This is one of my all time favorite books, and a movie version has the potential to be spectacular (although lots of stuff would have to be cut out). Here's hoping it gets done justice...
By Etan Vlessing
TORONTO (Hollywood Reporter) - Canadian director Deepa Mehta is collaborating with Salman Rushdie on a big-screen adaptation of the author's 1981 historical novel "Midnight's Children."
The book, which earned Rushdie the prestigious Booker literary prize, portrays the history of India from 1910 to a declared state of emergency in 1976. The story is narrated by a young man born on the stroke of midnight August 15, 1947, the day India won independence from Britain.
Toronto-based Mehta and Rushdie will co-write the screenplay, and they hope to have cameras rolling in 2010.
Indian actors Shabana Azmi and Nandita Das, who starred in two earlier Mehta films, "Fire" and "Earth," are on board to star in the project.
Both Mehta and Rushdie were born in India, with the filmmaker eventually moving to Canada and the novelist to Britain.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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