Mahabharat Br Chopra =link= -

Mahabharat Br Chopra =link= -

Many cast members became typecast for life. later entered politics (BJP) but remains the Krishna. Mukesh Khanna doubled down on his Bhishma persona, launching a children’s show Shaktimaan (India’s first superhero). Puneet Issar became a villain in B-movies. Gufi Paintal (Shakuni) passed away in 2023, but his meme-worthy dialogues— “Aisa kyon?” (Why so?)—live on eternally on social media.

For two years (1988–1990), India came to a halt every Sunday morning. Streets emptied. Markets closed. Trains ran late. The reason? Not a political event or a cricket match, but a television show: B.R. Chopra’s Mahabharat . At a time when Doordarshan was the only broadcaster, an estimated 80–100 million viewers tuned in each week—a staggering number for a pre-liberalisation, single-TV-per-neighbourhood India. More than three decades later, the show enjoys a second life on streaming platforms, proving its timeless power. mahabharat br chopra

Introduction: A Sunday Morning Ritual

| Feature | B.R. Chopra (1988) | Peter Brook (1989) | StarPlus (2013) | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Tone | Reverent, didactic | Experimental, arthouse | Soap-opera, melodramatic | | Krishna | Playful yet divine | Alien, mysterious | Handsome, romanticized | | Length | 94 episodes | 6 hours (theatre) | 267 episodes | | VFX | Minimal (painted auras) | None (theatrical) | CGI-heavy | | Legacy | Pan-Indian, devotional | Western critical acclaim | Youth-friendly but forgettable | Many cast members became typecast for life