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Director Radha Krishna Jagarlamudi, better known as Krish, finally opened up on all the speculation and controversies regarding his feud with Kangana Ranaut and his ouster from ‘Manikarnika’, the Rani Laxmibai epic saga which seems to have been more exciting behind the scenes than on screen.

Excerpts from an interview:

Q. A lot of speculation about how much of ‘Manikarnika‘ have you directed?

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A. Do you mean what you see on screen? I saw the film. I’d say more than 70 per cent is mine. I remained quiet until the release. I had to remain quiet for the sake of the film and for the entire team which worked so hard on the film. But now if I don’t speak about what Kangana did to the film I’d be doing a disservice to all our hard work. Many people advised me to talk after the film was taken away from me. I’d say what I directed was pure gold. Kangana turned it into silver.

Director Krish On Manikarnika: “What Nonsense Is Kangana Ranaut Talking? I Shot 95% Of The Film”

Q. Why did you leave the film when it was on the verge of completion?

A. You know, every time I am asked this, my heart sinks to the ground. Let me say this outright. I did not leave the film incomplete. I left it when it was almost complete. I shot ‘Manikarnika‘ for 109 days whereas I completed NTR biopic in half that time. Then we did the dubbing post-production, everything for ‘Manikarnika‘. Only then did I move to my other commitment (the NTR biopic). For me the film was complete. Everyone had dubbed except Kangana.

Q. Then what happened?

A. Once I finished she promised to do some patchwork completely under my guidance. She promised she’d shoot for 4-5 days extra and send me all details of the shooting. No such thing happened. And she says she had to re-shoot many portions because my cinematographer Gnana Shekhar had not done a good job. What nonsense is she talking?! Every actor, every technician gave their life and breath to their film.

Q. This film seems to have taken from you more than it has given?

A. At the end of the day, it is my baby. I have seen the film. And I am relieved that the grandeur vision and scale that I imagined for the film remains intact. The climax in Jaipur (doubling up for Gwalior) was shot entirely by me. I charged half of the fee that I get for my Telugu films as I wanted to be a part of this historical attempt to bring Rani Laxmibai’s story to screen. This is the highest number of days I’ve shot for any film. And I’ve directed complex costume dramas like ‘Kanche’ and ‘Gautamiputra Satarkarni’. In ‘Kanche’ I had shot five war scenes. So I know the complexities of shooting a period film. We shot a huge battle scene in Hyderabad. We shot in Jaipur and Jodhpur. The film was supposed to release on August 15, 2018. I completed the film in June, only a small portion remained which we agreed to shoot later and then I had to direct the NTR biopic since the director who was supposed to do that project was shifted out. Then that whole thing with Sonu Sood happened.