Knock Doors

Mahabharat By Br Chopra May 2026

The year was 1988. Doordarshan, India’s only television channel, was a stern, black-and-white window into a nation still finding its post-independence feet. But in a cluttered office in Mumbai, a 74-year-old filmmaker named B.R. Chopra was about to attempt something audacious.

The production was a war itself. The budget was a pittance. The “grand palace of Hastinapur” was a painted canvas. The “Kurukshetra war” was shot in a dusty Rajasthan quarry with 100 junior artists, not 100,000. The special effects for divine weapons were achieved by double-exposing film and drawing glowing chakras on animation cels. Once, a young assistant accidentally set the tent of the war-drummers on fire. As the crew panicked, B.R. Chopra yelled, “Don’t put it out! Roll the camera! This is the burning of the Lakshagraha house of lac!” mahabharat by br chopra

Chopra simply smiled. He had spent years reading the epic, from the Sanskrit slokas to C. Rajagopalachari’s crisp prose. He knew it wasn't just a story of gods and demons; it was a story of a dysfunctional family, of greed, of duty, and of a dice game that destroyed a kingdom. He told his son, Ravi Chopra (the director), “We will not show flying gods. We will show human beings trying to find God in the middle of their own failures.” The year was 1988

Across India, a billion people sat in stunned silence. Then, the phones rang. The temple bells began to chime. People stepped out onto their balconies and burst into applause—not for the actors, but for the story. For themselves. Chopra was about to attempt something audacious

B.R. Chopra, watching the frenzy from his edit suite, realized he wasn't just making entertainment. He was stitching a fractured nation back together. In an era of regional divides and political turmoil, a housewife in Tamil Nadu and a farmer in Punjab were crying for the same Karna. The serial became the Sarvadharam Stupa (all-faiths prayer) that the characters in the show spoke of.