoing.
Regulatory authorities said his son Flavio, who is also a senator, received 48 suspicious payments totaling about 25,000 U.S. dollars in a single month from his former driver Fabricio Queiroz, who also made a payment to Brazilian First Lady Michelle Bolsonaro of about 5,500 U.S. dollars.
All involved deny any wrongdoing and an investigation is ongoing.
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