
‘HanuMan’: Prashanth Varma’s superhero film wraps up shoot
The Hindu
Superhero film ‘HanuMan’ has Teja Sajja playing a man who gets the powers of Lord Hanuman through a celestial gem
HanuMan, the upcoming pan-Indian superhero film, has wrapped its shoot. Lead actor Teja Sajja took to his social media handles to announce the news.
In a teaser released by the makers in November, Teja’s protagonist character gets the power of Lord Hanuman himself, in the present day, and bashes up the villains. The teaser even had a shot that showed a glimpse of the titular deity himself.
HanuMan is writer-director Prashanth Varma’s attempt at building a cinematic universe, which will have superheroes inspired by mythological characters.
The film also stars Amritha Iyer, Vinay Rai, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar, Raj Deepak Shetty, Vennela Kishore, Getup Srinu, and Satya. The film has Shivendra serving as the cinematographer and SB Raju Talari as the editor. Gowra Hari, Anudeep Dev, and Krishna Saurabh scored the music for the film.
The film, produced by Niranjan Reddy under the PrimeShow Entertainment banner, will be released across India in Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, and Hindi. Earlier it was announced that the film will hit screens on May 12; it remains unknown if there is a change in the release date.

The ongoing Print Biennale Exhibition at Lalit Kala Akademi, Chennai, unfolds as a journey far beyond India’s borders, tracing artistic lineages shaped by revolution and resistance across Latin America and nNorthern Africa. Presented as a collateral event of the Third Print Biennale of India, the exhibition features a selection from the Boti Llanes family collection, initiated by Dr Llilian Llanes, recipient of Cuba’s National Award for Cultural Research, and curated in India by her daughter, Liliam Mariana Boti Llanes. Bringing together the works of 48 printmaking artists from regions including Mexico, Cuba, Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, the exhibition is rooted in the socio-political upheavals of the 1980s and 1990s. It shows printmaking as both a political and creative tool, with works that weave stories across countries and continents.












