<p>Sunil Kumar Desai, maverick filmmaker and master of the Kannada suspense thriller genre, is back after three years with Udgharsha.</p>.<p>The Kannada-Telugu bilingual, also dubbed into Tamil and Malayalam, is hitting screens this Friday.</p>.<p>Desai, who hasn’t given a major hit since Sparsha (2000), is upbeat about Udgharsha.</p>.<p>In an interview with <em>Metrolife</em>, Desai looks back at his journey in the Kannada film industry.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>You are back </strong><strong>after</strong><strong> three years...</strong></p>.<p>I am back after a gap. I am doing a suspense thriller after 14 years. I planned Udgharsha three years ago and began working on it a year and a half ago. I’ve successfully overcome all</p>.<g class="gr_ gr_99 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_disable_anim_appear Style multiReplace" data-gr-id="99" id="99">has</g>.<p>hurdles.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Is Udgharsha your own story or is it inspired by anything you’ve seen?</strong></p>.<p>It’s my own story. I thought of a murder. Then wove circumstances around it. It took a year for me to write it. I changed it 12 times.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>You haven’t tasted success after Sparsha. Reasons?</strong></p>.<p>I don’t know. Whether I failed to understand the industry or the industry failed to understand me is a mystery. No one came forward to produce the kind of films I wanted to direct. My conscience didn’t permit me to direct films the producers wanted.</p>.<p><br /><strong>Why didn’t you direct anything like Nammoora Mandara Hoove, Tarka and Beladingala Bale, which brought you fame and also did well at the box office?</strong></p>.<p>I always wanted to do such films. There is one such subject that I will be taking up in future. It’s neither a suspense thriller nor a love story. It’s the most violent love story which thrills. I plan to do it in seven languages. I may launch it this year end. Its fate depends on Udgharsha’s success.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Did you restrict yourself to a particular genre and fail to grow beyond it?</strong></p>.<p>My Marma, Utkarsha are Udgharsha are unrelated. So also Tarka, Sangharsha and Nishkarsha. I have tried different genres. There’s also Nammoora Mandaara Hoove, Beladingala Baale, Sparsha, Prathyartha and Re.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Do you feel you have been underutilised in the industry?</strong></p>.<p>The pain that I couldn’t do anything for long intervals will stay with me till my death. In the last 15 years, I have not been able to do projects I had dreamt of. It could be my mistake. It could be fate. I would be more fulfilled had I given at least 10 films.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Where were you lost all these years?</strong></p>.<p>I am unable to understand what happened to me. I don’t know why, where, when and how it happened.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Which of your films has satisfied you?</strong></p>.<p>Undoubtedly Beladingala Bale. Normally, I don’t write screenplays for others’ stories. Here, I did, and used the novel by Yandamuri Veerendranath.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Is Desai’s best yet to come?</strong></p>.<p>I have four subjects. My best will be 10 times higher in terms of everything. It will draw attention at the national level.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Any offers from other states?</strong></p>.<p>After the trailer of Udgharsha was released, offers have come from Tamil and Hindi producers. I had received no offers in the last 10 years.</p>
<p>Sunil Kumar Desai, maverick filmmaker and master of the Kannada suspense thriller genre, is back after three years with Udgharsha.</p>.<p>The Kannada-Telugu bilingual, also dubbed into Tamil and Malayalam, is hitting screens this Friday.</p>.<p>Desai, who hasn’t given a major hit since Sparsha (2000), is upbeat about Udgharsha.</p>.<p>In an interview with <em>Metrolife</em>, Desai looks back at his journey in the Kannada film industry.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>You are back </strong><strong>after</strong><strong> three years...</strong></p>.<p>I am back after a gap. I am doing a suspense thriller after 14 years. I planned Udgharsha three years ago and began working on it a year and a half ago. I’ve successfully overcome all</p>.<g class="gr_ gr_99 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_disable_anim_appear Style multiReplace" data-gr-id="99" id="99">has</g>.<p>hurdles.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Is Udgharsha your own story or is it inspired by anything you’ve seen?</strong></p>.<p>It’s my own story. I thought of a murder. Then wove circumstances around it. It took a year for me to write it. I changed it 12 times.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>You haven’t tasted success after Sparsha. Reasons?</strong></p>.<p>I don’t know. Whether I failed to understand the industry or the industry failed to understand me is a mystery. No one came forward to produce the kind of films I wanted to direct. My conscience didn’t permit me to direct films the producers wanted.</p>.<p><br /><strong>Why didn’t you direct anything like Nammoora Mandara Hoove, Tarka and Beladingala Bale, which brought you fame and also did well at the box office?</strong></p>.<p>I always wanted to do such films. There is one such subject that I will be taking up in future. It’s neither a suspense thriller nor a love story. It’s the most violent love story which thrills. I plan to do it in seven languages. I may launch it this year end. Its fate depends on Udgharsha’s success.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Did you restrict yourself to a particular genre and fail to grow beyond it?</strong></p>.<p>My Marma, Utkarsha are Udgharsha are unrelated. So also Tarka, Sangharsha and Nishkarsha. I have tried different genres. There’s also Nammoora Mandaara Hoove, Beladingala Baale, Sparsha, Prathyartha and Re.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Do you feel you have been underutilised in the industry?</strong></p>.<p>The pain that I couldn’t do anything for long intervals will stay with me till my death. In the last 15 years, I have not been able to do projects I had dreamt of. It could be my mistake. It could be fate. I would be more fulfilled had I given at least 10 films.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Where were you lost all these years?</strong></p>.<p>I am unable to understand what happened to me. I don’t know why, where, when and how it happened.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Which of your films has satisfied you?</strong></p>.<p>Undoubtedly Beladingala Bale. Normally, I don’t write screenplays for others’ stories. Here, I did, and used the novel by Yandamuri Veerendranath.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Is Desai’s best yet to come?</strong></p>.<p>I have four subjects. My best will be 10 times higher in terms of everything. It will draw attention at the national level.</p>.<p class="Question"><strong>Any offers from other states?</strong></p>.<p>After the trailer of Udgharsha was released, offers have come from Tamil and Hindi producers. I had received no offers in the last 10 years.</p>