An entertainer should help build the moral fibre of society- Aamir Khan
-Baradwaj Rangan
A
week before Aamir Khan was to inaugurate 11th Chennai International
Film Festival, he consented to a curtain-raiser interview – and on a
warm Thursday
afternoon, I found myself waiting in his new sea-facing office in
Bandra. The space doesn’t look finished yet, and from the things lying
around no clear theme is visible. An oil painting is propped in a
corner, various faces of the star from his films, all against a bright
red background. There are scattered books – The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño, Captain Pantoja and the Special Service by Mario Vargas Llosa. There are board games – Risk, The Settlers of Catan. On the floor are several clapperboards, foremost among them the one for Rang De Basanti. There are DVDs – the 007 collection, a boxed set of Satyamev Jayate.
A royal blue crystal ash tray lies on the centre table, and beside it, a
box of Jackson Maruti tissues, from which a single tissue flops over
like a Labrador’s ear. Elsewhere, there’s a pile of old, faded jeans and
T-shirts, and alongside, a clear plastic bag filled with a pair of
sneakers and a pair of flip flops. And somewhere in the midst of all
this is a red baseball cap with the legend Beti Zindabad: A campaign for gender equality. At 1 pm
sharp, Aamir Khan walked in and seated himself. He was in casual
clothes – baseball cap, a grey T-shirt, cargo shorts, sneakers. I asked
him if he wanted to change. He said, “If you want to me look all formal,
it will take an hour.” So we just began to talk.
We
keep hearing that the reason we don’t make the kind of cinema that
other nations make is that our audience isn’t cine-literate enough, that
they only want entertainment. Do you think stars have a responsibility
to guide their fans towards a different kind of cinema?
The
primary responsibility of a film person is to entertain. The audience
comes to the theatre to be entertained. If they want a lesson in
sociology they will go to a college. This entertainment, however, can
come in different ways. I could entertain you by making a movie with
cheap jokes, appealing to your baser instincts, or I could entertain you
by making a movie which appeals to your finer sensibilities. Either
way, my primary responsibility is to entertain. Having said that, I also
believe that an entertainer has much larger role to play in society,
one that perhaps only he/she can play best. And that is to bring grace
to society, to help build the moral fibre of society, to instil higher
values in young children. This can be a great contribution in nation
building, and in creating a healthy progressive society. This, I
believe, is the true role of an entertainer – in fact, of any creative
person, whether musicians, artists or poets.
Let me put the same question a little differently. Some of your most memorable hits in the recent past – Rang De Basanti, Taare Zameen Par, 3 Idiots
– have been in the genre that one might label “the sugar-coated message
movie.” Have you wondered about taking away the sugar coating, the
commercial trappings?
First
of all, I don’t think that it is sugar-coating. In my opinion none of
these movies you mention have an artificial coating of sugar or any
inorganic entertainment which is alien to the subject matter of these
films. 3 Idiots had a strong message and it entertained. The film
changed the way parents look at their children’s education, and the way
teachers look at students. Parents stopped saying “You have to do
engineering.” They stopped trying to live their dreams through their
children. Entertainment was an integral part of the film. Why should we
remove such a beautiful and integral part of the film? If we did that we
would be trying to take ourselves too seriously and also make the
message we are trying to give less effective.
Is it different with television, then? Because with Satyamev Jayate,
you did take yourself “too seriously,” as you put it, and that’s
exactly why the programme became such a game changer in our society. Had
you taken the topics behind each episode and made a series of
low-budget films (like Peepli [Live]), would it have been necessary to add “entertainment”?
The kind of topics we covered in the first season of Satyamev Jayate
are so important and fundamental to our lives that I feel I can’t get
serious enough. Each and every topic needs to be taken utterly
seriously. So yes I took Satyamev Jayate extremely seriously. But
at the same time, I also made every effort to make each episode as
engaging as I possibly could. The attempt was not simply to pass on
information but also to touch people’s hearts. We tried to reach out to
people not only through their minds but also emotionally. And that’s
precisely what we attempt when we choose important and serious topics to
make films on. For example in Taare Zameen Par our topic is
childcare and education. And we made every effort to make the film as
entertaining as possible. I must clarify here that when I use the word
“entertaining” I also mean “engaging.” Some films may not entertain you,
as in make you laugh or clap, but they engage you emotionally,
spiritually, and are therefore “entertaining” in their own way.
In
the 1970s and even in the 80s, our films used to hold up a mirror to
society. We don’t see those kinds of films much any more. Does the
average post-liberalisation Indian just not want to see hard-hitting
films based on social and political issues?
I
think there is an audience for these films. It’s not a huge audience
but it’s significant. I think one of the things we need to do is have a
chain of theatres across the country that only plays art-house cinema.
This move will further the cause of offbeat films, and make it easier
for that audience to know where to go to see the film. Independent
cinema needs nurturing. If you screen the film in the same multiplex
that’s playing a huge commercial film, then it will get crushed.
The same thing could be said about low-budget mainstream films, say, the ones made by and featuring newcomers.
If
we want to encourage young talent in mainstream cinema then we need to
change our economic policies. Currently the dice are loaded against
small films and films made by new talent. I don’t know about the South,
but in the Hindi circuit the revenue sharing between the theatres chains
and producers/distributors is a sliding scale in favour of the theatre
chains. With the passing of each week the theatre gets more and the
producer/distributor gets less. There is a certain logic to this
formula, but it is very detrimental to young and new talent. This
formula benefits big films which rake in most of their revenue in the
first two weeks. But a small film releases in fewer screens and depends
on word of mouth to grow. By the time this small film is appreciated and
starts to do good business – say, in the third or fourth week – the
producer/distributer earns only 25% of collections. This formula almost
penalises you for making a good film with new talent, effectively
discouraging new talent. It’s almost like we’re telling producers not to
invest in new talent.
25 years ago, you were a newcomer. Do you feel you are, today, where you set out to be?
I
had no plans when I started my career, and I certainly never imagined
that I would reach this far. It’s been an exciting journey. I’ve learnt a
great deal. I feel very humbled and at the same time very proud that in
this journey of 100 years of Indian cinema I have had the privilege of
being a part of the last 25 years.
Quite
a lot has changed in Indian cinema in this quarter century. What, in
your opinion, is the most significant of these changes?
I
feel that in the last 25 years the quality of our cinema has greatly
improved – I speak about Hindi films, as I haven’t watched too many
films in other languages. Earlier mainstream cinema had a very limited
and narrow definition. Now there is much more variety, people experiment
with different kinds of films, and audiences are also open to different
kinds of cinema. We have better stories, better creative talent, better
technicians, better production values. We have things like sync sound
now, which is a boon to people like me, who find it difficult to
recreate the magic of what happens during shooting six months later in a
sterile recording studio. And we no longer have the system of working
in multiple films in shifts. This means that, as an actor, I can
concentrate on one film at a time. Film releases have also become much
more efficient and streamlined. Earlier, we used to have staggered
releases. A film would release in the Bombay territory, then go East and
South and so on. We used to have films running for months and years but
in fewer theatres, and they had to keep marketing the film for a long
time. But now films release wide, and complete their run in a few weeks,
so the promotion effort is concentrated.
Is it easier for a filmmaker to make an “uncompromised” movie now, one that’s closer to his vision?
Filmmaking
is all about compromises. I could want sunlight for the shoot, but it
could be a cloudy day. I have permission to shoot only on that day. What
do I do? The key is to know when to compromise and when not to. Which
are the small battles you are willing to lose to win the war? I believe
that one should never compromise with one’s dream. One should be willing
to compromise to achieve that dream – but never with the dream itself.
Finally, it depends on the individual. Across the decades, you will
always find people who guarded their dreams with insurmountable passion.
And in some ways it’s easier to make the movie you want to make today.
Earlier, if you did anything different, it would be labelled an “art
movie,” and would only attract a very small audience. Now it’s possible
to make a different movie within the mainstream.
In
the race to get to the Rs. 100-crore club and with the constant eye on
the lucrative foreign markets, do you feel big stars are less likely to
take risks?
There
are stars who’ve always played safe because they wanted to hold on to
their stardom. And there are others who’ve taken risks. Personally I
don’t care about numbers. And as far as I know, neither does the
audience. I don’t know how much business Gunga Jumna or Pyaasa or Mughal-e-Azam
did. I love these films, but my value for them is in the emotions they
evoke in me, not in how much money they collected at the box office.
But sometimes, a project appears to be only about the numbers – like your upcoming release Dhoom 3, which looks like a preordained hit.
No
film is a preordained hit. But yes, the chances of success in this case
are high. And like any project, I chose this one because I loved the
script. I listened to the narration and I was excited by it. And then we
go back and work out the economics – how much we can spend, and so on,
so that we can ensure profits for everyone down the chain, the
exhibitors, the distributors, everyone. My interest in numbers is
limited to the fact that I want my films to make back the money invested
in them. I would like to be responsible about my creative decisions and
don’t want others to lose money due to my creative excitement. Beyond
that, numbers don’t interest me.
You are going to inaugurate the 11th Chennai International Film Festival. How much world cinema do you watch?
I
must confess that I don’t watch too many films. I’ve always been more
of a reader. On principle, I don’t watch pirated movies, and once you
become a celebrity it becomes difficult to go to the theatre to watch
films, and I love watching films on the large screen. But when I am
abroad, I watch a lot of films. I saw this amazing documentary called Searching for Sugar Man. I loved Michael Haneke’s The White Ribbon. Asghar Faradi’s A Separation
is a great film. That’s what I was saying. I wish we could have a small
but dedicated chain of theatres across India which curated only
art-house cinema. I believe that this would also eventually increase the
audience for these films.
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