Nick
Moore
who
did
editing
for
films
Notting
Hill
and
Love
Actually
will
now
make
a
cut
for
Deepika
Padukone-Arjun
Kapoor
starrer
Finding
Fanny
for
non-diaspora
markets.
The
film
Finding
Fanny
will
be
released
in
US,
Europe
and
Far
East
-
in
screens
where
no
other
Indian
film
has
ever
released,
making
Finding
Fanny
a
break-out
film
from
India.
This
is
for
the
first
time
that
an
Indian
film
will
have
such
a
wide
release
in
major
international
territories.
The
makers
believe
that
much
like
any
big
Hollywood
film
that
releases
across
the
world,
Homi
Adajania
has
made
a
truly
global
film
that
will
be
accepted
in
any
market.
Evidently
Homi
Adajania
is
thrilled.
He
is
back
after
Cocktail
with
this
quirky
comedy
Finding
Fanny
about
a
5
odd
balls
and
their
journey
looking
for
a
postman's
lost
love
through
Goa.
The
Hindi
and
English
versions
of
Finding
Fanny
will
open
in
theatres
on
September
12,
across
India
and
in
40
international
territories,
which
form
the
diaspora
markets
targeted
by
most
mainstream
Bollywood
films.
Fox
Star
Studios
also
plan
to
release
a
separate
edited
version
of
Finding
Fanny
in
non-diaspora
markets
-
US,
Europe
and
the
Far
East,
three-four
months
after
its
September
release.
"The
difference
between
the
two
versions
is
just
three-four
minutes
and
not
a
complete
re-edit.
This
English
version
will
be
cut
by
Nick
Moore
to
cater
to
that
audience," confirms
Homi
Adajania.
"It's
the
same
story
but
will
be
told
in
a
way
that
the
firangs
understand
better,"
adds
Homi.
Moore
has
directed
films
like
Wild
Child
(2008)
and
Horrid
Henry:
The
Movie
(2011)
but
is
better
known
as
the
editor
of
The
Full
Monty
(1997)
which
bagged
him
a
BAFTA
nomination,
Notting
Hill
(1999),
About
A
Boy
(2002)
and
Love
Actually
(2003).
Other
than
Deepika
and
Arjun,
the
film
Finding
Fanny
also
features
Dimple
Kapadia,
Naseeruddin
Shah
and
Pankaj
Kapoor.