Mother Teresa and Me, directed by Kamal Musale, will debut in English and Hindi on May 5. Actresses Jacqueline Fitschi-Cornaz, Deepti Naval, and Debashree Chakraborty unveiled the trailer on Thursday at the Oberoi Grand Hotel in Kolkata. Jacqueline Fritschi-Cornaz and Deepti Naval play important roles alongside Banita Sandhu. produced by Kavita Teresa Film (Ltd), Les Films du Lotus (Sàrl), and Curry Western Movies (Pvt Ltd).
“Mother Teresa & Me” is the inspiring tale of three remarkable people whose lives are impacted by love, compassion, and hope. The film, directed by Swiss-Indian filmmaker Kamal Musale follows the Mother’s life from the 1950s onwards as it intersects with the lives of two other Indian protagonists.
The film shows how Mother Teresa established a hospice close to the Kalighat temple in an abandoned structure and the early resistance she encountered from a number of sources.
It appeared as though a younger Mother Teresa had returned when Jacqueline Fitschi-Cornaz strolled through the streets of central Kolkata while dressed in the Missionaries of Charity’s white saree with blue borders.
Cornaz, who was born in Switzerland and played the role of the Nobel Prize-winning nun known as the “saint of the gutters” before her canonization, believes that filming “Mother Teresa & Me” was a “life-changing” experience.
Also Read: Suryadev- The Harbinger of New Year for Bihar
The filmmakers used Kolkata’s streets and locations for some of the filming, but they had to use Mumbai’s interior studios for the inside scenes because the unions in Kolkata made it very expensive for them to shoot the entire story in that city as they would have liked to.
According to Deepti Naval, the film deals with very subtle, intensely felt emotions. She continued, “The importance of change in the movie. I adore OTT platforms, but their lack of control is their one drawback. Women today feel empowered, but they also experience victimization, she continued. There is more violence against women than ever.
Musale noted that in 2007, they published Mother Teresa of Kolkata’s letters, which revealed that she had periods of intense religious pain and doubt.
Mother Teresa and Me, directed by Kamal Musale, will debut in English and Hindi on May 5. Actresses Jacqueline Fitschi-Cornaz, Deepti Naval, and Debashree Chakraborty unveiled the trailer on Thursday at the Oberoi Grand Hotel in Kolkata. Jacqueline Fritschi-Cornaz and Deepti Naval play important roles alongside Banita Sandhu. produced by Kavita Teresa Film (Ltd), Les Films du Lotus (Sàrl), and Curry Western Movies (Pvt Ltd).
“Mother Teresa & Me” is the inspiring tale of three remarkable people whose lives are impacted by love, compassion, and hope. The film, directed by Swiss-Indian filmmaker Kamal Musale follows the Mother’s life from the 1950s onwards as it intersects with the lives of two other Indian protagonists.
The film shows how Mother Teresa established a hospice close to the Kalighat temple in an abandoned structure and the early resistance she encountered from a number of sources.
It appeared as though a younger Mother Teresa had returned when Jacqueline Fitschi-Cornaz strolled through the streets of central Kolkata while dressed in the Missionaries of Charity’s white saree with blue borders.
Cornaz, who was born in Switzerland and played the role of the Nobel Prize-winning nun known as the “saint of the gutters” before her canonization, believes that filming “Mother Teresa & Me” was a “life-changing” experience.
Also Read: Suryadev- The Harbinger of New Year for Bihar
The filmmakers used Kolkata’s streets and locations for some of the filming, but they had to use Mumbai’s interior studios for the inside scenes because the unions in Kolkata made it very expensive for them to shoot the entire story in that city as they would have liked to.
According to Deepti Naval, the film deals with very subtle, intensely felt emotions. She continued, “The importance of change in the movie. I adore OTT platforms, but their lack of control is their one drawback. Women today feel empowered, but they also experience victimization, she continued. There is more violence against women than ever.
Musale noted that in 2007, they published Mother Teresa of Kolkata’s letters, which revealed that she had periods of intense religious pain and doubt.
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