Apurva Asrani (born 21 March 1978) is an Indian filmmaker. He has written the human rights drama Aligarh (2016), the courtroom drama (2020), has co-written and edited the film Shahid (2013), has edited the gangster film Satya (1998) and also the webseries Made in Heaven (2019).
He also the director of the Tera Mera Pyar (2005) music videos for Sony Music India.
Apurva made his webseries writing debut with the 2021 Disney Hotstar show . The show starring Pankaj Tripathi, Kirti Kulhari, Anupriya Goenka & Dipti Naval received glowing reviews and garnered record viewership for Disney Hotstar.
In August 2021, became the first Indian series to win 'Best Drama Series' in South Asia at the Content Asia Awards in Singapore. Apurva was subsequently nominated for a Filmfare Award for 'Best Adapted Screenplay' and for a Critics Choice Award by the Film Critics Guild for 'Best Writing'.
Apurva's other work includes the gang war film Chhal directed by Hansal Mehta. Critic Subhash K Jha wrote in his review 'The real hero of Chhal is Apurva Asrani's editing'. Apurva edited Anupam Kher's directorial debut Om Jai Jagadish and also collaborated with Nagesh Kukunoor on his Akshay Kumar starrer Tasveer 8x10 as supervising editor and as film editor on Aashayein, starring John Abraham.
In 2005, Apurva directed the music videos of Sony Music India's album Tera Mera Pyar and launched actress Nimrat Kaur in it. The title track, "Tera Mera Pyar", was sung by Kumar Sanu; "Yeh Kya Hua" was sung by Shreya Ghoshal and composed by UK-based artists Partners in Rhyme. Tera Mera Pyar won album of the year at the Sahara Music Awards in San Francisco.
In March 2006, Apurva represented India in Editing Fashion, a multimedia experiment for UK-based showstudio.com. Apurva's short film Imperfect Moon was showcased along with the films of Oscar nominated British director, Mike Figgis and Wong Kar Wai's editor William Chang.
On the UK stage, Apurva has collaborated with a British theatre company RIFCO Arts to write dialogue for three successful UK touring productions: Bollywood: Yet Another Love Story (2000/2003), The Deranged Marriage (2006) and There’s Something About Simmy (2007).
He is the editor and additional screenplay writer of the film Shahid and is also the writer and editor of the internationally acclaimed Aligarh.
Rahul Desai in his Mumbai Mirror review of Citylights said: Mehta and writer-editor Asrani pull off a rare feat here. They not only choose the right film to adapt—based solely on its theme and universal topicality—but build upon the original, without being overambitious.
In the same year, Apurva also edited Mrityunjay Devvrat's Children of War (formerly titled 'The Bastard Child'), a stark portrayal of the Bangladesh genocide of 1971. The film ran for a record-breaking 12 weeks in Bangladesh and is the only foreign produced film in history to have won a Bangladeshi National Award.
In 2015, Apurva edited Viacom 18's 'Dharam Sankat Mein', an adaptation of the British hit The Infidel.
In 2016, Apurva co-edited Waiting produced by Manish Mundra, directed by Anu Menon. The film starring Naseeruddin Shah & Kalki Koechlin received extremely positive reviews.
The film premiered at the Busan International Film Festival and UK premiered at the BFI London Film Festival. It also enjoyed the rare honour of being the first Indian film to open Jio MAMI (Mumbai International Film Festival) in 16 years.
The film was among the best reviewed films of the year. Shubhra Gupta in her Indian Express review of the film wrote 'Like in 'Shahid', Hansal Mehta and scriptwriter Apurva Asrani have come up with a lead character and a film which shines with authenticity and emotional heft, and which leaves you thinking.'
Anupama Chopra in her Hindustan Times review of the film wrote 'Hansal and writer Apurva Asrani have mined from real events but their dramatisation of Siras' tragedy isn't shrill or militant.' Stutee Ghosh in her review in The Quint wrote 'Aligarh is an assiduously made piece of brilliance.'
Apurva was also the editor of the film.
Uday Bhatia in his Livemint review of the film said 'Having watched Simran I can understand why they’d squabble over the writing credits (officially, Apurva is story, screenplay and dialogue; Kangana is additional story and dialogue). Praful is a fantastically etched character, all quirks and hard edges and nervous energy, like a '40s screwball comedienne crossed with Gena Rowlands.'
Ankur Pathak in his Huffington Post review said 'After decades of suffering regressive soap-operas on Indian television, we finally have a show that inverts every trope we’ve seen on Indian TV and makes a powerful commentary about the vulgar exhibition of power and wealth and its intersection with gender and class to piece together an impeccably feminist masterpiece.' Raja Sen in his Livemint review called Made in Heaven 'possibly the best Indian web series so far'.
Apurva edited the first four episodes of the nine part series. The first two were directed by Zoya Akhtar and the other two were directed by show runner Nitya Mehra.
In 2001, Apurva won the National Film Award for Best Editing for Snip!, a bilingual comedy directed by Sunhil Sippy. The National Awards citation read, "For creating an evocative rhythm enhancing the pace of the narrative while aesthetically maintaining the unit of form and content."
He was also nominated for a Zee Cine Award for his edit of Hansal Mehta's Chhal (film) in 2001.
In 2013 Apurva won the Life Ok Screen Award for Best Screenplay for Shahid which he shared with director Hansal Mehta.
In 2017, Apurva was nominated for 'Best Editing' & 'Best Original Screenplay' for Aligarh at the South African International Film Festival, also known as the RapidLion Awards.
In 2019, Apurva was nominated in the 'Best Editing' category for Made in Heaven at the Critics Choice Awards by the Film Critics Guild.
For his work on , Apurva was nominated for a Filmfare Award in 2021 and for a Critics Choice Award in 2022 in the 'Best Writing' category.
1998 | Satya | Film Editor | Filmfare Award for Best Editing |
2000 | Snip! | Film Editor | National Film Award for Best Editing |
2001 | Chhal | Film editor | Zee Cine Award for Best Editing (Nominated) |
2002 | Om Jai Jagadish | Film editor | |
2003 | Kyon? (film) | Film editor & Additional screenplay | |
2003 | Out of Control | Co-director | |
2008 | Mukhbiir | Film editor | |
2009 | 8 x 10 Tasveer | Supervising editor | |
2010 | Aashayein | Film editor | |
2012 | Jalpari-The Desert Mermaid | Film editor | |
2012 | Shahid | Film Editor | Life Ok Screen Award for Best Screenplay (Won) |
2014 | Children of War | Film editor | |
2014 | CityLights | Film editor & Script advisor | |
2015 | Dharam Sankat Mein | Film editor | |
2015 | Waiting | Film editor | |
2015 | Aligarh | Story/Screenplay/Dialogue & Editing | Rapid Lion Awards 'Best Original Screenplay' & "Best Editing' (Nominated) |
2017 | Simran | Co-Writer | |
2019 | Made in Heaven | Series editor | Critics Guild Award for Best Editing (Nominated) |
2020 | Adapted Story, Screenplay, Dialogue | Filmfare Award for Best Screenplay (Nominated) |
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