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Asia-Pacific
Tiger Man Mike Pandey
India's Tiger Man Mike Pandey to Helm Film with Bollywood star John Abraham
By Gautaman Bhaskaran South Asia Editor
 | Bollywood star John Abraham in "The Return of the Tiger" | Mike Pandey is no Jim Corbett – who once upon a time roamed the hills of the Himalayas shooting down rogue man-eating tigers and leopards. But Corbett Sahib as he was fondly called by those hundreds of villagers, who perhaps owed him their very lives having been saved from the jaws of those ferocious feline creatures, turned into a great conservationist. Pandey – who was born in Kenya and who grew up in England and still carries a British passport – never gunned down animals or any other living creature. He was always into conservation, trying to protect mammals, animals and birds from the two-footed predator, why man himself. And Pandey has been doing this through power-packed documentaries on tigers, on whale sharks on vultures and so on.So, it does seem very interesting that he is all set to walk into a feature now titled The Return of the Tiger, and John Abraham has been roped in. Now this looks like a fantastic combo. In a chat with me here at Egypt's El Gouna Film Festival, Pandey regrets the fact that while everybody in India is shouting that the tiger must be saved, nobody really cares how and why. Is it because it is a beautiful animal? Is it because it is at the top of the food pyramid ? Pandey feels that a movie with someone as big a star as Abraham and someone with that kind of raw appeal will go a long way in creating an awareness of the pressing need to take care of the tiger. The big cat is absolutely essential to maintain the food chain without which we humans will perish. And since documentaries are passe and nobody really watches them – or they are hardly ever exhibited in commercial theatres (with only Doordarshan showing them and with a 30 minute slot on NDTV) – a feature length work with a big actor like John Abraham seems like a good bet to attract footfalls into the cinemas and help spread a message to save the tiger. Mike himself plans to direct and act in The Return of the Tiger – a story about two men whose adventures in the jungles of India promises to turn out into a fascinating film Drawing on the close encounters with the tiger that Pandey has had in his adult life (even as a boy he lived next to a wildlife sanctuary in Africa), he avers that it is only a celebrity like Abraham who can help to draw the attention of the people and the powers that be. ¡°The idea is to tell a story and pack it with important messages¡±, Pandey contends. The movie will examine a whole lot of issues as two friends (Pandey and Abraham) journey across the narrative through some of India's most dense forests. The core plot deals with the tale of a tigress with three cubs that has strayed outside the reserve area and poachers are around when the two men get into the act to save the animals. Inspired by Pandey's own true adventure that he had along with his brother some years ago, The Return of the Tiger holds the potential to turn into a thrilling wildlife work, fictionalised from fact and culled out of a tragedy that India has been facing for decades. Admittedly, Project Tiger has helped in the multiplication of these wonderfully handsome feline creatures. But poaching still happens and poachers still have better weapons and equipment to outsmart forest guards (poorly paid, often just armed with lathis and not even proper footwear). And, most significantly, poaching has a free run because tiger parts in regions like China and South-East Asia are still mistakenly believed to cure a whole lot of diseases. There is also a belief that soup made out of the tiger penis boosts a sagging male libido! Of course, all this is an absolute lie that the powerful poaching mafia spreads to make its millions from those ignorant or plain simple desperate. Pandey and Abraham will run us through such ridiculous notions to point out that the tiger offers no such health benefits and that it must be allowed to roam the wild without any fear of being shot down. Time, the tiger is allowed to burn bright.
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Other Articles by Gautaman Bhaskaran
Egypt's First Edition of El Gouna Film ... El Gouna Film Festival Opens with Sheikh ... New Egypt's El Gouna Film Festival to Add ... India Stands Shamed after Racial Attacks ... The Dashing Pedro Almodovar to Chair Cannes ...
Gautaman Bhaskaran is a veteran film critic and writer who has covered Cannes and other major international festivals, like Venice, Berlin, Montreal, Melbourne, and Fukuoka over the past two decades. He has been to Cannes alone for 15 years. He has worked in two of India¡¯s leading English newspapers, The Hindu and The Statesman, and is now completing an authorized biography of India¡¯s auteur-director, Adoor Gopalakrishnan. Penguin International will publish the book, whose research was funded by Ford Foundation.
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