Vivek Agnihotri's next film titled 'Operation Sindoor'
The film will be based on the book ‘Operation Sindoor: The Untold Story of India's Deep Strikes Inside Pakistan’ by Lt Gen K.J.S. 'Tiny' Dhillon (Retd).
PTI
-
'Operation Sindoor' will be directed by Vivek Agnihotri and produced by Bhushan Kumar's productions (Screengrab)
Mumbai, 26 Mar
Bhushan Kumar and Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri on
Thursday announced their new film ‘Operation Sindoor’, which, they said, draws
inspiration from the codename of India’s targeted military strikes on terror
infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir following the Pahalgam
terror attack.
The film will be based on the book ‘Operation
Sindoor: The Untold Story of India's Deep Strikes Inside Pakistan’ by Lt Gen
K.J.S. 'Tiny' Dhillon (Retd).
Agnihotri will direct the film. The film
will be produced by Kumar's T-Series and Agnihotri's I Am Budha Productions.
The makers said the film is inspired by
India's targeted military strikes on terror infrastructure in Pakistan and
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, marking a defining moment of strategic resolve, courage,
and precision in India’s history.
They called the film a cinematic response
to the tragic massacre of innocent civilians, most of them tourists, in
Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir, in 2025, in which 26 people, mostly tourists, were
killed.
"Some stories are not chosen, they
choose you. Operation Sindoor is one such story—one that demands to be told
with honesty, courage, and responsibility. This is not just a film. It is a
revelation. When a nation goes through events of such magnitude, it becomes
important to document them truthfully,” Kumar said in a statement.
Director-producer Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri
added, “This is not just a film. It is a revelation. With Operation Sindoor,
India has not just taken revenge for the Pahalgam terror attack and punished
Pakistan, but it has also demonstrated its might in modern warfare.
"We have conducted extensive,
ground-level research in collaboration with multiple wings of the Indian Armed
Forces to understand not just what happened, but how and why it happened. What
emerges is a reality far more complex, far more precise, and far more
unsettling than what is available in the public domain."
Agnihotri, known for films such as ‘The
Kashmir Files’, ‘The Tashkent Files’ and ‘The Bengal Files’, said he has always
believed in telling stories that are uncomfortable but necessary.
"My effort is to bring this story of
courage, professionalism, and strategic clarity to audiences with authenticity,
while also presenting it as an edge-of-the-seat cinematic experience. My intention
is not to create noise, but to confront it—with facts, with clarity, and the
magic of cinema.”
Further details on the movie will be
unveiled shortly.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *




