Columns

Location Diaries: A dream, realised

This weekly column details the fascinating encounters that often take place on the sets of a film, and this week it is Sei

Rinku Gupta

On a bright day near Tenkasi, actor Nakkhul, playing an actor-turned-ambulance driver in his upcoming film Sei, was shooting for a stunt scene, amid windmills. Action choreographer Stunner Sam had instructed him to get into a giant tusker truck and wait for the shot to commence. “I was thrilled to sit inside it. I’d always dreamed of being in one. My first word as a baby was ‘lorry’. I also had a big collection of trucks and lorries through my childhood," says an excited Nakkhul.

But his joy was shortlived when he started driving it. "I thought I would just have to sit in it. But I was told to drive it and ram it into a jeep filled with stuntmen. I had no idea how to steer such a huge vehicle and was terrified of things going wrong.” He was given a few hours to learn from a lorry driver before the shoot. Despite the lesson, Nakkhul was still nervous. “The eight-gear system is complicated and the brake runs on a vacuum-filled cylinder that needs to be pumped quite a while before it can work. Fortunately, I managed to drive it without any incidents."

Just when he thought things had ended, he was asked to fight some stuntmen while being seated inside the close confines of the truck. He was also further asked to drive it through a barricade. “By the end of the shoot, I was almost cold in nervousness. My childhood obsession was completely destroyed. I now have  great  respect for bus and lorry drivers."

Sathyan Anthikad: Mohanlal burst out laughing when he read the Fahadh Faasil reference in Hridayapoorvam

Tribeny Rai: Even in the absence of men, women carry the burden of patriarchy

Pa Ranjith-backed film selected as Papua New Guinea's first Oscar entry

Anaswara Rajan to star alongside Abishan Jeevinth

Pranav Mohanlal's Dies Irae teaser: Bramayugam director Rahul Sadasivan promises a chilling Halloween experience