Raj Nidimoru: 'I Don’t Believe That DK and I Should Make Spectacle Films'

The filmmaker on staying grounded in storytelling and how streaming changed the game for creators.

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: NOV 11, 2025, 14:06 IST|5 min read
Raj Nidimoru
Raj NidimoruTHR India

Raj Nidimoru, one half of the popular filmmaking duo Raj & DK, doesn’t believe in chasing spectacle for the sake of scale. “I don’t really believe that DK and I should make spectacle films,” he says. “It’s just too much—too many factors come in, too many people to listen to, too many cooks.”

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At the THR India roundtable dissecting 25 years of Indian cinema, Raj said that filmmaking has always been about independence for him. “We started by putting in our own money, our friends’ money and making the film we wanted to make. Once you start making bigger films, you need other people’s help, and that’s when things start to change.”

He points to Shor in the City as an example of small-scale storytelling with big impact. “Even our most indie film, if you play it to anyone, they’ll enjoy it. It’s accessible. It just doesn’t have familiar faces or glossy packaging.” The contrast, he says, is with the high stakes of large productions. “There are so many big budget films that didn’t work. It’s painful to go through a three year journey and then have nothing to show for it.”

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For him, the answer lies in finding ambition. “I believe in smaller or medium films that are apt for the budget but have high ambitions. Stree was that—it was a group experience, where you are laughing and getting scared at the same time. Nobody has to sell their houses to make it.” His focus, he adds, is on “putting all your eggs in the content basket— your story is the only thing that will work.”

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Raj also acknowledges how streaming platforms have reshaped filmmaking itself. “Streaming is amazing for films, filmmakers, actors, everyone,” he says. “Theatres give you a rush, but streaming is where you live with something, discover it later, stay with it.”

For Raj, streaming has not only broadened audiences, but it has also raised the bar. “You can’t make a mediocre film anymore. The audience has seen better shows, so you have to put out something that matches or surpasses that.”

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