Soorma
2018

Soorma

The film is based on the real-life story of Sandeep Singh (played by Diljit Dosanjh), a former captain of the Indian Hockey Team who created a sensation in the world of hockey with his drag flick. Sandeep falls in love with Harpreet Kaur (Taapsee Pannu), who is a hockey player, and decides to join the training. However, the coach, who is Harpreet’s uncle, takes a dislike to him and sets impossible tasks for his training. Sandeep is brutalised for months but does not give up. Bikram's older brother (Angad Bedi), who is also a good hockey player, fails to make it to the national team. Meanwhile, Sandeep is also unable to make any headway in his training. One day, Bikram accidentally learns that Sandeep is exceptionally good at the drag flick shot. He introduces him to a coach in Patiala. Sandeep becomes part of the National Hockey Team and scores several goals in international competitions. His marriage is fixed with Harpreet. However, in a tragic accident, he gets shot in the back and becomes paralysed. The rest of the film shows how he fights to get back on his feet after intensive treatment in the Netherlands and plays for the country to make it a winning team in International Hockey. 

Locations in Europe: Serbia
Storyline
  • Director/Producer: Directed by Shaad Ali, Produced by Sony Pictures, Deepak Singh, and Chitrangda Singh
    Line Producer/Executive Producer:
    Line Producers: Alek Conic, Kartik R. Iyer, Rohit Phale, Executive Producers: Shaad Ali, Siva Ananth, Priyesh Kaushik, Pranjal Khandhdiya
    Star(s): Diljit Dosanjh, Taapsee Pannu
    Songs/Dance: India, Bulgaria
    Indian/ International Crew: For the sequences shot in Belgrade, local crew was hired. The decision to shoot in Serbia was based on economic reasons as Netherlands would have been far more expensive.
    Language: Hindi


    Film Location Analysis

    By Shikha Jhingan

    The European location of Serbia was used for two sequences in the film. The fluid architecture of Belgrade allowed it to stand in for other locations in Europe. In this film, Belgrade was chosen to represent the Netherlands. When Sandeep gets injured in a firearm accident that affects his spine, doctors advise him to go to the Netherlands for intensive treatment. Instead of shooting in the Netherlands, the production team decided to shoot in Serbia. The decision to ‘cheat’ was driven by budgetary concerns since Belgrade was a cheaper option.

    The Belgrade Fortress and the Petrovaradin Fortress were dressed up to convey a rehabilitation centre where Sandeep receives his treatment. The sequence is built over a background song that describes Sandeep as a ‘Pardesiya," or one who is an outsider. By moving between interior shots of the rehabilitation centre where Sandeep is undergoing his treatment and exterior shots of a beautiful space around the building where Sandeep is shown in a wheelchair, the song highlights his loneliness and despair. The clock tower of the Petrovaradin Fortress is dramatically placed in the background as we see Sandeep in his wheelchair framed against a leafless tree. Visually, the exterior locations place Sandeep in relation to other people who are shown cycling, jogging, and enjoying group sports to heighten his sense of isolation. In one sequence, a group of young men are shown playing throw ball while moving their wheelchairs in a circle. The camera starts moving, expanding the frame to include Sandeep in his wheelchair, immobile and lost. In another shot, we see Sandeep being wheeled around with a view of the Danube river. These shots are intercut with Preet (Taapsee Pannu), who is also in Europe representing India as a hockey player. The mood of the song is solemn, as Sandeep and Preet have been separated from each other because of the accident. These shots were also filmed in Serbia. We see a lonesome Preet at the Republic Square with the National Museum in the background, St. Mark’s Church, and the Pedestrian zone in Belgrade.

    The song shows Sandeep responding to the treatment. It concludes with a montage sequence that shows him sitting on a bench on a grassy slope with the wheelchair in the foreground. As the camera cranes in, Sandeep gets up and starts walking towards the wheel chair. Over the next few shots, the landscape starts expanding to include the view of the Danube river. Sandeep walks towards the wheelchair, but instead of sitting on it, he starts walking away with quicker movements of his feet. The last shot provides a panoramic view of the beautiful landscape.

    Sharmishta Roy, the art director of Soorma, told us that a production designer for the sequence was hired locally to dress up the sets so the space could look like a rehab centre. The Indian film crew carried some props (ethnic objects) to dress up Sandeep’s hospital bed. Sandeep’s jersey from the Indian hockey team, No. 13, can be seen hanging in the room to add to the visual density of the scene and his struggle to win back his status on the team.

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