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Shah Rukh Khan
The NRI communities have been
responsible for the breakthrough in the areas where they
are living ? like England. Duncan [Kenworthy] became aware
of Indian films because of the presence of Indians, Pakistanis
and Sri Lankans in England and we have a little window now
and it is a great opportunity. This (BAFTA) is an institution
which is opening its arms and giving us a platform. Opportunities
like this give us a chance to build on it and try and make
Indian cinema for a truly universal audience.
Our films offer audiences an experience
beyond entertainment. It is about a portion of life, which
they may not experience otherwise. We do believe the length
is value for money. I personally believe we should make
shorter films. Every artiste in his heart and mind wants
the world to recognise his work of painting, poetry. Appreciation
is the reason why artistes work and these two artistes [Karan
Johar and Yash Chopra] have been working from the heart
and doing very well. But I am a little more practical. If
I am invited to a party in England and have to wear a dinner
jacket, I would respect that. That [shorter films] would
only happen if there is a synergy between an Indian film
and a screenplay writer from the West. If that kind of synergy
happens, I think even Karan would make a film which is shorter.
Right now we have an Indian way of storytelling and we stick
to it. But if the time demands it and the universal audience
is there and there is a distributor who says, I will
distribute it, I am sure we can.
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Karan Johar
Whether they are Indians or Pakistanis,
for me I look at them in the same way. I firmly believe
they are bound by one language ? one may be more refined
than the other but its the same language ? the same
people, the same emotions, same family structures. Films
can make a big, big impression and again change the course
of things. If you see a film like Veer-Zaara, which
Mr Yash Chopra made, I think it was the most authentic positive
depiction of the two countries. Today I was in the hotel
and a lady from Lahore came and said, Thank God for
Veer-Zaara. There are movies being made that
will probably bridge the gap.
[On length]: I am not actually
willing to change anything and I have been very clear about
that. When I have been asked to make a two or two-and-a-half
hour version [of my films] I have always said I cant
do it because that is not the way the film has been structured.
We are a very proud filmmaking nation. We are the only filmmaking
nation that has survived without any kind of studio backing.
Actually we have been so self-obsessed
and lived in our own cocoon because our domestic market
has been so strong. That is the reason why we have not penetrated
the Western world till about five years ago. Lagaan actually
came as a shock to all of us, even to the filmmakers. Thats
what started the ball rolling. But I think it is wonderful
to open avenues. I look at an event such as BAFTA as bringing
about more awareness, more eyeballs, more exposure. As a
filmmaker it is wonderful that many more people in the world
see your movie but that does not mean we have to cater to
them specifically at the cost of our domestic audience.
At the end of the day, nobody matters more to us as filmmakers
than the Indian/Asian audiences. It is not fair that they
have given us 50 years of love and suddenly we turn our
backs on them because we have won the Oscar or the BAFTA.
I, as a filmmaker, refuse to change my format to adapt to
anyone or anything.
Yash Chopra
The Indian film industry is the
most secular film industry in the world. When a step is
taken towards India-Pakistans friendship, Veer-Zaara
will be remembered. I dont make political films,
I make only human films. These films do create a path for
coming together. Emotionally, culturally they [Indians and
Pakistanis] are one. The biggest blockbusters in Indian
cinema are three hours long. Why should we change our style
? this style we have been doing for the last 100 years?
Why should Karan Johar change? His audience is there, at
home and abroad. Every film of his has set a benchmark in
overseas business. His style is working for him.
This [honorary life membership
of BAFTA] is not an honour for me only, its an honour
for the Indian film industry and our country India and I
am proud of it. This relationship [with BAFTA] started today
and, in the years to come, it will become a meaningful,
purposeful, wonderful relationship. It has taken it [BAFTA]
a long time to recognise the Indian film industry.
Preity Zinta
I wanted to do films that had
some kind of educative base. Kya Kehna! was a film
about a single mother but in India if you are a single mother,
you are evil. Everything is wrong with you.
[On being asked, How do
you deal with millions of sweaty men in darkened cinemas
clenching and unclenching their sweaty palms?]: In
a theatre they are not looking at you, Preity Zinta, they
are looking at an image which has a bunch of writers, the
director, the production, your DOP, there are various people
working to create that image. For certain films, I wear
a burqa and I go into the theatre and sometimes you get
a little embarrassed by the way people react. They feel
they own you. In India its not entertainment for them,
its a religion.
Aamir Khan
I prefer listening to scripts
as opposed to reading them. Because I like to know how the
director is seeing the film. Whether it is a real person
or a completely fictitious one, either way, the key for
me is to get into the head of the character. How he would
sit, stand, walk, run, talk all that comes when I am in
his head and I know how his head ticks. Lets take
Bhuvan from Lagaan ? Bhuvans strongest quality
is his inner strength so no matter what he is faced with
he has so much inner strength that he can face up to anything
and he does not flinch. How do you project all these qualities?
For me the key was his back is always straight and he never
stands with his weight on one foot.
Aakash in Dil Chahta Hai is
extremely unreliable. His eyes never stopped moving. There
is a naughty glint in his eyes at all times. I have to believe
that what is happening to the character is happening to
me.
[When a shot is taken]: I never
check the monitor. What I like to look at are the directors
eyes. I hate directors who sit somewhere else and watch
the shot on a monitor. I need to know from him what he is
feeling. That connection has to be there. At the very core
I am a creative person. Im an actor. I will never
get into being a full-time activist. But at the same time
Im a member of society that we live in. I would like
to be a sensitive and responsible member of society. I would
like to contribute in any way I can. We should not be sitting
on the fence on issues. We should voice our concerns. |