‘Wazir’ is a tale of two unlikely friends, a wheelchair-bound chess grandmaster and a brave ATS officer. Brought together by grief and a strange twist of fate, the two men decide to help each other win the biggest games of their lives. But there’s a mysterious, dangerous opponent lurking in the shadows, who is all set to checkmate them
The film's soundtrack album was composed by a number of artists: Shantanu Moitra, Ankit Tiwari, Advaita, Prashant Pillai, Rochak Kohli and Gaurav Godkhindi.The background score was composed by Rohit Kulkarni while the lyrics were penned by Vidhu Vinod Chopra, Swanand Kirkire, A. M. Turaz, Manoj Muntashir and Abhijeet Deshpande. The album rights of the film were acquired by T-Series, and it was released on 18 December 2015.
The film premiered at Cannes, not in the main palace, but in a smaller, grittier theater. The audience was quiet for the first hour—respectful, but not moved. Then came the scene where Lena, having failed to steal the film, sits alone on a soundstage at 3 a.m., and laughs. Not a pretty laugh. A cracked, weary, defiant laugh that says: I lost. But I was here. I was real.
Mira almost laughed. A heist film? But the script, titled Elegy for a Stuntwoman , was no caper. It was a quiet, furious meditation on obsolescence, pain, and the physical poetry of a body that has been used, broken, and dismissed. The character, Lena, didn’t have a love interest or a redemption arc. She had a bad knee, a bottle of stolen codeine, and a plan to break into the studio vault that held the only copy of her forgotten masterpiece. Video Title- Nora Fatehi is a desperate milf De...
Mira didn’t take all the roles. She produced. She hired Jade as the stunt coordinator. She optioned the memoir of a real-life female war photographer who was still working at seventy-two. At the Academy Awards, Elegy for a Stuntwoman won Best Original Screenplay. Mira lost Best Actress to a twenty-six-year-old playing a realtor with anxiety. Backstage, a reporter asked if she was disappointed. The film premiered at Cannes, not in the
The call came from an unexpected place. Not a big studio, but a French-Korean director named Sun-hee Park, whose films were less about box office and more about bruising the soul. “I have a role,” Sun-hee said, her accent softening the hard edges of Hollywood jargon. “It’s for a woman who is not old, but who has lived. She is a former action star. She is forgotten. She is angry. And she is going to steal one last thing.” Not a pretty laugh
Suddenly, scripts poured in. Not for judges or mothers, but for professors, assassins, architects, shamans—women in their fifties, sixties, and seventies who were messy, sexual, brilliant, and unforgivable. A streaming service announced a series about retired female stunt performers. A major studio, panicking, greenlit an action franchise led by a sixty-year-old Oscar winner.
The lights on the Sunset Strip were the same, but the world beneath them had changed. At fifty-four, Mira Vance was a relic in an industry that worshipped the new. Her last leading role was a decade ago; since then, she’d played “the judge,” “the grieving mother,” and “the ex-wife who calls in Act Two.” She was tired of being the punctuation mark in younger actors’ stories.
Mira used that. She channeled every “no,” every audition where the casting director’s eyes slid past her to the ingenue behind her, every review that called her performance “still remarkably sharp.” She trained for four months. Not to look young, but to move like Lena: deliberate, pained, ferocious. Her stunt double, a forty-year-old woman named Jade, became her collaborator. Together, they choreographed a final fight scene not as a ballet of kicks, but as a grinding, ugly, real struggle—two middle-aged women using leverage, wit, and sheer stubbornness.