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AuthorTopic: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan  (Read 1983 times)

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'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« on: May 14, 2007, 09:54:46 AM »
In the hush of Aamir Khan's study-cum-lounge, the well-thumbed, eclectic collection of books tells its own story--P.G. Wodehouse alongside Gore Vidal, Mushirul Hasan's volume on the Partition and Vijay Nambisan's take on Bihar. There's Salman Rushdie's The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Pico Iyer's Falling Off The Map and a collection of the masterpieces of patriotic Urdu poetry stacked next to the star's abiding passion--the chessboard. There seems more to the romantic hero of the '90s than blinding glamour. Aamir's turn-of-the-century movies--1947: Earth, Sarfarosh, Lagaan, Mangal Pandey, Rang De Basanti and Fanaa--show a crusading zeal, conscious or otherwise. The label, neo-patriot, has begun to sit rather nicely on him after his involvement, however short-lived, with the Narmada oustees and his confrontation with Gujarat CM Narendra Modi. He has been speaking on contentious issues like fundamentalism and divisive politics and has even taken on the media for dumbing down. Yet Aamir doesn't want to be perceived as a political creature. His political sense seems more spontaneous than grounded, his agenda based on common sense rather than ideology. His activism is reluctant, and conscious of minefields. His efforts have been greeted with cynicism and scepticism, even by the liberals he had been aligning with; his brand association with Coke has been under the scanner. He is careful, earnest, forever searching for the right word.... In an interview as expansive as his airy living room, Aamir talks to Namrata Joshi about nationalistic cinema, contemporary politics and identity issues. He also tells us that he will always remain an entertainer--above everything else.


Nationalism and cinema seem to make for a winning synergy. What is it about the medium that lends itself so well to capturing this theme, this feeling?
It’s not as though most filmmakers who have been making films about nationalism are really concerned about it. The majority is only bothered about what the box office collections of the film will eventually be. They want to entertain. So if there’s a topic that they feel the audience would react to; emotions that are broader, that spread across the board, they normally like to make films about them: like love, nationalism, revenge. Why does every film have a romantic angle in it? Because love and romance is something we are involved in, some way or the other, at some point in our life. It is something everyone identifies with. There are very few films where the filmmaker is focused on a national issue and makes the film because he feels he has an important thing to say. This is what we went through while making Rang De Basanti. When we set out, four films had been made on Bhagat Singh and all had not done well. And here was a fifth one. Also RDB points a finger at the audience and asks them to wake up. Very few films of this kind, where the audience is at the receiving end, are successful. It’s a difficult film to swallow. It could have not done well but we really wanted to make it.

Rang De Basanti, Mangal Pandey, Lagaan, Sarfarosh…All these films have fetched you the label of Bollywood’s neo patriot. How do you react to it?
I am happy if people feel I care about the society, how our nation is doing. But I genuinely feel the role of cinema is to entertain. A filmmaker is not meant to educate an audience. The primary responsibility for providing education lies with schools and colleges, not with cinema. Having said that, for me, churning out a successful film at the box office is important but not enough. I want more. When I listened to Sarfarosh, I reacted emotionally to it because of what I had been going through as an Indian, it talked of Hindus and Muslims living together.
I get attracted to stories that have a certain value. Lagaan, Mangal Pandey. Even Ghulam: It’s a story about directionless youth. The conflict in Ghulam is within Siddhu (the lead character) himself. Ultimately which way does he want to go? Does he want to become another Raunaq Singh and rule over the basti? Or does he want to go through a path that he believes in? It was a film that was trying to guide the misguided youth. These are films that have a certain social connect so in that sense they are nationalistic films. At the same time, I want these films to entertain people.
I pick films that have the ability to both entertain people and, along with it, give them something of value that they can take back home. It could be a thought, a debate.

 I pick films that have the ability to both entertain people and, along with it, give them something of value that they can take back home. It could be a thought, a debate.

Then how would the Aamir brand of nationalist cinema be different?
I have seen films that have manipulated my feelings as an Indian, telling me something good about my country, playing on my emotions as a nationalist person. I feel those films have been making a fool of me. There are others that are actually trying to take on issues of importance and deal with them; they are deliberating on how we are, as Indians, looking at things more realistically. You can get an audience into the theatres by showing a traitor being bashed up. You can make a film on how Indians are the best human beings on the earth and other cultures are useless. I don’t believe in that. I believe every culture has value; every human being has value. He may be Japanese, Chinese or American. He has his own history and every civilization, culture and society has both good and bad qualities. That is a reality I prefer to look at. If a human being  is good, it doesn’t matter to me whether he is a Bangladeshi or Sri Lankan or American. I am going to look at the goodness and I hope I have the ability to appreciate it no matter what nationality he is.


So how much of a nationalist are you in real life?
I don’t have a very jingoistic approach of India as the greatest, India as the best. I don’t believe in national boundaries, they are man-made. A bunch of people have decided that this is India; this is America, Japan and China. I am not a person who is ultra nationalistic or ultra jingoistic. For me, it all boils down to the issues we are facing today as a nation and as a society. Nationalism to me means an understanding of what our nation is, what are the issues that concern us, what do we feel about our lives today, what are we unhappy about, what can be improved.

What then would be your idea of India?

(Long pause)… For me, India is this huge country made up of people with such varied backgrounds, cultures, languages, eating habits, clothing habits; even the way they physically look across the country is varied. Yet, all of them feel like they are part of one unit. Yes, there are problems, there is trouble, but ultimately all of us are living in a sense of harmony.

Also, India as a collective of people is a country that absorbs. In history, there have been people who have come in from outside India and they ended up becoming Indians. Whether it was Babar, or the Portuguese, even the British for that matter started living like Indians. India has a capacity to absorb what you have to offer and makes it its own.

Boundaries don’t matter to you. Would you then be as comfortable being the citizen of another country?

No. India with all its challenges, all its flavours, good or bad qualities, is something that I feel close to and strongly about. I can’t even imagine myself anywhere else in the world.

How much of your identity would you then say is derived from being an Indian?

It works on an emotional level. To give you a crude example, if I am traveling outside India and if I am in a foreign place where I don’t know people or their culture, if I am not familiar with the grain of the people, then the moment I meet an Indian there is an immediate sense of connect and a comfort. I may not know the person, he may be as much of a stranger as the next. But we do share a language, a backdrop, a history, a culture, which is of emotional value to me.

There have been various influences on me that may not have been Indian. As I have grown over these years, I have read a lot of authors, seen a lot of films, I have traveled a fair amount. But it’s my emotional key that makes me Indian. It’s the one thing I can identify in myself as the most Indian: how I react, how I feel.

Going back to your films, there has been criticism that in Sarfarosh there was a demonisation of Pakistan, the enemy country. Were you ever uncomfortable with that?

From whatever research director John Matthew Mathan had done, it seemed clear that there was a lot of ISI activity happening in India. There were lots of attempts at sending arms into India to generate terror and violence. It is happening still. I don’t think my character of ACP Rathore didn’t like Pakistanis. He had the highest respect, he was not against them at all, nor was the film. The film was certainly against cross-border terrorism that ISI was indulging in, and perhaps still is.

Earth, Fanaa may have been about nationalism but your characters’ moral frame was questionable.

Dilnawaz in Earth is a guy who is full of life; who's romantic and charming; someone who can go over the edge, and he does when things go haywire. He doesn’t have the stability that others around him had. He had no real agenda to begin with, but does turn into a monster. Rehaan in Fanaa believes in what he is fighting for and finds himself in a situation where he begins to feel emotionally very strongly for a person. It becomes a dilemma. Fanaa does not go into the right or wrong or the history. A man indulging in violence is not to be condoned and the film doesn’t do so either.

But Fanaa was a rare Hindi film that talked of how things went wrong because Kashmiris were not given a right to decide for themselves…


No, the film is not making a comment. It puts on board what happened. The films have earlier not put on board what happened which is important in itself.

Mangal Pandey was criticized for making a larger than life patriot out of a guy who was a chance hero, the trial papers claim that he acted under the influence of bhang…
Certainly historians know more about history than I do. However, I have only one simple question: how many sepoys do you know by name from 1857? All of India knows one, and that is Mangal Pandey. Whether he was a hero by chance or actually heroic is something we will never know. For 90 years, India has looked upon him like that, he became a name and personality that did become inspirational for Indians to fight for Independence. At every step, he was a name that became synonymous with rebellion against the British, stood for national sentiments, a personality who was willing to give up his life for the country. There’s very little documented matter on him. Just two pages of it actually. The fact that he was in the 34th regiment infantry, in Barrackpore, the fact that he took to arms on 28/29 of March and then he was hanged on the 8th of April. His court-martial and incidents of that day are recorded, other than that, what do you know about what kind of a person was he, his relationships?
So how do you make a film on him? You can’t make a film that actually deals with the nitty-gritty of his everyday life, but can catch the essence of what he stood for. And that is what Ketan attempted to do. Whatever recorded document is there has been written by the British, so you have to understand that it is by the very officers who spoke against him. If we go by today’s example, there are so many cases where reports are fudged, what actually happened is not reported. I see it every day in the papers. Misinformation is not something new. So why am I going to believe what was reported in the court martial? I will use my own imagination. When there is not enough research, then we will go by imagination and then one person’s imagination is as good as the others'.

The film has been honest to what used to happen at that time. Were there British officers who were friends with Indian sepoys? Yes there were. Was there prostitution, did the Company have its own brothels? Yes. Did the sepoys refuse to use the cartridge? Yes. All of these things have happened. Was there sati happening? Yes there was. These incidents were happening. Are there records of British officers trying to stop sati? Yes. Have there been instances of British officers having relations with Indian women? Yes. Have there been instances of British officers joining Indians against the British during the First War of Independence? Yes. All of these things shown in the film have been reported somewhere…

Your kind of nationalistic films have been fictional or historical. Would you do a contemporary political film based on actual incidents like Black Friday or Parzania?
Yes, why not? Neither was offered to me but I saw both of them, they were extremely moving.

Black Friday left a section of people dissatisfied. While some called it anti-Muslims, others felt it humanized terrorists…

I can understand that, but Black Friday is a film that attempts to place on record what happened. It is based on a book that, in turn, was based on representations made by the police investigating the case and people involved in the incident. Then it’s up to you as a viewer to decide what happened.

So what did you decide?

I didn’t see it as an anti-Muslim or pro-Muslim film. For me it’s about certain people who did a certain thing and it was proved and placed on record. If the person planting the bomb is shown to be a Muslim, then it’s not being anti-Muslim. If it was a Hindu you will report that.

But I had issues. I felt that the film clearly names the people involved in the blasts, which it should do and I appreciate that. It also clearly states that these people did what they did because of one incident that happened in the past i.e. the Bombay riots. But the film doesn’t name the people involved in that incident. The filmmaker should have had the courage. Why not bother to find out who those people were? I found that lacking.

What according to you have been the good and bad moments for you as an Indian?

Bad moments are all those connected to violence: people getting killed in bomb blasts and riots; people with political backgrounds using religion and caste to get people to fight, polarize and poison minds. Good bits are that through all this you still see positivity. I am just happy being here in India.

How conscious have you been of your identity as a Muslim?

I don’t think any of us has a choice any more. The moment you have parties and individuals polarizing people, making them aware, then you will become aware too. Whether you are a Hindu or a Muslim, you are constantly being reminded of who you are and what the other person is.
That’s sad. I can make two twins sit next to each other and make them feel different; if I want, I can create a rift between the two. There’s no end to it. In a country like India, we should be able to live with dignity, in love and care and should all live as one. We are the same human beings. We must enjoy it the way it is with its beauty and diversity.

Is it important for you to practice your religion? How come I don’t see any symbols of your religion in your house?

(Laughs pointing to a statue in the balcony): There’s a Ganesha over there…I don’t discuss religion in public. And the less it is discussed the better.

But I am curious to know if you have read the religious texts. Have your parents inculcated the practices in you?

All of this goes into the same area of discussing religion that I don’t want to indulge in…


On this question all I’d like to say is that I am an Indian and that is what is important to me…But I am not apologetic or defensive about my religion…

You are the liberal face of a Muslim—educated, married to a Hindu, have a stature and standing. Does it make you more immune to trouble than say the common Muslim on the streets?

Irrespective of your religion, it’s your position in society that counts. If you are economically well off, if you are successful and you have certain strengths you would be that much more immune to a lot of things. You will be exposed to harsh realities if you are at the grassroots.

Our film industry is considered to be the most secular. Right now, it’s the Khans who are ruling it…

Discrimination happens in every society, in every walk of life in various degrees and to different people, whether it’s on caste or religious grounds. If you go by the theory that man is a tribes person, then what you recognize as your tribe might be quite different from what another person recognizes as his tribe. You are softer on someone who you think is from your tribe and harsher on another.

In the entertainment world, if someone entertains you, he just entertains irrespective of whether he is Chinese or German or black or white or Hindu or Muslim or upper caste or lower caste. When someone cracks a good joke he makes you laugh. You are quite happy to ignore his background. In the last 17 years in the film industry, I have seen no discrimination. At every level--in the labour force, spot boys, producers, directors, writers, actors--I haven’t seen it happening…

Yet portrayals of the minorities get stereotypical…

Why just Muslims? Any hero can get stereotyped. In a mass medium when I am telling a story to lakhs of people and if I am hoping to connect with lakhs of them, then my strokes will have to be a little broad. The struggle for any creative person is how to bring in finer strokes, how to bring in layers? For us, that becomes a challenge. In a medium meant for mass consumption, forget the Muslim, even a Hindu can become a cliché. There is very little scope for grey.

Have you wondered about what the academics call the "feminization" of the Muslim, how in Bollywood’s Hindu-Muslim love story (like Gadar, Bombay) it’s the girl who is a Muslim who gets "taken over" by the Hindu guy…

According to me, if a film like Gadar was made in Pakistan, it would be other way round. Every society would want to get its own audience to identify with the particular story. I don’t think it’s important. It’s not an issue at all. If a film is saying that irrespective of your religion, you can love each other and hope to share a life, then why not? I don’t like to read into it too much
If I had problems with Mani Ratnam’s Bombay those were not Hindu or Muslim in nature. Bombay shows that the riots happened spontaneously and that your average Hindu or Muslim was out on the street fighting each other, which is not what happened.

You took on Narendra Modi but Fanaa never got shown in Gujarat, Parzania too is stuck…Doesn’t it bother you?

In a democracy you go by the understanding that what majority wants will happen. You or I may not like it. Having said that, I also feel the law of the land must be upheld in all cases, but obviously there are times when illegal things do happen. Irrespective of who is in power, you have to follow the law of the land and it states you can’t stop the exhibition of a film. But what can you do if the law and order machinery is unable to protect a film? If 500 people come to my house today and kill me and law is not able to protect me, then what can you do?

You were criticized for picking up the Narmada issue and then leaving it mid-way…

I am not a social activist. For me to take an issue to its final conclusion will mean that I stop making films. I feel if there’s any issue I feel strongly about, I can give a voice to it. I can try and create awareness. I can use my public personality to educate, to take it to people. I have no inclination to go beyond that. My primary responsibility is to entertain, to speak on issues as a citizen. Whether it's NBA or any other issue, it’s the primary responsibility of administration to sort it out and for the media to report on it. On NBA, I felt a certain way, understood it and wanted to express. It became a controversy in which the youth wing of both Congress and BJP took to arms against me. There are people who have lost land, do you not want them to be rehabilitated? It really is the responsibility of elected representatives and media to take it forward. Would there be other issues I’ll take up in the future? Yes, if and when I feel like.

Any leaders who inspire you?
*hiji was one such person. I can’t name anyone from contemporary politics. It will be unfair. I don’t know them enough.

Does the thought of entering politics enter your mind?

No. I am quite comfortable where I am. I am a person who is into cinema. I do not want to be anywhere else. I am not cut out for politics. I am not going to align with any party, nor campaign for any.



 







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feverpitch

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #1 on: May 14, 2007, 11:01:48 AM »
Link?
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"In societies where modern conditions of production prevail, all life presents as an immense accumulation of spectacles. Everything that was directly lived has moved away into a representation."

Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle

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feverpitch

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #3 on: May 14, 2007, 11:29:51 AM »
This is one heck of an interview. I wonder why more rags and TV chatterboxes don't, even occasionally do such an interview. This reminds me of the pretty similar but far shorter and more circumspect interview of Shahrukh on Tehelka, that I had posted somewhere on this DG a month or so ago.
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"In societies where modern conditions of production prevail, all life presents as an immense accumulation of spectacles. Everything that was directly lived has moved away into a representation."

Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #4 on: May 14, 2007, 12:03:09 PM »
This is one heck of an interview. I wonder why more rags and TV chatterboxes don't, even occasionally do such an interview.

because the man does not talk to all the "rags" and "TV chatterboxes"
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Sachin Tendulkar gave the muhurat clap for 'Awwal Number' - that apart, he hasn't done much wrong in the last 20 yrs!

feverpitch

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #5 on: May 14, 2007, 12:06:33 PM »
This is one heck of an interview. I wonder why more rags and TV chatterboxes don't, even occasionally do such an interview.

because the man does not talk to all the "rags" and "TV chatterboxes"

I don't agree totally. Why? Because, as a media personality, he lives by the media, and truly, I've seen him on other channels etc. However, I've rarely, if at all, seen him being asked anything other than stupid inanities by bolly bimbettes.
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"In societies where modern conditions of production prevail, all life presents as an immense accumulation of spectacles. Everything that was directly lived has moved away into a representation."

Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #6 on: May 14, 2007, 12:13:51 PM »
This is one heck of an interview. I wonder why more rags and TV chatterboxes don't, even occasionally do such an interview.

because the man does not talk to all the "rags" and "TV chatterboxes"

I don't agree totally. Why? Because, as a media personality, he lives by the media, and truly, I've seen him on other channels etc. However, I've rarely, if at all, seen him being asked anything other than stupid inanities by bolly bimbettes.


Aamir carefully picks and chooses the people and media outlets he talks to. I am not saying that he does not appear at all. But he is very choosy, and he is very clear that there will be no personal questions involved.
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Sachin Tendulkar gave the muhurat clap for 'Awwal Number' - that apart, he hasn't done much wrong in the last 20 yrs!

achutank

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #7 on: May 14, 2007, 06:00:06 PM »
aamir talks to people deemed "intellectual enough" , the questions here are typically intellectual if you ask me.

i would like to ask him some questions if i do interview him, like how come he manages to hog all the limelight in a  film? and why does he think it happens that way?
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #8 on: May 15, 2007, 12:42:26 AM »
ps - I read somewhere that Aamir Khan gets his dosage of news from The Hindu which he gets couriered every day to his place.

Remind you of anyone?
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Why did the chicken cross the road?

According to Le Chatelier:
 
The chicken crossed the road because there were too many moles of chicken
on the reactants side of the road equilibrium.

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #9 on: May 15, 2007, 03:42:17 AM »
aamir talks to people deemed "intellectual enough" , the questions here are typically intellectual if you ask me.

i would like to ask him some questions if i do interview him, like how come he manages to hog all the limelight in a  film? and why does he think it happens that way?

well, you wouldnt say that if you watched RDB
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Sachin Tendulkar gave the muhurat clap for 'Awwal Number' - that apart, he hasn't done much wrong in the last 20 yrs!

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #10 on: May 15, 2007, 03:59:12 AM »
I remember one interview of Aamir K on NDTV where he pretty much told the interviewer that all you guys have chosen to dumb down news to the extent that I dont feel like talking to you people because your priorities are so different. I remember him in fact taking NDTV on for spending copious amounts of time on Paris Hilton escapade(I dont which one but the one where she had her pet dog with her).

So I dont think its right to say Aamir does interviews with TV channels or even mag's etc. In fact to a pointed question on some talk show he had replied saying if talking would have solved problems, India would be the most prosperous place in the world after all these talk shows.
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achutank

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #11 on: May 15, 2007, 04:44:45 AM »
aamir talks to people deemed "intellectual enough" , the questions here are typically intellectual if you ask me.

i would like to ask him some questions if i do interview him, like how come he manages to hog all the limelight in a  film? and why does he think it happens that way?

well, you wouldnt say that if you watched RDB

WHY? WHATS IN RDB thats so life altering?  if you ask me LRMB had a better impact on society. and how coincidental that he chose tocome out and support the NBA when the RDB hyping was on an then convininetly go bak saying i am just an artist and its not really my problem (read interview upstairs) :-)
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #12 on: May 15, 2007, 04:48:14 AM »
aamir talks to people deemed "intellectual enough" , the questions here are typically intellectual if you ask me.

i would like to ask him some questions if i do interview him, like how come he manages to hog all the limelight in a  film? and why does he think it happens that way?

well, you wouldnt say that if you watched RDB

WHY? WHATS IN RDB thats so life altering?  if you ask me LRMB had a better impact on society. and how coincidental that he chose tocome out and support the NBA when the RDB hyping was on an then convininetly go bak saying i am just an artist and its not really my problem (read interview upstairs) :-)

I am not talking about whether RDB was life altering or not. Or whether Lage Raho was. That is a separate debate altogether.

I was responding to your point that Aamir hogs all the limelight in his movies. He did not in RDB. He did not, in Earth, either.
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Sachin Tendulkar gave the muhurat clap for 'Awwal Number' - that apart, he hasn't done much wrong in the last 20 yrs!

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #13 on: May 15, 2007, 04:54:13 AM »
yes earth maybe but then it is an interntional release with limited impact in india. however to say that he is not the face of rdb would be do a disservice to amir's pr mecanism  ;D
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #14 on: May 15, 2007, 05:08:34 AM »
achu:

why do you hate amir so much ?  >:D ::Whip::
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #15 on: May 15, 2007, 05:14:36 AM »
yes earth maybe but then it is an interntional release with limited impact in india. however to say that he is not the face of rdb would be do a disservice to amir's pr mecanism  ;D

well, achu, earth was not an international release alone .. it was released all over in india as well

of course, aamir is the leading face of RDB ... what do you expect? he is a star .. he can pull people in to the theatres ... and when film makers make films they hope to make money as well. Just as most promos for a forthcoming cricket series will have SRT, SG, RD, AK in their promos .. even if Kaif or Munaf have been the better performers in recent times. But, the actual movie did not have any of the characters being sidelined by aamir; neither did he hog the limelight.

another movie is dil chahta hai ... aamir was the only star .. saif was a nobody then .. akshay still is ... again, every character was well etched out ... no overshadowing of others by one big star.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #16 on: May 15, 2007, 05:21:25 AM »
achu:

why do you hate amir so much ?  >:D ::Whip::

He loves Shahrukh, perhaps?  ;D
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #17 on: May 15, 2007, 05:43:34 AM »
achu:

why do you hate amir so much ?  >:D ::Whip::

He loves Shahrukh, perhaps?  ;D

are they mutually exclusive as far as likeability?
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #18 on: May 15, 2007, 05:52:45 AM »
Quote
are they mutually exclusive as far as likeability?

definitely, sharukh's the imposter gallivanting as some one with a membership in the actor's guild.  ::Whip::
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #19 on: May 15, 2007, 06:04:17 AM »
Quote
are they mutually exclusive as far as likeability?

definitely, sharukh's the imposter gallivanting as some one with a membership in the actor's guild.  ::Whip::

well, he does have his strengths as an actor ... although, these have been largely invisible of late....
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #20 on: May 15, 2007, 06:09:43 AM »
Quote
well, he does have his strengths as an actor ... although, these have been largely invisible of late....

yes, he does, except no one has ever taught him to harness those strengths -- what you get is a flood of histrionics far removed from how people actually emote in real life.

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #21 on: May 15, 2007, 06:22:45 AM »
Quote
well, he does have his strengths as an actor ... although, these have been largely invisible of late....

yes, he does, except no one has ever taught him to harness those strengths -- what you get is a flood of histrionics far removed from how people actually emote in real life.


I dont disagree ... but there always is the ocassional Swades or Hey Ram, which shows what we are missing out on. Even his current histrionics were fine to begin with ... till they started appearing in every film irrespective of the character.

But, he sells. He is a star by doing what he is doing. And, one cant grudge him that, though I do not like his acting most times.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #22 on: May 15, 2007, 06:32:06 AM »
Yes, Swadesh was a revelation and to an extent Paheli, and I thought ok, he finally gets it -- someone has talked some sense ino him.

Unfortunately it was short lived. He is back to the over emoting "nautanki" style again.

But you are right, he sells. Perhaps more than anyone else. Does not make him a good actor in my books though
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #23 on: May 15, 2007, 09:05:22 AM »
when i go to see a sharukh khan film, i go to see SRK, not an actor. like rajni.  ;D i enjoy seeing SRK as SRK.

on another note not related to above statement: SRK is also a good actor when he has the right director, he is creative.

amir hAS  a few stock templates he plays - angry man on mission, impish rogue, serious executive and these are repeated in alternate movies with a standard set of expressions right from his rangeela days. even shobha de said on karan johar's show that aamir is overrated and shobha knows bollywood, she practically created film journalism in india.

well if you need to know i am ahuge SRK fan but not a yash-karan fan so i miss out on most SRK movies. but yes he was awesome in paheli but my favourite all time SRK film was kundan shah's KHKN and i thought he really held his own in swadesh which was a fantastically bad film.

now coming to great actors:

the greatest actor in the world is from india: please see the last 20 minutes of monsoon wedding to know the answer.

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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #24 on: May 15, 2007, 09:23:02 AM »
so ur angst wrt amir is becoz ure a fan of the pathetic SRK ?


the difference between amir and srk is that amir prsents reality, limited repertoire and all. Most of us in real life do not emote in  a 1001 ways, and most of us dont emote in a way that hearing and speech impaired people can understand.

Amir is the best commercially because when he acts, it doesnt feel like hes acting -- natural.

SRK on the other hand is the most monumental waste of talent I have seen, comparable to mithunda ( you have to see mithun in his national award winning roles to see what a waste his commercial career has been). SRK's routine of amplifying emotions to the point of caricature means his movies will never need captioning for the hearing impaired, which is why he is fit for the nautanki stage.

As far as last 20 min of MW -- do u mean Naseer ? Yes, he is a great actor, w/o doubt.

BTW, if you want to see Amir, see Raakh
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #25 on: May 15, 2007, 09:24:14 AM »
Well, if SRK does not get good directors, the fault entirely lies with him. If, after reaching where he has, he is not willing to experiment, there is nothing much anyone else can do. Besides, I think SRK sucks at comedy.

I dont think Shobha De is an expert on acting ... she would hardly know what that means ... so, i wonder why her view on anyone's acting capabilities .. leave alone Aamir ... is really to be considered as a benchmark. Yes, as an individual, she is entitled to her view, but thats about it. Yes, now if Shobha were to give her views on who writes the best semi-porn or who is the yellowest journalist out there or which she considers to be the best film magazine out there, one should take note.

Incidentally, almost every director who has come on Karan Johar's show has rated Aamir as the better actor vis-a-vis Shahrukh - but that is not really saying much, I agree.

On Aamir's templates ... angry young man on a mission, impish rogue, serious executive ... covers most of the templates out there, doesn't it? Serious, comedy, action, romance, negative .. he's really done it all with a good success rate. I wonder which template you find missing. I like the fact that he gets out of his comfort zone ... works in different plots with different and as yet untried directors and works well ... among the mainstream actors, he is probably the most versatile along with Saif.

I agree Naseer is a very good actor. I wouldnt, however, term him as the greatest in India or the world.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #26 on: May 15, 2007, 10:09:05 AM »
Well, if SRK does not get good directors, the fault entirely lies with him. If, after reaching where he has, he is not willing to experiment, there is nothing much anyone else can do. Besides, I think SRK sucks at comedy.

I dont think Shobha De is an expert on acting ... she would hardly know what that means ... so, i wonder why her view on anyone's acting capabilities .. leave alone Aamir ... is really to be considered as a benchmark. Yes, as an individual, she is entitled to her view, but thats about it. Yes, now if Shobha were to give her views on who writes the best semi-porn or who is the yellowest journalist out there or which she considers to be the best film magazine out there, one should take note.

Incidentally, almost every director who has come on Karan Johar's show has rated Aamir as the better actor vis-a-vis Shahrukh - but that is not really saying much, I agree.

On Aamir's templates ... angry young man on a mission, impish rogue, serious executive ... covers most of the templates out there, doesn't it? Serious, comedy, action, romance, negative .. he's really done it all with a good success rate. I wonder which template you find missing. I like the fact that he gets out of his comfort zone ... works in different plots with different and as yet untried directors and works well ... among the mainstream actors, he is probably the most versatile along with Saif.
I agree Naseer is a very good actor. I wouldnt, however, term him as the greatest in India or the world.

kb, kic

first of all i would like to clarify that srk and amir are two separate topics and i can like both actors.

so please do not say that i dislike one because i like the other. ;D

amir khan movies were something i looked forward to right from QSQT days. i enjoyd his dil immensely, he does feel natural and all that as kban mentioned. but my problem is that he since lagaan has come across as someone who thinks he is niro. his "look-at-me-i-am-so-into-kafka" thing is something that is overbearing. for the record i thought lagaan was a boring film. and just the novelty of the storyline situaion does not a good film make. but an oscar nominaion can really do wonders for your intellectual quotient i suppose.

to answer kic's take on the templates, yes you are right. what else is there if you take the bollywood context. but if you were to evaluate his acting from a mere film perspective he is too limited in range. his role may be different but the way he acts in those roles there is a sense of deja vu. for example the amir in rangeela = amir in dil chata hai =amir in first half of RDB = amir in JJWS. see them (and i have seen his movies multiple times, big fan of amir in JJWS). but his tag of "serious" actor is something i don't feel he ahs earned. now you see tabu in astitva and tabu in namesake you find that she hasbrought completely deifferent shades to the two housewives she portrays there. and remember a simple commonplace housewife is one of the most difficult roles to do, you cannot bank on character eccentricites to bail you out in your acting-creativity.

as far as SRK goes, i have not said that he is not getting the roles he deserves - not at all. merely i am saying that he chooses to be the superstar (or should i say the superupstart:)) and he knows what the public wants to see. but the point i was making was that he is no less an actor and that is why i pointed you to the movies i mentioned in the earlier post.

i hope this clarifies my different stands on amir and SRK.
« Last Edit: May 15, 2007, 10:20:27 AM by achutank »
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #27 on: May 15, 2007, 10:14:47 AM »
also kic (since you read mumbai newspapers)

de's column in bombay times is a really balanced column and her worldview is well articulated and knowledgeable, surprising very surprising even when i discovered it but improbable no way. she comes from a family background that is well educated (Mah brah) and her brother is gautam rajyadakshya just to give an example who himself apart from being oen of the foremost photographers of the country is also the leading indian authority on opera  :icon_thumleft:.

my point is kic you should read her column to find out how she knows and how much she really cares about the issues whe writes about, don't let her SBombay network and her bread-butter writing come in the way of making your own judgement of her.

she does know her films kic :).
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #28 on: May 15, 2007, 10:18:08 AM »
also kic (since you read mumbai newspapers)

de's column in bombay times is a really balanced column and her worldview is well articulated and knowledgeable, surprising very surprising even when i discovered it but improbable no way. she comes from a family background that is well educated (Mah brah) and her brother is gautam rajyadakshya just to give an example who himself apart from being oen of the foremost photographers of the country is also the leading indian authority on opera  :icon_thumleft:.

my point is kic you should read her column to find out how she knows and how much she really cares about the issues whe writes about, don't let her SBombay network and her bread-butter writing come in the way of making your own judgement of her.

she does know her films kic :).

oh, i've read her columns, achu. And, I stand by my view.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #29 on: May 15, 2007, 10:31:05 AM »
Achu, I dont know what a "serious" actor is ... and why should someone earn such a tag? I also do not consider aamir the greatest actor in the world ... but he is definitely head and shoulders above most of his counterparts, in terms of range and acting. And that includes SRK. An actor's body of work keeps expanding as he does more work ... and Aamir's has been growing, and I'm sure will keep growing.

You may find him repetitive in a lot of situations ... I dont. I think the serious guy in Lagaan is different from the serious guy in Sarfarosh, who in turn is different from the serious guy in Ghulam. Some of the characteristics of the characters played by Aamir in RDB, JJWS, Rangeela, DCH may match .. and, to that extent, there could be similarities. But each of these characters had their own nuances as well. Most importantly, any of the characteristics displayed appeared natural for the character concerned.

And, finally, Tabu is a good actress as well. I liked her performance in Astitva, thought she was just Ok in namesake and found her pathetic in Fanaa.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #30 on: May 15, 2007, 10:32:43 AM »
well then thats your opinion then. and you must be right from where you are standing.

and wecan agree to disagree on shobha de the cannes jury member  ;D
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #31 on: May 15, 2007, 10:40:27 AM »
In my books Amir K is an actor and Sharukh like Kamal Hassan is a nautanki artist...That SRK and Kamal have talent is a given, but like KIC said neither of them emote on screen like normal humans do...peoples emotions and expressions dont change that abruptly.

Now one can talk about SRK not getting good directors etc but all that is just an exercise in finding reasons according to me. SRK is got locked into a image, I remember him from his days on TV in Fauji, Circus, One Punju serial etc where he showed his real talent, now with his involvement in the YashRaj banner etc he has lost his acting edge.

Aamir on the other hand has matured into a really good actor and today carries off almost all roles with equal panace. That he is trying to project a intellectual image is completely another issue.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #32 on: May 15, 2007, 10:54:37 AM »
One Punju serial ... ...

That would be Sanjha Chulha...
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #33 on: May 15, 2007, 12:39:10 PM »
Talking about Muslims and Aamir, srk etc.
I always wondered about the inordinately high number of Muslims in Bollywood or Jews in Hollywood.
What makes minorities go more into arts? Is it the persecution (imagined and/or real). is it the hunger because they have limited opportunities?
Does anyone know about any study done on this especially regards to Hollywood.


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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #34 on: May 15, 2007, 01:10:26 PM »
khans have good persoanlity, even someone like irfan han has a good presence
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #35 on: May 15, 2007, 03:20:11 PM »
talking about actors I think Rajpal Yadav is also a great actor if given the right director
His Main, meri Patni aur Woh was such a pleasure to watch.

ditto with KK
among the newer lot I like Abhay Deol
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #36 on: May 15, 2007, 03:59:47 PM »
so ur angst wrt amir is becoz ure a fan of the pathetic SRK ?


the difference between amir and srk is that amir prsents reality, limited repertoire and all. Most of us in real life do not emote in  a 1001 ways, and most of us dont emote in a way that hearing and speech impaired people can understand.

Amir is the best commercially because when he acts, it doesnt feel like hes acting -- natural.

SRK on the other hand is the most monumental waste of talent I have seen, comparable to mithunda ( you have to see mithun in his national award winning roles to see what a waste his commercial career has been). SRK's routine of amplifying emotions to the point of caricature means his movies will never need captioning for the hearing impaired, which is why he is fit for the nautanki stage.

As far as last 20 min of MW -- do u mean Naseer ? Yes, he is a great actor, w/o doubt.

BTW, if you want to see Amir, see Raakh

Pitamah, I fail to get your point. Mithunda, in your own words, is a good actor and you are referring to his rols in some of the art films that he has done. Apparently he has given a very good performance in Buddhadev's 'Kaalpurush', also starring Rahul Bose, but the film hasn't yet released commercially although it has received acclaims in all the film festivals. Other than the art films, I can also name a few commercial films where Mithunda has been very good. At least there's no doubt about Mithunda's talent and even people (mostly non-Bengalis) who haven't watched his art films tend to agree with that. But tell me which SRK performance comes even close to Mithunda's performance in 'Mrigaya', 'Tahader Katha', 'Swami Vivekanand', 'Hum Paanch' etc.? Why do you call SRK a monumental waste of talent? I can understand and agree with your comments on Mithunda's commercial career, but imo SRK is not even remotely close to Mithunda as far as talent is concerned. Yes, he may be a bigger commercial success than most of the stars, past and present, but that's entirely different. So where's the comparison yaar? The other thing is the Bachchans and the SRKs have always worked with the biggest filmmakers of the industry while a Mithunda, Govinda, even Aamir (to a much lesser extent though) didn't have those luxaries and yet survived and gave hits. 'Rangeela' was Ramu's first hit in Hindi, when Aamir worked with Vikram Bhaat in 'Ghulam', Bhaat was a nobody. No other actor would have probably worked with Gowarikar after he made 'Pehla Nasha' and 'Baazi', but Aamir did and he even produced 'Laagan'. 'Sarforash' was JMM's first ever film. However, I didn't like Aamir doing 'Fanaa'. That was a stupid film. Btw, imho, in terms of purely acting, the best that we have today is Irrfan. The guy will never be a big commercial star because he lacks what's needed to be one in Bollywood, but he's ever so dependable, much like Koko. 

PS: Before Achu jumps on me, let me say that I did  enjoy some of SRK's movies. My favorite, like Achu's, is KHKN with 'Yes Boss' being a close second. I liked 'Paheli' as well and I think 'Baazigar' was an ultimate commercial film and SRK was perfect in that film, considering it was one of his earlier films. I also think he did a fantastic job with KBC3 and hosting the last 'Filmfare' award. I liked his energy and the way he came up with witty answers.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #37 on: May 15, 2007, 05:47:12 PM »
achu:

why do you hate amir so much ?  >:D ::Whip::

He loves Shahrukh, perhaps?  ;D

are they mutually exclusive as far as likeability?
Comeon yaar, I meant if you like Shah Rukh, you are perhaps incapable of appreciating Amir  ;D
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #38 on: May 15, 2007, 06:26:46 PM »
achu:

why do you hate amir so much ?  >:D ::Whip::

He loves Shahrukh, perhaps?  ;D

are they mutually exclusive as far as likeability?
Comeon yaar, I meant if you like Shah Rukh, you are perhaps incapable of appreciating Amir  ;D
No one comes close to Rajani annan, my hero.

Seriously speaking, Naseeruddin Shah is the one of those rare exceptions in Hindi cinema who can be considered a good actor today. But what I personally feel is that Hindi cinema lacks good directors and more importantly, an audience that can appreciate real quality versus the trash that is dished out daily.
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Re: 'Why Muslim, Even A Hindu Can Be Cliché' - Aamir Khan
« Reply #39 on: May 15, 2007, 06:46:19 PM »
Let me add my 2 cents to this.

First off, Naseeruddin Shah. Personally, Naseer is the greatest Indian actor that I have seen, by
any measure. The sheer authenticity he brings to the screen is something unparalleled in
Indian cinema. Someone whose resume includes Paar, Mandi, Umrao Jaan, Masoom, Junoon, Mirch Masala,
Albert Pinto, Bazaar, Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron, Sparsh (and I am still in the early-mid 80's) has to be a very
special actor. The reason I picked these films (and one can add tons more to them) was because the
each role demanded something distinctly different and in each case, Naseeruddin became the role. I
remember reading somewhere that Naseeruddin could play the role of a chair better than a chair
itself. He embodies everything that an actor should aspire to be.

On the commercial front, I would put Saif well ahead of both Aamir and Shahrukh. This guy is genuinely
good (with a superb comedic timing, to boot), and will only get better with meatier roles. To his credit,
Saif has created a niche for himself without the shallow nautanki that passes as acting in most films. Langda
Tyagi simply owned Omkara. Can anyone remotely imagine Shahrukh even attempting that role with his
range of emotions (all the way from A to B) ? Shahrukh is just not trained well enough as an actor.

In my view, Aamir has acquitted himself quite nicely. I thought Earth was a gritty and challenging part, and
he did quite well. On the lighter front, he was very smooth and authentic in Dil Chahta Hai.

Irfan/Konkona have the potential to be the Naseer/Shabana of this generation. They feed off each other
so very well - Metro should've had more of them. Eagerly waiting to see more of them.

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