Building a INR 10000(US$150) PC

Is it possible? I'm mainly wanting to find out if it's doable instead of a dedicated bluray/dvd player.

Obviously no gaming, I'm a fan of PC's being able to support all video formats, regardless of new or old; all you have to do is update your media player.

I'm thinking of this:
A Celeron G460(1990)
GA-B75M-D3H(4500)
Corsair RAM 2GB(VS2GB1333D3)(1500)
Seagate 250GB HDD(1450)
Corsair VS350(1899)
Cooler Master Elite 311(2740)
Total: 14079
What I haven't figured out is how to incorporate support for blu-ray disks in this budget.
Opinions?
 
The Celeron is the cheapest CPU with integrated graphics I could find. The only cheaper one I could find was a Sempron 145. I do not have any experience with AMD builds.
I could go for a 3,000 motherboard, but that wouldn't have HDMI. A low end graphics card would at least cost 2000, so it's better to just have a motherboard with integrated support for HDMI.
 
This:

Priced out on flipkart, using a local 480W PSU and Zebronics case comes to just over 9000 Rs.

I would not recommend it to any one

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: AMD 2650 1.45Ghz Dual-Core Processor ($25.99 @ SuperBiiz)
Motherboard: Biostar AM1MHP Micro ATX AM1 Motherboard ($32.27 @ Mwave)
Memory: Kingston 2GB (1 x 2GB) DDR3-1333 Memory ($17.99 @ Newegg)
Storage: Seagate Barracuda 160GB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive ($20.44 @ Amazon)
Case: Antec ASK4000E-U3 ATX Mid Tower Case ($42.99 @ SuperBiiz)
Power Supply: Logisys 480W ATX Power Supply ($12.97 @ OutletPC)
Total: $152.65
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2015-03-18 13:01 EDT-0400
 
There's a reason I chose the Corsair. Case I can understand, but not power supply. One rogue surge and your investment's gone.
Anyway, I'm thinking this build is wasted effort unless any kind of computing is involved such as teaching kids basic programming and that kind of stuff. Not to mention this build is going to be running on Linux.
LG prices their blu-ray players quite competitively, and they come with support for playing media off of USB devices. It'd be cheaper to get one of those bluray players for 10 grand. Unless, the user is interested in burning bluray media, an optical bluray drive is an additional 7k. Not many people are interested in that kind of thing.