Mythri Movie Makers celebrated Prabhas’ birthday with a grand reveal — the title and first-look poster of his latest film, Fauzi, directed by Hanu Raghavapudi. With the caption reading “PrabhasHanu is FAUZI – the bravest tale of a soldier from the hidden chapters of our history,” the makers have set the tone for an epic, deeply patriotic saga rooted in India’s colonial past.
Fauzi promises to be more than just another cinematic spectacle. The poster, layered with Mahabharata-inspired visuals, features Sanskrit verses drawing mythical parallels — Arjuna defying the padmavyuha, Karna standing beside the Pandavas, Ekalavya striving without his guru. These references aren’t mere backdrop; they signal the film’s intent to reimagine forgotten heroism through a contemporary lens, positioning Prabhas as a lone warrior-chieftain leading an unsung unit from 1940s India.
The team behind Fauzi is as formidable as its subject matter. The film unites Raghavapudi’s flair for emotional storytelling with the grandeur of Mythri Movie Makers’ production scale. Veteran names like Mithun Chakraborty, Jaya Prada, and Anupam Kher join the ensemble, while Vishal Chandrasekhar composes the score and Sudeep Chatterjee captures the visuals. With editing by Kotagiri Venkateswara Rao and design supervision by Kamalakannan, every credit suggests a film made to echo on the big screen.
But the launch wasn’t without controversy. Soon after the reveal, social media erupted with debates surrounding the female lead, Imanvi. Certain users questioned her origins, falsely labeling her Pakistani and calling for a boycott. Imanvi swiftly clarified she is an Indian-American born in the U.S., yet the uproar reflects the uneasy undercurrent of cross-border sensitivities that still ripple through online film chatter.
Despite the noise, excitement dominates the conversation. Fans are eager to see Prabhas in a grounded, heroic role again — one steeped in sacrifice and valor rather than mere spectacle. Fauzi may well turn out to be the comeback narrative that brings emotional depth back into his megastar image.