

The same year, his couple of friends "urged to catch a de Sica retrospective" at the International Film Festival of India. He then eventually joined the street theatre group, Jana Natya Manch and did many street plays. Owing to his desire to become a scientist, Kashyap went to Delhi for his higher studies and enrolled himself into a zoology course at the Hansraj College ( University of Delhi) he graduated in 1993. Abhinav is also a filmmaker, while Anubhuti has been his assistant in most of his films. Some of the locations used in Gangs of Wasseypur are also influenced from his own old house where he himself lived with his parents, sister Anubhuti Kashyap and brother, Abhinav Kashyap. He did his early schooling in Green School Dehradun and, age eight onwards, at the Scindia School in Gwalior. His father Sri Prakash Singh is a retired Chief Engineer of the Uttar Pradesh Rajya Vidyut Utpadan Nigam Limited and was posted in Obra Thermal Power Station in Sonbhadra district near Varanasi.

Kashyap was born on 10 September 1972 in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh. He is also the co-founder of a film production company, Good Bad Films. The same year, he co-directed India's first Netflix Original series, the crime thriller Sacred Games, based on Vikram Chandra's novel of the same name and the romantic drama Manmarziyaan. His next film was the sports drama Mukkabaaz, which was released in 2018.
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In 2016, Kashyap directed Raman Raghav 2.0, a film inspired by the serial killer Raman Raghav. His next films were the anthology Bombay Talkies (2013), and the drama Ugly (2014).

Kashyap subsequently co-produced the critically acclaimed drama The Lunchbox, and the biographical drama Shahid (both 2013), the former earned him a BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language nomination. Kashyap's prominence increased with the two-part crime drama, Gangs of Wasseypur (2012). His next venture Dev.D (2009), a modern adaptation of Devdas was a critical and commercial success followed by the political drama Gulaal (2009), and the thriller That Girl in Yellow Boots (2011). Kashyap's followup, No Smoking (2007) met with negative reviews and performed poorly at the box-office. Its release was held up for two years by the Central Board of Film Certification because of the pending verdict of the case at that time, but was released in 2007 to widespread critical appreciation. He then went on to direct Black Friday (2004), a film based on the namesake book by Hussain Zaidi about the 1993 Bombay bombings. For his contributions to film, the Government of France awarded him the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Knight of the Order of Arts and letters) in 2013.Īfter writing a television serial, Kashyap got his major break as a co-writer in Ram Gopal Varma's crime drama Satya (1998), and made his directorial debut with Paanch, which never had a theatrical release due to censorship issues. He is the recipient of several accolades, including four Filmfare Awards. Anurag Kashyap (born 10 September 1972) is an Indian film director, writer, editor, producer, actor known for his works in Hindi cinema.
