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'రామారావు.. నాగేశ్వరరావు.. తర్వాత చిరంజీవి'

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Published : Oct 16, 2019, 6:56 PM IST

Updated : Oct 16, 2019, 8:50 PM IST

ఉపరాష్ట్రపతి వెంకయ్యనాయుడుకు తను నటించిన 'సైరా' సినిమా చూపించాడు మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి. అనంతరం మాట్లాడిన వెంకయ్య.. చిత్రం బాగుందని మెచ్చుకున్నారు.

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి-ఉపరాష్ట్రపతి వెంకయ్యనాయుడు

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి హీరోగా నటించిన 'సైరా'.. ప్రస్తుతం థియేటర్లలో విజయవంతంగా ప్రదర్శితమవుతోంది. అయితే బుధవారం దిల్లీ వెళ్లిన చిరు.. ఉపరాష్ట్రపతి వెంకయ్యనాయుడుకు ఈ చిత్రాన్ని చూపించాడు. అనంతరం మాట్లాడిన వెంకయ్య.. ఈ నటుడిపై ప్రశంసలు కురిపించారు. జానపద చిత్రాల్లో నటించడంలో ఎన్​.టి.రామారావు, అక్కినేని నాగేశ్వరరావు తర్వాత చిరంజీవి అని అన్నారు.

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవిని అభినందిస్తున్న ఉపరాష్ట్రపతి వెంకయ్యనాయుడు

'సైరా'ను స్వాతంత్ర్య సమరయోధుడు ఉయ్యాలవాడ నరసింహారెడ్డి జీవితకథతో రూపొందించారు. అమితాబ్ బచ్చన్, తమన్నా, నయనతార, కిచ్చా సుదీప్, విజయ్ సేతుపతి కీలక పాత్రల్లో నటించారు. అమిత్ త్రివేది సంగీతమందించాడు. సురేందర్ రెడ్డి దర్శకత్వం వహించాడు. హీరో రామ్​చరణ్ నిర్మాతగా వ్యవహరించాడు.

ఇది చదవండి: 'సైరా'కు సన్మానం.. మెగాస్టార్​పై ప్రశంసలు

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవి హీరోగా నటించిన 'సైరా'.. ప్రస్తుతం థియేటర్లలో విజయవంతంగా ప్రదర్శితమవుతోంది. అయితే బుధవారం దిల్లీ వెళ్లిన చిరు.. ఉపరాష్ట్రపతి వెంకయ్యనాయుడుకు ఈ చిత్రాన్ని చూపించాడు. అనంతరం మాట్లాడిన వెంకయ్య.. ఈ నటుడిపై ప్రశంసలు కురిపించారు. జానపద చిత్రాల్లో నటించడంలో ఎన్​.టి.రామారావు, అక్కినేని నాగేశ్వరరావు తర్వాత చిరంజీవి అని అన్నారు.

మెగాస్టార్ చిరంజీవిని అభినందిస్తున్న ఉపరాష్ట్రపతి వెంకయ్యనాయుడు

'సైరా'ను స్వాతంత్ర్య సమరయోధుడు ఉయ్యాలవాడ నరసింహారెడ్డి జీవితకథతో రూపొందించారు. అమితాబ్ బచ్చన్, తమన్నా, నయనతార, కిచ్చా సుదీప్, విజయ్ సేతుపతి కీలక పాత్రల్లో నటించారు. అమిత్ త్రివేది సంగీతమందించాడు. సురేందర్ రెడ్డి దర్శకత్వం వహించాడు. హీరో రామ్​చరణ్ నిర్మాతగా వ్యవహరించాడు.

ఇది చదవండి: 'సైరా'కు సన్మానం.. మెగాస్టార్​పై ప్రశంసలు

RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Belfast, Northern Ireland - 15 October 2019
++16:9++
1. Tracking shot of tourists walking along painted murals on the peace walls
2. Various of tourists walking and looking at murals, UPSOUND (English) off-camera from Republican guide: "People who are watching the Brexit negotiations can see that the whole problem is the fact that we have a border here in Ireland at all."
3. Tourist taking a photo
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Jack Duffin, Republican tour guide:
"There were armed attacks on nationalist communities throughout Belfast, but in particular on this road. And the first one really was right here."
5. Wide of walking tour group, UPSOUND (English): "What they've done here in Ireland goes back many hundreds of years."
6. Woman listening
7. Pan following car driving through a peace wall separating Catholic and Protestant communities
8. Close of barbed wire
9. Close of flood lights
10. Fence with protestant home in background
11. Wide of group walking through peace wall gate
12. Group walking into the Protestant area
13. Tracking show of group walking
14. Group in front of huge wall separating communities
15. People listening to Protestant guide
16. Wide of group with Protestant guide, UPSOUND (English): "We can never change the history, that's impossible, but we can change the future. We've stopped thirty years of conflict here. We've moved mountains to get where we are now."
17. Mid of peace wall spray painted with text (English) reading: "No surrender to the E.U."
18. Close of words (English) reading: "No surrender"
19. Tilt down from UK flags tied to lamp post to street
20. Pull focus from UK flag to unionist paramilitary mural painting of armed men wearing balaclavas
21. Various of unionist Jamie Bryson activist walking by the mural
22. Bryson sitting, talking
23. SOUNDBITE (English) Jamie Bryson, Unionist activist, editor of Unionist Voice:
"The unionist and loyalist community, I think, is at one on the most basic fundamental point, which is that we must leave the European Union and we must leave as one United Kingdom. And that means leaving the customs union, leaving the single market and being outside the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice. I think it is absolutely absurd to suggest that Northern Ireland would be subsumed, as it were, into an economic united Ireland."
24. Wide of Protestant street with numerous UK flags
25. String of UK flags with church spire in background
26. Mural condemning killings carried out by Republicans
27. SOUNDBITE (English) Jamie Bryson, Unionist activist, editor of Unionist Voice:
"I think the problem is when you have a mass amount of angry people, especially angry young people and there are a lot of angry young people in the unionist community, taking to the streets, who feel almost as if their country is being torn off them, then I think it doesn't take much for that to explode into violence. That's something nobody wants to see, but I think we all have to live in the real world and know that once mass amounts of people take to the streets, once something happens and that genie gets out of the bottle, it's going to be very difficult to put it back in."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Londonderry, Northern Ireland - 14 October 2019
++16:9++
28. Wide of republican neighbourhood and site of Bloody Sunday killings in 1972
29. Mural reading "You are now entering Free Derry" in foreground, with mural painting with boy wearing gas mask in background
30. Close of Bloody Sunday memorial
31. Tilt down of memorial to 13 victims of Bloody Sunday killings
32. Close of photo of 19 year old Bloody Sunday victim William Nash, UPSOUND (English) of his sister Kate Nash: "He used to strum on his guitar, he couldn't play it very well but he used to strum. His favourite singer was Marty Robbins, you know (singing) 'Out in the west Texas town of El Paso'… he played that song every night. He loved that song."
33. SOUNDBITE (English) Kate Nash, sister of Bloody Sunday victim:
"I'm always disturbed, so I don't feel the Troubles are over. I really don't feel that. When I hear or read of paramilitary activity, I'm always worried about that. The war will be over for me when I see paramilitaries gone from the communities, people not frightened to speak up, which they are. They are now and it's twenty years after the peace process."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Londonderry, Northern Ireland - 30 January 1998
++4:3++
34. Various of people putting wreaths at base of memorial to victims
35. Woman observing two minutes silence
36. Crowd at memorial observing two minutes silence
37. Memorial with wreaths at base
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Londonderry, Northern Ireland - 14 October 2019
++16:9++
38. SOUNDBITE (English) Kate Nash, sister of Bloody Sunday victim:
"The bigger worry would be the border. If they're going to man the border, who's going to man it? Is it the army? Is it the police? Because it's most certainly going to create violence again. It's really something that will start violence again because what they will be doing is, they will be targets for the IRA, or whoever."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Belfast, Northern Ireland - 15 October 2019
++16:9++
39. Tilt down of sign at entrance of gallery dedicated The Troubles at Ulster Museum
40. Close of poster of controversial Northern Ireland army regiment
41. Close of photo of victims of the Troubles
42. Close of weapon
43. Tilt down signed memorandum marking final draft of Good Friday Agreement
44. Close of memorandum
45. Various of Eamon Phoenix, Professor of History at Queen's University
46. SOUNDBITE (English) Professor Eamon Phoenix, Professor of History at Queen's University:
"Well certainly Brexit has been the greatest existential threat to the peace process in 25 years. This society, Northern Ireland, the island of Ireland, has enjoyed really unbroken peace for 25 years after violence in which 3,500 people died, intimidation, if you like the fear factor, all of that abnormality, and suddenly in the last three years we have the risk to all that."
47. Cutaway of Phoenix' hands
48. SOUNDBITE (English) Professor Eamon Phoenix, Professor of History at Queen's University:
"Until Brexit, people had a softer view of identity. They were prepared to cooperate in this space, Northern Ireland, within the structures of this agreement that recognised all identities and provided equality of treatment. And they would hold their aspirations on the long finger (delay it for a long time). Suddenly those aspirations have been sort of prioritised. And that is a factor which is leading to instability."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Portadown, Northern Ireland - 23 February 1998
++4:3++
49. Aftermath of bomb blast
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Markethill, County Armagh – 16 September 1997
++4:3++
50. Bomb damage in Markethill
51. Broken shop window
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Newtown Hamilton - 24 June 1998
++4:3++
52. Various of aftermath of explosion on streets
STORYLINE:
On the streets of Belfast, armoured police vehicles and check points have been replaced by busloads of tourists visiting the colourful murals that testify to a troubled past.
In the divided city where Catholics and Protestants still live separated in many places, former IRA member Jack Duffin leads a group of visitors along Falls Road, a mainly-Catholic Republican stronghold in the Northern Irish capital.
"There were armed attacks on nationalist communities throughout Belfast, but in particular on this road," he tells a group comprising Australian, English, Americans, Danes and others.
Duffin tells his story about a struggle born in the civil rights movement of the 1960s. He's still fighting to reunite Ireland, and thinks Brexit may help achieve that goal.
Yet Belfast Political Tours offers visitors a more nuanced view of the conflict, and in a sign of efforts to reconcile the telling of this history, the group then walks through the gate along the peace wall and meets with a Unionist tour guide - on the other side of the political divide - to hear the Protestant community's version of events.
More than twenty years after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement that brought an end to decades of violence, the heavily secure gate closes at night to the relief of some who live here.
Fears about a return to the violence that killed more than 3,500 people over three decades have made Northern Ireland the biggest hurdle for U.K. and European Union negotiators trying to hammer out an agreement on Britain's departure from the 28-nation free trade bloc.
While negotiators are focused on arrangements for securing the border, they don't want to do anything that will inflame the underlying tensions between those who want Northern Ireland to remain part of the United Kingdom and those who want it to be reunited with the Republic of Ireland.
People who want Northern Ireland to remain an integral part of the U.K. oppose any Brexit deal that weakens that relationship.
"There would be an organic explosion of anger and people would take to the streets and obviously any sensible person would be urging people ... to do so peacefully,'' said Jamie Bryson, editor of the Unionist Voice newsletter.
"But we all have to live in the real world and know that once mass amounts of people take to the streets and once something happens and that genie gets out of the bottle it's going to be difficult to put it back in.''
Others think that genie had never actually been contained.
Kate Nash says The Troubles never really ended.
While the 1998 Good Friday Agreement brought an era of relative peace and prosperity to Northern Ireland, paramilitary groups still exist on both sides and lower levels of violence continue to plague the community, says the 70-year-old grandmother who lost a brother in what became known as Bloody Sunday.
Her brother, a dock worker went to the demonstration near his home in Londonderry on Jan. 30, 1972 because it was a local happening - not because he was involved with the IRA.
Thousands had gathered to protest internment, but things went badly wrong.
British soldiers shot 28 unarmed civilians, killing 13.
"I'm always disturbed so I don't feel the troubles are over. I really don't feel that," she said.
Brexit, she fears, may cause the smouldering conflict to flare up once again, especially if there are renewed customs and passport controls along the border between the Republic of Ireland and the U.K.'s Northern Ireland.
"The bigger worry would be the border. If they're going to man the border, who's going to man it? Is it the army? Is it the police? Because it's most certainly going to create violence again. It's really something that will start violence again because they will be targets for IRA or whoever."
The EU has underpinned the Good Friday Agreement, negotiated with the help of the U.S., because both Britain and the Republic of Ireland were members of the bloc.
That meant people and goods could flow freely across the frontier and allowed authorities to tear down the hated border posts once paramilitary groups agreed to put away their weapons.
Over the past 20 years, the border has became largely invisible, marked only by changing speed limits and signs targeted by vandals who obscure the word "Northern'' with spray paint.
After Brexit, the frontier will become an external border once again and negotiators are struggling to find a way to regulate trade without rebuilding checkpoints and destroying the cross-border links that have spurred economic growth on both sides.
Sorting out the issue has forced all sides to confront the past even as they grapple with an uncertain present.
"Brexit has been the greatest existential threat to the peace process in 25 years,'' said Eamon Phoenix, a historian at Stranmillis University College, Queen's University Belfast.
"The island of Ireland has enjoyed really unbroken peace for 25 years after violence in which 3,500 people died ... and suddenly in the last three years we have the risk to all that."
The conflict was born almost a century ago when the Republic of Ireland, dominated by Catholics, won its independence but Northern Ireland, with a Protestant majority, remained part of the United Kingdom.
Republicans on both sides of the border opposed partition from the outset in 1921, and the conflict flared into what became known as The Troubles in the 1960s.
The Good Friday accord, which includes a power-sharing agreement between Unionist and Republican parties, helped soften questions of identity because people could identify as British or Irish, regardless of where they lived, Phoenix said.
That allowed people to cooperate and delay their long-term aspirations.
Memories of the conflict are still raw for many Northern Ireland residents, and as talk of renewed violence from both sides of the conflict returns, a bandage has been torn from a wound that appears never to have fully healed.
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Last Updated : Oct 16, 2019, 8:50 PM IST
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