Michelin-star chef Vikas Khanna says he is amazed that he made his directorial debut "The Last Color" without any training in filmmaking.
Set in the ancient Indian city of Varanasi, the film follows a 70-year-old widow Noor, played by actor Neena Gupta, and her special bond with 9-year old Chhoti (Aqsa Siddiqui), a homeless girl who aspires to go to school and makes ends meet by performing stunts as a tight-rope walker and selling flowers.
"I'm a trained chef, not a filmmaker. Yet people have said that the film moves very organically and nobody can take away the fact that it is so original," Khanna told PTI in an interview here.
Khanna said the movie is about "pure love" and highlights a serious issue, the condition of widows in India.
"The film had a message of hope. Holi is a festival of spring, we took that away from them, we took away spring from the widows when they were not allowed to celebrate the festival of colours."
"People have showered their love on me ever since the movie has come. It moves people and they feel it is their movie. Growing up we always felt that movie making is magical. Now people see that if I can make a movie, anybody can make a movie."