Aditya and Shraddha brought me back to life: Mohit Suri

[email protected] (Cine News)
June 20, 2014

Aditya and ShraddhaMumbai, Jun 20: On being Bollywood’s most wanted director:

I felt the change happening when I was shooting Aashiqui 2. That was when Ekta (Kapoor) and I started discussing Ek Villain. The film with Karan Johar is also happening. When I was only making films for one company I was considered to be a talented boy in a limited universe but now that I’m working with others, the world has opened up for me.

Aashiqui 2 is my most personal film:

I lost my father a week before the release of Murder 2. I shared a very close bond with him. He singlehandedly brought me up. You tend to pitch your success and failure against the one constant in your life — for me, it was my dad. I was lost after his death. I pushed everyone away. I even broke up with Udita (Goswami, now his wife). Then I started working on Aashiqui 2 and these young kids Aditya (Roy Kapur) and Shraddha (Kapoor) brought me back to life. Infact it was Aditya who told me that I should marry Udita because I was always talking about her. I was unravelling and I panicked everyone so much so that Bhatt saab (Mahesh Bhatt) came to see me and I remember telling him that I’m flawed but I’m not bad, which kind of reassured him. I remember when Aashiqui 2 was releasing, I told Bhatt saab that I really wanted it to do well, not just because I need a hit, but because I felt that if this film works then India would have accepted my voice and basic personality. Whatever I was, whatever I was going through at that time, I put it all in Aashiqui 2.

Stories of incomplete and tragic love fascinate me:

Personally, I’m a bundle of incomplete experiences, so stories of incomplete love resonate within me. It’s not always about the years that you spend with a person, sometimes all you need are some moments that can become the love of a lifetime. Someone can touch you deeply but maybe it doesn’t reach the level where you end up together. I feel that kind of love burns brighter. True love happens when romance dies out. Today it’s easier to break a relationship than make it work. So love stories where people stick by each other against all odds have become like superhero films — like a fantasy — which is why people lap them up.

On Ek Villian being inspired by the Korean film I Saw the Devil:

Why just this film, I’ll say that I’ve taken from every film possible. I’m not pretending to be Christopher Nolan who made Inception, which was a completely new thought. I’m not even the maker of The Matrix. It’s convenient to look at portions you feel are lifted from a film that you know of and I don’t mind it. I openly say that I was not born creative. Everything that I have learnt is from the books I read and the films that I watched. I didn’t have any spiritual breakdown, never experienced any divine intervention and I don’t claim to have come up with a new creative thought for the world to follow. I’m a sum of all the impressions I’ve gathered, so my films are a combination of my own life and personality.

Music is the star of my career:

Be it Jiya dhadak or Tum hi ho or Sun raha hai na tu, music has played a very important role in my career. I never had the backing of stars, music has been the only star. My earliest memory of music being a great companion even in tough times was when my mom and I used to catch the rickshaw to go to Emraan Hashmi’s house to meet my grandmother. My mom would ask the rickshaw-wallah to take the longer route just so that the song could finish.

I cast Riteish because he doesn’t look like a villain:

The villains, in our films, keep reinventing — from dacoits, to cops, to politicians, to Khalnayak and Maharani to Mogambo and terrorists. This set me thinking that what if today’s villain is an aam aadmi? He could be on the bus, a delivery boy or a plumber. Someone you see everyday. What if this unheard and unseen man has angst? There is so much pressure on the common man with ads like jo biwi se karen pyaar woh pressure cooker se kaise karen inkaar. What if this guy can’t afford a pressure cooker for his wife? That was the thought behind creating the villain in this film. It’s almost the anti-villain. The casting would have only worked if we went for someone against type. Riteish (Deshmukh) is such a good guy. Nobody would expect him to play a character like this. The only addition I did was to give him the David Headley eyes.

Bhatt saab says I’m his Shekhu:

I don’t need big budgets to tell my stories. Big budgets don’t make big hits. Bhatt saab calls me his Shekhu — this is a reference from Mughal-e-Azam where Akbar used to call Salim, Shekhu. He has always been indulgent with me but then I get his gaalis too because then he has to give it to the other directors too.

I drain my actors emotionally:

I like to concentrate on the magic of the close up. It’s more satisfying to get the correct scene key than focus on the opulence. I’ll always focus on the character than the curtain on my set. You can ask my actors. I drain them emotionally because I push them to give me a performance that hits. During Ek Villain, Sidharth (Malhotra) stopped going to parties because he used to be so emotionally spent after working the whole day.

What’s next:

Hamari Adhuri Kahani with Vidya Balan, Emraan Hashmi and Rajkummar Rao. It’s an eternal romance. After this, I go on to shoot a film for Karan Johar, which is the Hindi remake of The Intouchables.

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News Network
March 5,2020

Bihar, Mar 5: A complaint has been filed before a court in Bihar against lyricist Javed Akhtar over his remarks on the FIRs being registered against expelled AAP councillor Tahir Hussain in the wake of Delhi riots.

The complaint was lodged on Wednesday by Amit Kumar, a local advocate, before the court of Chief Judicial Magistrate Thakur Aman Kumar.

On the basis of a newspaper report, the complainant has alleged that Akhtar's remarks were seditious and promoted religious hatred.

The media report was based on Akhtar's tweet of February 27 that "So many killed, so many injured, so many houses burned, so many shops looted so many people turned destitute but police has sealed only one house and looking for his owner. Incidentally, his name is Tahir. Hats off to the consistency of the Delhi police."

The violence in northeast Delhi claimed at least 42 lives and left over 200 injured. The former Rajya Sabha member was heavily trolled for the tweet.

In a subsequent tweet, Akhtar who asserted that he is a non-believer and a rationalist, had clarified that he was not asking "why Tahir but why ONLY Tahir and not even an FIR against those who have openly threatened violence in the presence of the police".

The matter is likely to come up for hearing on March 25.

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News Network
April 2,2020

Mumbai, Apr 2: Ramayan, the over three-decade-old TV series based on Hindu mythology, garnered 170 million viewers in four shows over the last weekend in its new avatar, the BARC said on Thursday.

This catapulted the Ramanand Sagar production as the highest watched serial in the Hindi general entertainment space ever, the Broadcast Audience Research Council said.

The show was relaunched last Saturday amid the gloomy times of lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and a lot of thrust laid by the government machinery to popularise the series.

BARC's chief executive Sunil Lulla said the numbers notched up by the series was a bit surprising and called the move as a brilliant one by the Prasar Bharti.

He said eventually, we will also see advertisers flock the series which will be running for a few more days.

The inaugural show of the series on Saturday morning had 34 million viewers glued to their TV sets watching and enjoyed a rating of 3.4 per cent, while a telecast the same evening had 45 million viewers and a rating of 5.2 per cent.

The show bettered its performance on Sunday, with 40 million and 51 million people watching it in the morning and evening telecasts, respectively.

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Agencies
June 14,2020

Chennai, Jun 14: Tamil Nadu Police has recovered about 100 bottles of liquor from the car of actor Ramya Krishnan, who had starred in movies like Bahubali, Padaiappa and others.

According to the police, the actor was traveling in the car at the time on the East Coast Road (ECR) where they were carrying out vehicle checks on Thursday.

The police found about 100 liquor bottles in the car boot and when queried Ramya Krishnan said she was unaware of the bottles.

Later the police confiscated the bottles and arrested the driver Selvakumar who said the liquor was bought at the Tamil Nadu government-run liquor shop.

The government has not allowed the opening of the Tasmac shops in Chennai.

Another driver came and drove the actor back to Chennai.

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