'Baahubali' Gave Me The Courage To Return To India: Praveena Paruchuri On Directing 'Kothapallilo Okappudu'

The debut filmmaker reflects on Telugu cinema’s emotional legacy, its global rise, and the responsibility of storytelling.

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: SEP 11, 2025, 11:24 IST|5 min read
Rana Daggubati and Praveena Paruchuri
Rana Daggubati and Praveena Paruchuri

Praveena Paruchuri, who produced Venkatesh Maha's acclaimed 2018 film C/o Kancharapalem, is returning to Telugu cinema as a filmmaker with Kothapallilo Okappudu on July 18. The film is produced by Gopalakrishna Paruchuri (Praveena's father) and presented by Rana Daggubati. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter India, Paruchuri called Baahubali a trendsetter. “It was the movie that gave me the courage to come to India," she said. Paruchuri, who is a practising cardiologist in the US, came back to India for her film. "Baahubali showed that a Telugu film could go to the global box office. Baahubali Part 2 was the number two highest-grossing film at the US global box office.”

That shift in scale helped Praveena imagine a return to India not just geographically but creatively. “I'm more excited about bringing films like this to the general Telugu audience because I see myself in them,” she said. “So if I exist, they have to exist.” Praveena grew up watching Telugu films and holds them close for more than just nostalgia. “I was living in Queens [New York] away from all of this, and in a way, my parents used Telugu cinema to teach me values. Indian values. Our values.”

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She believes stories can carry meaning beyond the screen. “I believe in art, and I believe that when you do art for the right reasons, it becomes something lasting. Whether it’s a film or a song or a painting, it’s about depth of feeling, and that can move another person.” Filmmaking, for Paruchuri, is a form of responsibility. “A lot of modern filmmakers say, ‘It’s not my responsibility.’ That happens in the West, too. But when you create something seen by so many people, especially young people and children, it becomes your responsibility whether you want it or not.”

Speaking about juggling being a practising doctor and a filmmaker, she said it was a balancing act. "America allows you to make this possible. I am grateful for being a doctor, but I love making films. I like characters and conflict because I do see people when they are their most vulnerable." Daggubati observed how Paruchuri was an example of the love people hold for cinema. "The medium of being a filmmaker allows you to do this. It is important for local stories to be told in a slightly global manner. The world is also open today, and there is so much love for wanting to know more. Filmmakers like her, who have been around the world and understand different languages, are able to tell such stories."

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Watch our full interview with Rana Daggubati and Praveena Paruchuri dropping on The Hollywood Reporter India's YouTube channel soon.

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