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Amitabh
Bachchan is getting increasingly more involved with departments other
than acting. After jotting off dialogues for Rituparno Ghosh's film
"Last Lear", he motivated R. Balki to take a plunge into filmmaking
with "Cheeni Kum".
Balki, who is a Tamilian from Bangalore, would have grappled with Hindi if it were not for Big B.
"I've
grown up watching his films," said the director of "Cheeni Kum". "And I
love the casual colloquial conversational way he speaks in his films.
No long-flowing poetic rhetoric. That's the Hindi which comes naturally
to me."
"It was Amitji's language that I decided to use in
'Cheeni Kum'. Even otherwise, he has been completely supportive. He
silently kept pushing me to take the plunge.
"One day when I
messaged him saying I had an idea for a film, he called me over
immediately. From that day onwards he has motivated me into making this
film."
As "Cheeni Kum" gets swathed in compliments, it gets
progressively hard to believe that its director had never looked into a
camera before this film.
"It's true. I'm not a filmmaker,"
Balki said. "I'm an advertising person. I just write ads. I had never
made a film in my life before 'Cheeni Kum'. I wrote my script
two-and-a-half years ago with Amitji in mind."
"Then for
various reasons, including Amitji's illness, the film kept getting
postponed. Finally I just took 45 days to shoot the film. I didn't try
to be different in 'Cheeni Kum'. I just made it the way I wanted to."
"Cheeni Kum" is arguably the most original film since last year's runaway hit "Rang De Basanti".
"It's
completely original," admits Balki. "I don't think it's worthwhile to
rip off someone else's idea. I also think a director needs to write the
script and dialogue himself."
"I had a friend to get the
gender, etc., in Hindi right. Otherwise I can't imagine how anyone can
have two different people doing the direction and the writing."
Balki is currently writing his second film, but is in no hurry to start it.
About
Bachchan playing a chef, Balki explains: "I wanted him to convey the
arrogance of some kind of an artiste. Amitabh had never played a chef
before. My script was based on my perception of what Amitji and Tabu
were like in real life."
"I always thought Amitabh is very
wry. Amitabh is always larger than life. I wanted to work around that.
As for Tabu, I wanted her role to be played by someone who would make
the relationship with the much older man real. There's a fantastic
chemistry between the two."
Paresh was the only afterthought
in the cast. "Paresh was out of the country. When he returned he said
he had to be in the film."
Balki cast his first choice for
almost every role. "The guy who plays the waiter Colgate is actually a
Kannada guy playing a Malayali. I was very clear about which actors I
wanted for the four principal roles played by Amitabh, Tabu, Zohra
Sehgal and the little girl Swini Khare whom I had worked with in a
couple of ads. I needed a seven-year-old girl who is Amitabh's
confidante."
"Does the film industry under-utilise Tabu? I
don't think so. She under-utilises herself. She's very simple and
choosy. She's as sarcastic, quiet and cool as the character she plays.
And she's a very honest person. She was in awe of Amitabh. But she
never let it show on screen.
"In fact Amitabh's awe for Tabu
is more visible on screen. If it was some two other less skilled actors
it'd have looked like Amitji was leching."
Balki still remains an advertising person at heart.
"Feature
film is a new idea. For 'Cheeni Kum' I got immense support from my old
friend cinematographer P.C. Sreeram and my art director Julie Bonnet
from London who recreated the whole London restaurant on a studio set.
But I'd say 99 percent of the encouragement to make my first film came
from Amitji."
"Working with him has completely spoilt me. I grew up watching and idolising three people: Kamal Haasan, Rajnikant and Amitji."
After
"Cheeni Kum", Balki does not intend to abandon his main vocation. "I'll
make a film only when I get an idea that I can film. I'm in the middle
of writing a film called 'Pa' for Amitabh and Abhishek Bachchan. It's a
funny and light film."
"And if the casting sounds gimmicky
it isn't so. Just like 'Cheeni Kum' was written for Amitji and Tabu,
'Pa' is written for the two Bachchans. And, no, there's no Aishwarya
Rai or Vidya Balan in the film, as mentioned in an interview in a
tabloid."
Indo-Asian News Service
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