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Sports / Cricket

Tendulkar's life brought to silver screen

Published: 24 May 2017 - 10:30 pm | Last Updated: 12 Nov 2021 - 06:16 am
Peninsula

AFP

Mumbai:  A hotly anticipated film about the life of Indian cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar (pictured) hits cinemas this week but the batting great says he might find watching it an unsettling experience.
"I am used to seeing myself on a big screen inside the stadium, not inside a movie theatre," Tendulkar told ahead of tomorrow's release of "Sachin: A Billion Dreams"
The docudrama, directed by Emmy-nominated British filmmaker James Erskine, took four years to make and traces Tendulkar's life from aspiring cricketer to arguably the greatest batsman of all time.
It features real footage, including clips from his matches and interviews with colleagues and family and present day stars including Virat Kohli and Mahendra Singh Dhoni.
It uses actors to recreate some scenes from the 44-year-old's childhood in Mumbai.
Tendulkar, who played 200 Test matches and enjoys an almost god-like status in cricket-mad India, consented to the biopic but admitted that letting the cameras into his family life didn't come naturally.
"Being a private person I always believed I should let my bat do the talking, stay focused on the game and give all my energy over there," said the "Little Master" in an interview.
"There are personal moments in the film and some family footage. I know fans want to see something more than what they have in the last 24 years. Nobody knows what was going on in my mind at that time so we have spoken a lot about highs and lows and the line between me, my family and fans," he added.
The right-hander made his debut for India aged just 16 in 1989 and broke almost every batting record possible before retiring from professional cricket in 2013.
The former Indian captain is the only cricketer to have scored 100 international centuries and is the highest run scorer in international cricket with more than 34,000 runs.
Tendulkar published his autobiography in 2014 and there isn't much that cricket fans don't know about him.
But Erskine, who has made several acclaimed sports films, insists the docudrama will reveal new aspects about his life.
"You might know the stats, you might know how he performed in certain matches, but you don't know what happens when he goes off-stage, in his house -- his private life, his hopes, dreams, his highs and sorrows," he said.