Bhubaneswar: Hindi film industry star Ajay Devgn Friday released the trailer of the Hindi version of Odia film Daman, a social drama, based on a true incident on Odisha’s malaria elimination drive.
Panorama Studios and JP Motion Pictures will release the movie February 3 in Hindi in theatres across India.
“Jab badhega ek kadam badlaav ki taraf, tab banegi nayi misaal. Presenting the official Hindi trailer of #Daman In cinemas on 3rd Feb, 2023,” Devgn tweeted.
Jab badhega ek kadam badlaav ki taraf, tab banegi nayi misaal.
Presenting the official Hindi trailer of #Daman
In cinemas on 3rd Feb, 2023. https://t.co/4PlqItzN27 @Babushaansai @Dipanwit_7 @Vishgwl @Debiprasadlenk7 @KumarMangat @AbhishekPathakk— Ajay Devgn (@ajaydevgn) January 13, 2023
Written and directed by Vishal Mourya and Debi Prasad Lenka, the film opened in Odisha last year, November 4, was declared tax-free and is still running successfully.
Daman is based on a true incident and traces the journey of Dr Siddharth Mohanty, played by Odia actor Babushaan Mohanty, who has just completed his MBBS from Bhubaneswar, is posted in a remote tribal area in the state’s Malkangiri district.
How he spearheads a drive to eradicate malaria in the 151 villages in Janbai PHC in the tribal-dominated Malkangiri district in spite of many hurdles, forms a moving tale of the film.
“Our film is a true-life story appreciated not only by the common man, but also Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, who believes it will inspire doctors and government officials in remote areas across the country to work selflessly and give an impetus to many such initiatives. Now Ajay sir supporting this small film with a big heart is really a sweet gesture,” said Vishal Mourya.
An acronym for Durgama Anchalare Malaria Nirakarana (Malaria Control in Inaccessible Areas), the drive has produced impressive results in 8,000 villages of 79 blocks of eight highly malaria-endemic southern Odisha district in a short span.
The World Health Organisation’s 2018 World Malaria Report lauded India for being the only country among the 11 highest-burden countries to have shown substantial progress in reducing the disease burden. In 2015, at the East Asia Summit, India had pledged to eliminate malaria by 2030.
“It is important to support inspirational stories like Daman to help support a national cause. Covid-19 had reiterated the age-old maxim ‘health is wealth’, and we should all do our bit to make our country disease free. Films like these are the need of the hour,” asserts Kumar Mangat Pathak, chairman, Panorama Studios, who has produced the film with Deependra Samal of JP Motion Pictures.
Produced by Kumar Mangat Pathak, Abhishek Pathak and Deependra Samal; co-produced by Murlidhar Chhatwani and Pinkis Pradhan, Daman also stars Dipanwit Das Mohapatra and many actors from the tribal community who have acted in a film for the first time.
–IANS