Renji panicker biography definition
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Renji Panicker
Indian rulle actor, director and scriptwriter
Renji Panicker | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1960-09-23) 23 September 1960 (age 64) Nedumudi, Kerala, India |
| Other names | Renji |
| Occupations |
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| Years active | 1990–present |
| Spouse | Aneeta Marium Thomas |
| Children | 2 |
Renji Panicker (born 23 September 1960[1]) is an Indian actor, screenwriter, director, film producer, and reporter known for his works in Malayalam films. He made his debut as a director with Bharatchandran IPS in 2005.[2]
Early life
[edit]He did B.Com from SD College, Alappuzha and certificate in Journalism from Press Club, Thiruvananthapuram. He earned MCJ from Kerala University.[3]
Career
[edit]Panicker began his career as a reporter. He started off as a reporter for magazines and publications. During an interview, while working for Chithrabhumi, a film
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i shuffled on saavn and got mohe rang do laal which …. thats a HUGE L for me but instead of this being a historical movie they’re all going to be WORKING on one because …ya. anyways!
Prithviraj is a first time producer from a film family, a former failed actor who is now on a mission to win a National Award before his elder brother (a successful actor who never shows up on screen) and has determined that producing is his only path to fame, success and self-respect.
Shobana is a yester-years (so like … she’s 50) superstar who has been trying to get into directing for the last 10 years without luck – she has a few indie flicks to her name, but reviewers comment that she work lacks passion. “There is a story she is waiting to tell” they say, “but this isn’t it.”
When Shobana is in college she falls in love with a young man she finds in the library, who she discovers to be
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Renji Panicker regrets writing gender insensitive dialogues, Rima Kallingal lauds his statement
In a recent interview, Malayalam director and writer Renji Panicker revealed he regrets every gender or caste insensitive line that he wrote for films. In a response to a question about his film The King (starring Mammootty), where the character is seen being insensitive towards a woman, Renji said, “I feel I shouldn’t have written it. When I wrote it, I never thought of belittling women or even degrading the gender, it was just contextual for the film. Those who clapped for those lines have later found it disturbing.”
He continues, “If I knew what I was writing based on a situation will have a different interpretation in the future, I wouldn’t have written it. Definitely, I regret it.” He further added that it wasn’t his objective to make women ‘uncomfortable’ and that due to t