ETV Bharat / sitara
ట్రైలర్: గ్యాంగ్ పగ తీరేందుకు 'పెన్సిల్' సాయం
హాస్యభరితంగా ఉన్న 'గ్యాంగ్లీడర్' ట్రైలర్ ఆకట్టుకుంటోంది. నాని హీరోగా నటించిన ఈ సినిమా వచ్చే నెల 13న ప్రేక్షకుల ముందుకు రానుంది.
గ్యాంగ్లీడర్ సినిమా ట్రైలర్
By
Published : Aug 28, 2019, 12:47 PM IST
| Updated : Sep 28, 2019, 2:20 PM IST
నేచురల్ స్టార్ నాని ప్రధాన పాత్రలో నటించిన సినిమా 'గ్యాంగ్లీడర్'. హాస్యభరితంగా ఉన్న ఈ ట్రైలర్ను బుధవారం విడుదల చేసింది చిత్రబృందం. విలన్పై పగ తీర్చుకునేందుకు వచ్చిన ఐదుగురు ఆడవాళ్లకు ఓ రచయిత సహాయపడితే ఎలా ఉంటుంది అనే వినూత్న కథాంశంతో ఈ సినిమాను రూపొందించినట్లు తెలుస్తోంది. 'పెన్సిల్' అనే రైటర్గా నాని కనిపించనున్నాడు. ఇతర పాత్రల్లో లక్ష్మి, శరణ్య, ప్రియాంక... ప్రతినాయకుడిగా కార్తికేయ నటించాడు.
"ఆకలేస్తే అక్షరాలు తింటాం. చలేస్తే పుస్తకాలు కప్పుకుంటాం","ప్రపంచంలో ఎంతటి మగాడినైనా మాయ చేయగలిగే ఒకే ఒక్క ఆయుధం అమ్మాయి","యుద్ధానికి సిద్ధం కండి.. సమర శంఖం నేను ఊదుతాను","నేను ఇంకా థ్రిల్లర్ జానర్లోనే ఉన్నాను. సైకో కిల్లర్ జానర్లోకి వెళ్లే లోగా మొదలుపెట్టేద్దాం" అంటూ సాగే సంభాషణలు సినిమాపై ఆసక్తిని పెంచుతున్నాయి.
ఈ చిత్రానికి అనిరుధ్ రవిచందర్ సంగీతమందించాడు. విక్రమ్.కె. కుమార్ దర్శకత్వం వహించాడు. మైత్రీ మూవీ మేకర్స్ నిర్మించింది. వచ్చే నెల 13న ప్రేక్షకుల ముందుకు రానుంది.
ఇది చదవండి: బల్గేరియాలో 'ఆర్ఆర్ఆర్'.. రాజమౌళి ఫొటో వైరల్
నేచురల్ స్టార్ నాని ప్రధాన పాత్రలో నటించిన సినిమా 'గ్యాంగ్లీడర్'. హాస్యభరితంగా ఉన్న ఈ ట్రైలర్ను బుధవారం విడుదల చేసింది చిత్రబృందం. విలన్పై పగ తీర్చుకునేందుకు వచ్చిన ఐదుగురు ఆడవాళ్లకు ఓ రచయిత సహాయపడితే ఎలా ఉంటుంది అనే వినూత్న కథాంశంతో ఈ సినిమాను రూపొందించినట్లు తెలుస్తోంది. 'పెన్సిల్' అనే రైటర్గా నాని కనిపించనున్నాడు. ఇతర పాత్రల్లో లక్ష్మి, శరణ్య, ప్రియాంక... ప్రతినాయకుడిగా కార్తికేయ నటించాడు.
"ఆకలేస్తే అక్షరాలు తింటాం. చలేస్తే పుస్తకాలు కప్పుకుంటాం","ప్రపంచంలో ఎంతటి మగాడినైనా మాయ చేయగలిగే ఒకే ఒక్క ఆయుధం అమ్మాయి","యుద్ధానికి సిద్ధం కండి.. సమర శంఖం నేను ఊదుతాను","నేను ఇంకా థ్రిల్లర్ జానర్లోనే ఉన్నాను. సైకో కిల్లర్ జానర్లోకి వెళ్లే లోగా మొదలుపెట్టేద్దాం" అంటూ సాగే సంభాషణలు సినిమాపై ఆసక్తిని పెంచుతున్నాయి.
ఈ చిత్రానికి అనిరుధ్ రవిచందర్ సంగీతమందించాడు. విక్రమ్.కె. కుమార్ దర్శకత్వం వహించాడు. మైత్రీ మూవీ మేకర్స్ నిర్మించింది. వచ్చే నెల 13న ప్రేక్షకుల ముందుకు రానుంది.
ఇది చదవండి: బల్గేరియాలో 'ఆర్ఆర్ఆర్'.. రాజమౌళి ఫొటో వైరల్
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kingston, Tennessee – 13 April 2019
1. Wide of TVA Kingston plant sign with stacks in the background
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kingston, Tennessee – 17 December 2009
2. STILL photo of TVA Kingston Fossil Plant
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kingston, Tennessee – 22 December 2008
3. STILL: Aerial view of a retention pond wall collapse at Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston Fossil Plant
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Knoxville, Tennessee – 13 April 2019
4. STILL: A group of coal ash workers and their families pose for a picture in Knoxville, Tennessee
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Leonard Bledsoe, Powell Resident, Tennessee:
"It looked like the moon, the surface of the moon because it just blew out and leveled everything, took out any houses that were in the way."
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Jeffrey Brewer, New Market Resident, Tennessee:
"You'd leave there. Your eyes would burn. Go home and get a washcloth and wipe your eyes and there would be grey soot in it."
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Frankie Norris, Albany Resident, Kentucky:
"You had it in your mouth, and you could taste it. You breathed it every day. I mean it was-it was unreal."
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kingston, Tennessee – 17 December 2009
8. STILLS: Fly ash is loaded into plastic lined rail cars at the TVA Kingston Fossil Plant
9. STILL: Clean-up at the TVA Kingston Fossil Plant
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Knoxville, Tennessee – 13 April 2019
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Frankie Norris, of Albany, Kentucky:
"They told us, you know, that stuff won't hurt you. 'There ain't nothing in it that'll hurt you.' You know, they even told us we could even eat a pound of it a day, you know, and it wouldn't bother you."
Jason Williams, of Oak Ridge, Tennessee: "And we probably did in all reality."
Norris: "Oh I guarantee you we probably did, yeah."
Williams: "And it's bothered us."
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Jeffrey Brewer, New Market Resident, Tennessee:
"Oh no, matter of fact, they took the masks out of the tool room that we had and destroyed them."
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Frankie Norris, Albany Resident, Kentucky:
"When we asked for it, they'd tell us that if we wanted a dust mask, if we wore a dust mask, they would fire us."
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Durham, North Carolina - 24 July 2019
13. Flag with Duke logo
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Avner Vengosh, Geochemist, Duke University:
"This was when my group first started to look at coal ash. We went to Kingston a few days after the spill and started collecting water and coal ash samples."
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Harriman, Tennessee – 20 March 2009
15. STILL photo of dredging activity to clean up coal ash spill in Emory River
ASSOCIATED PRESS— AP CLIENTS ONLY
Durham, North Carolina - 24 July 2019
16. SOUNDBITE (English) Avner Vengosh, geochemist, Duke University:
"Unlike many other normal soils or rock material, it contains a large concentration of toxic material like arsenic, selenium, lead, cobalt, chromium."
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kingston, Tennessee – 17 December 2009
17. STILL photo of TVA Kingston Fossil Plant
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Durham, North Carolina - 24 July 2019
18. SOUNDBITE (English) Avner Vengosh, geochemist, Duke University:
"So the fact that we see elevated level of arsenic in coal ash is kind of intuitive that once coal ash has been, people have been exposed to coal ash, they will be affected. The real question is the exposure and what are the pathways that could bring coal ash from disposal site into human."
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kingston, Tennessee – 22 December 2008
19. Workers standing near a home that was destroyed from a dyke break
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Knoxville, Tennessee – 13 April 2019
20. Wide shot of Tommy Johnson, Karns resident, Tennessee, coughing and struggling to breathe
21. SOUNDBITE (English) Jason Williams, Oak Ridge resident, Tennessee:
"That's my nose there (holds picture up) where they found I had skin cancer and that's where they fixed my nose. And like Frankie's got, we all got scars on our arms. And you know my legs. You know, that's just dry legs."
22. SOUNDBITE (English) Doug Bledsoe, Powell resident, Tennessee:
"I went to the doctor for a sinus infection, I thought. He diagnosed me with brain cancer and lung cancer and I ain't been back to work since."
ASSOCIATED PRESS -— AP CLIENTS ONLY
Kingston, Tennessee – 13 April 2019
23. Smoke coming out of stack at TVA's Kingston Fossil Plant in Kingston, Tennessee
ASSOCIATED PRESS— AP CLIENTS ONLY
Durham, North Carolina - 24 July 2019
24. SOUNDBITE (English) Avner Vengosh, geochemist, Duke University:
"I think the industry need to take responsibility. And understanding, and understanding that the coal ash is, it's a dangerous material, even if the EPA doesn't admit it."
ASSOCIATED PRESS — AP CLIENTS ONLY
Knoxville, Tennessee – 13 April 2019
25. SOUNDBITE (English) Jeffrey Brewer, New Market resident, Tennessee:
"And the people in that community needs to know that they're living in a poisonous valley."
26. SOUNDBITE (English) Doug Bledsoe, of Powell, resident Tennessee:
"I know they, they done well up there in their big offices, but we didn't do so well out there on that ash."
27. STILL photos of memorial cross
STORYLINE:
The Tennessee Valley Authority has long been revered in East Tennessee for providing good jobs, cheap electricity and lovely campgrounds and lakes.
But fallout keeps growing from the public utility's handling of a massive coal ash spill a decade ago, with potentially serious consequences for an industry often opposed to environmental regulation.
A jury in Knoxville took only a few hours to decide that the TVA's contractor coordinating the cleanup, Jacobs Engineering, breached its duty to keep workers safe.
A group of 72 workers and spouses blames the coal ash for a slew of illnesses, some fatal, including cancers of the lung, brain, blood and skin and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
But despite the favorable verdict last November, the sick workers won't get monetary damages unless they can prove in a second phase of trial that specific actions by the TVA contractor caused their specific illnesses.
The judge, alluding to their urgent need for medical care, ordered mediation meanwhile.
More than a hundred others filed similar lawsuits and await the outcome.
The workers encountered a horrific scene after a leaking six-story earthen dam collapsed at the TVA's Kingston Fossil Plant on Dec. 22, 2008, releasing more than a billion gallons of coal ash on the Swan Pond community.
Gray sludge oozed over 300 acres, knocking houses off their foundations and fouling the Emory and Clinch rivers in what remains the largest industrial spill in modern U.S. history.
Promising to make the community whole again, the TVA immediately began a massive cleanup effort.
As many as 900 people labored to contain and remove the pollution, some working 12-hour shifts with hardly a day off for months at a time.
The sludge sucked off their boots and even trapped heavy equipment at first.
Then it dried into a moonscape of fine dust that sparkled like glitter in headlights, whirling at times into clouds so thick, drivers could barely see past the hoods of their trucks.
"It looked like the moon, the surface of the moon because it just blew out and leveled everything, took out any houses that were in the way," said Leonard Bledsoe, resident of Powell, Tennessee.
The TVA is not a defendant in these personal injury cases, and says Jacobs was responsible for worker safety.
But it's the TVA's reputation at stake.
The agency founded in 1933 to provide for the people's economic, environmental, social and physical wellbeing has declined to comment on the workers' claims, and maintains that the ash is safe.
Regardless, there is no established safe level of exposure to airborne coal ash, experts say: Regulations apply to many of the individual toxins it contains, but very little research has been done on the cumulative effects of breathing in the mixture over time.
And this may make it difficult to prove a particular illness resulted from a worker's exposure, said Paul Terry, an epidemiologist at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who testified for the workers.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
Last Updated : Sep 28, 2019, 2:20 PM IST