Home > Mumbai > Report

Authentic prison touch for Madhur Bhandarkar's Jail

Anuradha Mane Wadhwani & Gitesh Shelke / PTI
Saturday, November 7, 2009 2:46 IST
Email Email
Print Print
Share Share

Those at the helm of affairs in prisons may have their views on the 'realism' of Madhur Bhandarkar's Jail, which was released on Friday. But none can deny that the clothes worn by the characters in the film are authentic. That is because all the prison costumes carry the 'Made in Yerwada' tag.

In April, authorities at the Yerwada central jail received a request from Bhandarkar Entertainment for tailormade clothes. On April 12 --- just three days later --- over 200 costumes worth Rs50,000 were supplied by the prison. The items included uniforms of superintendents, convicts, undertrials, wardens, night watchmen, warders, cooks and guards.

All the costumes, except for the uniforms of jailers, were stitched using cloth made by Yerwada prison's own textile industry. "The authenticity, detailing, and work would not have come through with any other designer, no matter how much money I paid," Bhandarkar said. "All my actors loved the clothes and felt 'in character'."

Deputy inspector-general of police (prisons) Ravindra Kedari told DNA, that 150 inmates, including women, stitch nearly 5,000 clothes daily for various jails in the state.

"We have a textile mill in the prison which manufactures cloth, khadi and pure cotton," he said. "We usually have the stock of clothes ready and no extra efforts were needed to meet the demand of the film production house."

Kedari said the jail's only condition was that the costumes should be returned later to avoid misuse. "The production house has agreed to do this without claiming back the fees," he said.

Double click an English word for Macmillan Dictionary definition
©2010 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.
digg reddit google Facebook MySpace delicious

City subways remain unused, abused
Bangalore's legendary traffic woes are not unknown to its administrators, which is why they may find it difficult to explain away the plight of its subways.
Girls wanna have fun
Wine connoisseur Shamita Singha hosted a wine appreciation dinner for some of her friends as she took them through a number of wines paired with a four-course meal.

Get daily news in your inbox and read it at your convenience.

D 910