Kamal Hassan's much-awaited kollywood flick "Dasavatharam", in which he is donning 10 different roles, is expected to be released in early April.
The movie was originally slated for a release on Pongal on January 15.
"The post-production work is still on and it may take some time. The film is expected to be released on April 10," (three days ahead of the Tamil new year), sources said.
The actor, who also speaks ten different dictions in the film, has decided to keep away from the media till the release of the film, the sources added.
The actor has penned the movie's screenplay and dialogue too.
The Tamil audience will also get to see bollywood damsel Mallika Sherawat in the film.
Though she had earlier done an item number in Maniratnam's "Guru", it was only a dubbed version, and `Dasavatharam' could well mark her first direct entry into Kollywood.
The film is directed by K S Ravi Kumar, who had earlier directed Kamal in the rib-tickler, "Panchathanthiram."
`Dasavatharam,' meaning the ten incarnations of Lord Mahavishnu, also marks the Kollywood debut of Himesh Reshammiya, on whose tunes bollywood has been swinging for the past few years.
A stickler to the saying "variety is the spice of life," Kamal, as he is fondly called, has tried many an experiment with the looks of his characters, especially the old man in `Indian' (`Hindustani' in Hindi) the old woman in `Avvai Shanmugi' (Chachi 420 in Hindi) and the "I-met-with an accident" face in his critically acclaimed "Anbe Sivam," directed by Sundar C.
A hero who never shies away from experimenting both with the script and looks, Kamal had did the same thing with "Virumaandi", his home production, which also ran into some controversy with a political party claiming that the original title, "Sandiyar," would inspire the youth in villages to openly wield the traditional weapons in the name of chivalry.
Buckling to pressure, the actor-director renamed the film as "Virumaandi" after the lead character. But his moustache in the film went on to be popularly branded as "Virumaandi Meesai," (Virumaandi moustache) in Tamil Nadu.
The movie was originally slated for a release on Pongal on January 15.
"The post-production work is still on and it may take some time. The film is expected to be released on April 10," (three days ahead of the Tamil new year), sources said.
The actor, who also speaks ten different dictions in the film, has decided to keep away from the media till the release of the film, the sources added.
The actor has penned the movie's screenplay and dialogue too.
The Tamil audience will also get to see bollywood damsel Mallika Sherawat in the film.
Though she had earlier done an item number in Maniratnam's "Guru", it was only a dubbed version, and `Dasavatharam' could well mark her first direct entry into Kollywood.
The film is directed by K S Ravi Kumar, who had earlier directed Kamal in the rib-tickler, "Panchathanthiram."
`Dasavatharam,' meaning the ten incarnations of Lord Mahavishnu, also marks the Kollywood debut of Himesh Reshammiya, on whose tunes bollywood has been swinging for the past few years.
A stickler to the saying "variety is the spice of life," Kamal, as he is fondly called, has tried many an experiment with the looks of his characters, especially the old man in `Indian' (`Hindustani' in Hindi) the old woman in `Avvai Shanmugi' (Chachi 420 in Hindi) and the "I-met-with an accident" face in his critically acclaimed "Anbe Sivam," directed by Sundar C.
A hero who never shies away from experimenting both with the script and looks, Kamal had did the same thing with "Virumaandi", his home production, which also ran into some controversy with a political party claiming that the original title, "Sandiyar," would inspire the youth in villages to openly wield the traditional weapons in the name of chivalry.
Buckling to pressure, the actor-director renamed the film as "Virumaandi" after the lead character. But his moustache in the film went on to be popularly branded as "Virumaandi Meesai," (Virumaandi moustache) in Tamil Nadu.
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