Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
Bollywood

Anil Kapoor: I'm Always My Worst Critic

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Nov, 2019 09:17 PM
  • Anil Kapoor: I'm Always My Worst Critic

After four decades in Bollywood, Anil Kapoor feels he needs to learn how to go easy on himself, and that is his biggest challenge. The actor says he has always been his worst critic.


Anil entered the industry with a small role in 1979 with Umesh Mehra's "Hamare Tumhare", and then went on to carve his niche by balancing his stature as a respectable actor and his popularity as a saleable star, with performances including "Woh 7 Din", "1942: A Love Story", "Mr. India", "Tezaab", "Ram Lakhan", "Lamhe", "Beta", "Taal", "Nayak: The Real Hero" and "Pukar".


At 62, he has managed to keep himself relevant in the forever fickle world of Bollywood showbiz, and his fit and sprightly persona defies his age. Anil insists his constant struggle is to go easy on himself.


"I've always been hard on myself and I'm always my own worst critic. So my biggest challenge continues to learn to go easy on myself and to let go when I need to," Anil told IANS.


He says his career goals continue to be the same as they were all those years ago, when he was starting out.


"Strangely enough, my goals haven't changed much! I'm a simple man with a simple plan -- to be better than I was yesterday. So that's what I continue to strive towards," said the actor.


If anything, he has managed to stay relevant by experimenting with his craft and subjects, as trends changed in Bollywood over the past 40 years.


There have been the international forays, too. He featured in Danny Boyle's Oscar-wiing global blockbuster "Slumdog Millionaire", and also worked in "24", "Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol" and "Family Guy".


His versatility is proved by the fact that he was equally at home in these international projects as he was in out-and-out Bollywood outings as "No Entry", "Welcome", "Race", "Dil Dhadakne Do", "Mubarakan", "Fanney Khan", "Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga" and "Total Dhamaal".


"I've always believed that change is the only constant. So, I have let life and opportunities change me along the way, in the most organic ways possible. The only thing that hasn't changed is the passion I feel for my work," said the actor, who recently became part of a panel discussion by Royal Stag Barrel Select Large Short Films in Kolkata to decode "what makes films powerful", as part of a six-city tour.


Royal Stag Barrel Select Large Short Films brings stars together to talk about the power of cinema and the short film genre. The panel discussion in Kolkata was moderated by Anupama Chopra, and also included Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, Vinay Pathak, Sheetal Menon, Bejoy Nambiar and Niranjan Iyengar.


"Cinema is perhaps the most engaging way in which stories are told and shared", he said, adding: "And stories have always had the power to shape minds and lives."


The actor points out that power comes with a sense of responsibility.


"Anyone in a position to influence minds and hearts has a responsibility towards the people they are reaching. Not everyone is fortunate enough to have the right platform and a mouthpiece to communicate with the world, so when you do, it comes with the duty to be mindful of the message you're sharing and affirming," said the father of three.


Anil will be back on the big screen in Anees Bazmee's "Pagalpanti", with whom he has in the past worked in "No Entry", "Welcome", "No Problem", "Welcome Back" and "Mubarakan".


"Pagalpanti" also stars John Abraham, Arshad Warsi, Pulkit Samrat, Ileana D'Cruz, Kriti Kharbanda, Urvashi Rautela and Saurabh Shukla, and is slated to release on November 22.


The film is produced by Bhushan Kumar and Krishan Kumar's T-Series and Kumar Mangat Pathak and Abhishek Pathak's Panorama Studios and co-produced by Vinod Bhanushali, Shiv Chanana, Aditya Chowksey and Sanjeev Joshi.

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

Will Retire When No More Emotions Are Involved, Says Gautam Gambhir

Will Retire When No More Emotions Are Involved, Says Gautam Gambhir
He has been in the cricketing field for over a decade now and is the only Indian to have scored hundreds in five consecutive Test matches.

Will Retire When No More Emotions Are Involved, Says Gautam Gambhir

I Don't Think You Should Get Stuck In Competition: Harrdy Sandhu

Popular Punjabi singer Harrdy Sandhu likes to stay away from competition as he feels it will shift his focus from what he likes to do.

I Don't Think You Should Get Stuck In Competition: Harrdy Sandhu

India Is Much More Than Rape Cases: Iulia Vantur

India Is Much More Than Rape Cases: Iulia Vantur
Romanian model-actress Iulia Vantur, who is making her Hindi film debut with "Radha Kyun Gori Main Kyun Kaala", has says India as a country has a lot to offer and that the rising number of crimes against women in the nation is not what defines it.

India Is Much More Than Rape Cases: Iulia Vantur

#MeToo Movement Shows India’s Soul Is Decaying: Filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt

#MeToo Movement Shows India’s Soul Is Decaying: Filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt
On the one hand, Indians bow down to a goddess to pray and on another some people violate women. This dichotomy in India is creating a mess of things, says filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt, who feels Indians are far from what we claim to be.

#MeToo Movement Shows India’s Soul Is Decaying: Filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt

#MeToo Fallout: KWAN Founder Anirban Blah Asked To Step Down

KWAN Entertainment founder Anirban Das Blah, a popular Bollywood celebrity manager, has been asked to step aside from his position in the wake of sexual misconduct allegations against him.

#MeToo Fallout: KWAN Founder Anirban Blah Asked To Step Down

#MeToo Best Clean Up Act To Happen: Neha Dhupia

#MeToo Best Clean Up Act To Happen: Neha Dhupia
Actress Neha Dhupia says the ongoing #MeToo wave in India is the best clean up act that could have happened to Bollywood and the country in a long time.

#MeToo Best Clean Up Act To Happen: Neha Dhupia