Being one of the prominent religious and spiritual centres of India for centuries, Varanasi was one of the key destinations for Freeman.
"I found Varanasi extremely fascinating... I was going over the pictures, the ambience in Varanasi is extraordinary. It is the holiest of holy cities in India on the holiest river in India. Learning that reincarnation, you can bypass it in Varanasi, did you know that? That was news to me," Freeman told PTI in an interview over phone from the US.
"...The thing I really could not put my mind around was the traffic. You've got everything that's mobile - cows, donkeys, dogs, children, old people, cabs, trucks, those little tick-ticks, tuck-tuck trucks, they're all there and traffic sometimes stops, but it never really stops. I don't know how they do that.
"There were no lights, there were no guides. It just keeps going. How in the world do they do that? You don't see people lying alongside road having been run over, you don't see dead dogs or chickens lying in the road having been run over, everything manages to function on the roads."
The "Million Dollar Baby" star has collaborated with director Lori McCreary and James Younger for the second time after "Through the Wormhole" to explore the existential questions.