His debut feature film, about two lonely people who meet due to a mistake by Mumbai's highly efficient dabbawalas's delivery system, became a great success globally.
The director hopes his second film "Sense of an Ending", a screen adaptation of Julian Barnes' 2011 novel and starring Oscar-winner Jim Broadbent, "45 Years" star Charlotte Rampling and Michelle Dockery of "Downton Abbey" fame, will find similar acceptance.
"The world is becoming a smaller place and the stories have to travel and intermingle... To be able to tell a British story in English language worldwide is great for me. It would be great to make a movie where I have great actors from east and west. I would love to do that. We have such great talent in India," Batra told PTI in an interview.
"Sense of an Ending" has already sold worldwide and Batra is hopeful that the audience that watches the English movie, will also follow him to the next Indian project that he does.
really supportive during the making of the film.
"It was one of the books that I always loved. Julian Barnes was at the shoot many times and he recently saw the finished film and he loved it. He has been really supportive and put a lot of trust in me. You have to kind of live up to that."
For Batra, the beauty of the novel is the fact that it touches people differently but he was careful in creating a story that was close to his vision rather than following the book verbatim.
Batra has introduced new characters, plot points and thought process in the movie which are not there in the book so he is confident that those who have read the book will also be surprised by the new elements.
"The movie should exist side by side the novel. I wish I was a novelist. Even though the story is on the page and does not have the resources of a film, it is an extremely powerful medium.
The director, a film lover to the core, says he considers making movies as his life.
"This is the best job for me in the world because usually when you go to a job you leave your life behind and you invest yourself in your job. Life and your job are two different things. But I can bring my life to it. When I read the novel, read the script and made this movie, it felt like I was telling my own story. That's important to me.
