Director Shoojit Sircar on Thursday said he does not view opting for a digital release for his upcoming feature Sardar Udham as a "mistake" because the decision was taken keeping in mind the best interest of the film.
Headlined by Vicky Kaushal, the film is gearing up to be released on Amazon Prime Video on October 16.
"Sardar Udham", which was completed in 2019, was earlier expected to release theatrically.
During the trailer launch of the film, Sircar was asked if he feels he could have waited longer for cinema halls to reopen so that the movie could have had a big screen release.
"It's a tricky question. There's a destiny for every film and Sardar Udham landed on Amazon Prime. When I shot the film, this wasn't the situation. We shot the film for cinemas.
"I do not feel guilty that it's releasing on (a digital platform). We decided that this will go on the digital platform. I didn't feel that this was a mistake I was making," the filmmaker told reporters.
The Maharashtra government recently allowed cinema halls in the state, a prime market for Bollywood films, to resume operations from October 22.
Last year, during the coronavirus pandemic-induced nationwide lockdown which resulted in cinema halls being shut across the country, Sircar's Gulabo Sitabo was one of the first films to head to the OTT platform.
Starring Amitabh Bachchan and Ayushmann Khurrana, the film also premiered on Amazon Prime Video in June.
The filmmaker said he is "impatient" and wants to showcase his work to the audience as quickly as possible, which is why both "Gulabo Sitabo" and "Sardar Udham" didn't wait for the reopening of cinema halls.
"What I also experienced after Gulabo Sitabo was the reach the film got. I thought this film ('Sardar Udham') also needs a huge global platform, apart from our Indian territories. That was also a good reason for me to go ahead.
"Yes, the cinematic experience of a theatre will be surely missed, but it is not a compromise on the cinematic narrative. It'll be as cinematic on a big screen as it is on a small screen," Sircar added.
The film is a biopic on freedom fighter Sardar Udham Singh, who assassinated Michael O'Dwyer, the former Lieutenant Governor of Punjab in British India in 1940, to avenge the 1919 Jallianwala Bagh massacre.
The Amazon original movie, penned by Ritesh Shah and Shubhendu Bhattacharya, is produced by Ronnie Lahiri and Sheel Kumar.