"Essentially a tale of children growing up into boys, 'Open Tee Bioscope' has the spirit of 60s classics like Dhonni Meye but is conemporary and fresh in content and style," the Vicky Donor maker told PTI on location set of the movie here.
"When we discussed the film first, after 'Aparajita Tumi', I cited to Anindyo examples of old classics including 'Dhonni Meye' which centred on football, human emotions, traditional kolkata and its people while contemporizing it with present day tale of the adolescent," Shoojit said.
Shoojit, who had made his first foray in Bengali film production in Aniruddha Roychoudhury's 'Aparajita Tumi', said "Open Tee Bioscope is obviously poles apart from the former in content, look and execution. When I take up a film the story line has to be intriguing first. And the story of a boy growing up into a man, with first puff, crushes, stealing glance of girls of his age, taking part in para tournament, rivalry and all always fascinating if told in a fresh way," he said.
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The film, to be extensively shot in the lanes, alleys and a prominent park in north Kolkata, where para football tourneys hold centre stage, will have autographical references of the director-producer duo, the last one still yearning for those days when he was a lanky 14-year old hired by para football clubs for local tourneys with the promise of tiffin and travel expenses and looking out for excuses to escape the prying eye of mother who insisted he stayed back home.
Anindyo a.K.A Ajit, the much-acclaimed sleuth accomplice of Bomkesh Bakshi in Satyaneswi, said the film was a peek into an adolescent boy's psyche groomed in traditional milieu of a north Kolkata para where every single day calls for celebration of sorts.