Saif Ali Khan’s Web-Series ‘Dilli’ Will Stick To The Deadline Director Ali Abbas Zafar Confirms, Season 2 Already In Works

    Saif's Dilli In Post-Production, Season 2 Confirmed

    Saif Ali Khan’s Web-Series ‘Dilli’ Will Stick To The Deadline Director Ali Abbas Zafar Confirms, Season 2 Already In Works

    During this lockdown phase, the entire country is staying indoors and is trying to fight the coronavirus in their own way. And with nothing to do and no new TV serial to see, they are falling back on the OTT platforms that are churning out new content day in and day out.

    Saif Ali Khan’s new web show titled Dilli is another big web series which is supposed to release on Amazon Prime Video and is helmed by Ali Abbas Zafar. This one was long promised to the netizens and they are already impatient. However, according to reports, director Ali Abbas Zafar surely is in no mood to fasten things up! On the contrary, he says that he would prefer a well-made series rather than joining the rat race.


    Saif Ali Khan’s Web-Series ‘Dilli’ Will Stick To The Deadline Director Ali Abbas Zafar Confirms, Season 2 Already In Works


    Mid-Day quotes him as saying, "On Twitter and Instagram, people have been asking us to release the show now. So, there has been pressure, but we don't want to rush the process. Our series was supposed to drop in the last quarter of 2020, and we will stick to that deadline. If the show was ready, we would have released it now because it is an ideal time to grab eyeballs." Quipped Zafar, who is pretty pepped about the interest of people in the web series.


    Saif Ali Khan’s Web-Series ‘Dilli’ Will Stick To The Deadline Director Ali Abbas Zafar Confirms, Season 2 Already In Works


    Well, the director plans to make the web show appealing to the global audiences and therefore, the dubbing has to take place in different languages. He has been further quoted by the show as saying, "Once you deliver your project, it has to be dubbed in nine languages. So, the post-production takes three to four months, longer than the shoot itself."