Index Of Sikander 2 [ Trusted | 2024 ]
Logline: A film archivist discovers a classified government file labeled INDEX OF SIKANDER 2 , leading her down a rabbit hole where a legendary unfinished movie intersects with a real-life espionage mystery. Prologue: The Missing Reel In the annals of Indian cinema, few myths are as tantalizing as Sikander 2 . The original 1941 film Sikander , about the young Alexander the Great’s clash with King Porus, was a roaring success. But its sequel—announced in 1944, shot partially in 1945, and then… erased—exists only in whispers.
But the Index is never really closed.
After the screening, Mira always adds a new entry to her Index. Not about the film. About the audience.
Mira writes a paper. Rohan opens a museum wing called "The Lost Sequel." And every year on April 3, they screen Reel 4 at a tiny cinema in Shimla. index of sikander 2
But one Tuesday afternoon, while digitizing a 1946 customs log from the Bombay Port, she finds an anomaly.
Sikander speaks in Urdu—flawless, poetic, devastating: "I came to burn the world. But the world taught me to plant. They call me ‘Great’ because I conquer. But greatness is not a crown. It is a seed. Tonight, I order my generals: break the swords. Build schools. Stay. Not as rulers. As guests." The scene cuts to Porus’s camp. Porus laughs. "A wolf who asks to be a sheep is still a wolf."
"I am not the first Alexander. I am the last. And this is my Index: a list of all the kings who forgot that empires are just stories. Time is the only emperor." Logline: A film archivist discovers a classified government
That night, in a freezing bunker, they project onto a sheet nailed to the wall.
The image flickers: black-and-white, nitrate-rich, ghostly. Sikander (played by the forgotten actor Sohrab Modi’s cousin, Kersi) stands on a rocky outcrop. Behind him, his Macedonian army looks exhausted. In front, the green plains of India.
She also learns she’s not alone.
No stills. No posters. No trailer.
But then—the twist. Sikander removes his helmet. He is not Greek. He is Indian. A spy? A changeling? The film doesn’t explain. It simply holds his face in close-up as he says:
She calls it