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In My Era, Cinema Wasn't Driven By Studios: Kamal Haasan

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Aug, 2018 01:22 PM
  • In My Era, Cinema Wasn't Driven By Studios: Kamal Haasan
Tamil film icon Kamal Haasan, who started his acting career when he was just three years old, says he comes from an era when artistes believed that cinema was one vision and not driven by studios.
 
 
Kamal has donned many hats -- as an actor, a writer and producer -- for several films, including his forthcoming one titled "Vishwaroop 2". 
 
 
What makes him take up so many roles instead of sharing the responsibilities with others?
 
 
"I used to because when you want something done precisely as per your vision... I have learnt from all my masters, including my mentor with whom I was an understudy, Mr. Balachander. He wrote, he directed and if given a chance, he could have been a fantastic actor but fortunately, he didn't desire to do that. 
 
 
"Otherwise, I would have lost out on 36 films with him. He (Balachander) could have played all those characters," Kamal, who worked with the filmmaker in films like "Manmatha Leelai" and "Ek Duuje Ke Liye", told IANS in an email interview.
 
 
The actor, also a politician, admires others as well. 
 
 
"Even those whom I admired like (Charlie) Chaplin or (Alfred) Hitchcock or even Francois Truffaut, they all ended up acting, producing and did everything...including (acting) in other people's films. Usually directors shy away from it. But Truffaut acted in Steven Spielberg's film 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind'.
 
 
"So for me, it (multi-tasking in films) is nothing new because my masters - be it Chaplin or Truffaut, all of them moved from one to another so easily. So, it seemed natural, and I come from an era when we believed that cinema was one vision and it was not driven by studios," said the actor, now in his 60s. 
 
 
"Vishwaroop 2" is a sequel to the 2013 movie "Vishwaroop".
 
 
Does he feel more pressure when he does sequels?
 
 
"No, but I thought of sequels long time back. So much before that people thought I was an eccentric and a dangerous person to deal with... in the sense... I wanted a sequel to 'Ek Duuje Ke Liye'. He (Balachander) asked, 'How do you make a film after 'Ek Duuje Ke Liye'?" So I told my boss, my mentor, the story. 
 
 
"He asked 'How could you rise from the dead?' and I replied 'It's been done before, the new testament is all about it and finally Sir, you killed those lovers, you have the right to resurrect them'."
 
 
And, they did make a film.
 
 
"But he didn't want to call it 'Ek Duuje Ke Liye 2'. So, we called it 'Punnagai Mannan' in Tamil," said Kamal.
 
 
"Vishwaroop 2" will hit the screens on August 10. Its Hindi version will be presented by Rohit Shetty and the Anil Ambani-led Reliance Entertainment. It's a bilingual shot in Tamil and Hindi, and also dubbed in Telugu.
 
 
MN+ has associated with "Vishwaroop 2" for season three of 'Pathbreakers', a specially curated property showcasing Hollywood movies that redefined cinema till date.
 
 
No animosity with BJP: Kamal Haasan
 
Tami
l actor-filmmaker turned politician Kamal Haasan on Tuesday said he had no animosity with the BJP as his newly launched Makkal Needhi Maiam was yet to take a decision on any alliance with any political grouping or a party in the country.
 
 
"I have met BJP leaders. We have our ideological differences with the BJP (but) there is no animosity," Kamal said. 
 
 
He said he launched Makkal Needhi Maiam on February 21 to start a fresh round of politics in the country "and at the moment I have not considered coalition with any party".
 
 
At an interaction with News18, he said he had tried to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi but "I did not get the time".
 
 
Kamal paid homage to former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and DMK chief M. Karunanidhi whom he described as "the teacher of all the actors". 
 
 
"Karunanidhi has had a wonderful political career of 70 years. His mistakes in politics and his success are a lesson for us."

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