Producer Prerna Arora Opens Up About the Creative Spark Behind Her Untitled Venture With Kiran Abbavaram & Srikanth Puppala
- Nishadil
- July 08, 2026
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A fresh blend of Bollywood and South‑Indian cinema: Prerna Arora reveals what ignited her new project
Prerna Arora, the mind behind ‘Jatadhara’, talks about the unique chemistry and storytelling promise that led her to team up with Kiran Abbavaram and Srikanth Puppala for an untitled film.
When I first read the script, I felt something click – a kind of electric buzz you only get with stories that refuse to stay in one box. That’s the feeling Prerna Arora, the producer famed for ‘Jatadhara’, describes while speaking about her yet‑to‑be‑named venture with Telugu heartthrobs Kiran Abbavaram and Srikanth Puppala.
“It’s not just another Bollywood experiment,” she laughs, a hint of excitement in her voice. “It’s a conversation between two very different film worlds, and the script lets them talk in the same language – the language of raw emotion.” The project, she says, is rooted in a small‑town backdrop, yet its themes—ambition, love, and the clash between tradition and modernity—are universal.
According to Arora, the moment Kiran and Srikanth walked onto the set for the first read‑through, she sensed a chemistry that went beyond the usual actor‑producer dynamic. “They both brought something distinct,” she notes, “Kiran’s earthy charm and Srikanth’s gritty intensity. When those two meet, you get a blend that feels both familiar and entirely new.”
She also credits the director’s vision for acting as a catalyst. The filmmaker, still unnamed, wanted to create a narrative that would feel at home in a Mumbai theatre as well as in a Hyderabad multiplex. “The creative spark came from that ambition – to craft a story that can comfortably sit on both sides of the screen,” Prerna explains.
In her own words, the venture is a “love letter” to audiences who crave depth without sacrificing entertainment. The producer admits that she’s still guarded about the title and the exact plot, but promises a cinematic experience that will “make you feel the heartbeat of a town, the dreams of its people, and the fire of its heroes.”
For now, fans of both Hindi and South Indian cinema can only wait, but one thing is clear: the project’s foundation rests on a genuine, unforced collaboration, a rare kind of magic that Prerna Arora believes will resonate far beyond the opening credits.
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