From seeking justice to battling zombies and befriending dogs, these movies on OTT illustrate the incredible variety of stories Indian filmmakers can tell.
A school dropout from Thalassery in Kerala, Njattyela Sreedharan spent 25 years writing a unique dictionary with four Dravidian languages — Malayalam, Tamil, Kannada, and Telugu.
The Mysuru man catalogued 6000 coins, excavated a Mauryan city in Brahmagiri called ‘Isila’ and was also responsible for discovering Shahji’s (Shivaji’s father) tomb.
Until three years ago, 12-year-old Karan would be continuously scolded by his parents and teachers for his inability to read and write in English. Today, he happily attends his school, and can read and write, thanks to Dr Nandini's research!
"What is that in Vyomaganga? It is not the moon because it is quite bright; not the sun because it is night; it is the internal fire in the water/ocean," reads a verse from an ancient text.
The Rajya Sabha Chairman announced that members will be able to speak in any of the 22 scheduled languages, as speaking in their own mother tongues is most comfortable for all.
"What is the purpose of every human being born in this world? Is it not to lift mankind a little higher towards perfection?", Snehalatha Reddy wrote in prison.
Rabijita Gogoi took up direction at a time when there were very few women directors in India. After directing close to 25 plays in a host of Indian Languages, she is back in Assam for a permanent stint.
Priced at ₹10, the affordable, monthly, monochromatic magazine truly embodies the phrase, ‘For the people, by the people’ and reaches out to people living in slums across nine city corporation limits in Karnataka.