Acting in commercial films not a conscious effort: Rahul Bose
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Cerebral
actor Rahul Bose says his recent performances in commercial movies are
not a conscious effort to prove wrong critics who think he is suited
only for art-house cinema.
"I
don't have to prove anything to anybody," Bose told IANS in an
interview. "Just when people say that Rahul Bose only does art-house
cinema, you'll find me doing something different like 'Pyaar Ke Side
Effects' and 'Chain Kulii ...'"
"I don't care what people think about me. I love doing different films. Put me wherever and I will try to do my best."
The
39-year-old actor, who enthralled audiences with his memorable
performance as a Muslim man in "Mr. and Mrs. Iyer" and as an
intellectual who is torn by guilt for leaving his girlfriend at a time
she needed him the most in "15 Park Avenue", made his acting debut in
1994 with "English August".
His forthcoming film "Chain
Kulii Ki Main Kulii", whose promo shows Bose dancing with several women
- an act he has never tried before on screen - will see him play the
role of the Indian cricket captain trying to pull out his team from a
bad patch.
Bose, whose directorial venture "Everybody Says
I'm Fine" in 2001 had earned him the reputation of a thinking director,
said he would direct a film "Moth Smoke", based on a novel by Pakistani
author Mohsin Hamid that deals with an extra-marital affair in
contemporary Pakistan.
The versatile actor is also doing two
other films: "The Japanese Wife", which narrates a long distance
romance between a Japanese girl and an Indian school teacher, and
Santosh Sivan's "Before the Rains", which portrays an intimate
friendship between an Englishman and a Malayali villager.
Bose,
who got rave reviews for his performances in Sudhir Mishra's "Chameli"
and Sujoy Ghosh's "Jhankar Beats", added that he wanted to do roles
that he has never attempted before.
"I want to do action films because I want to explore that genre. I think I can do it," he said.
Indo-Asian News Service
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