Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Bollywood

Was Asked To Change 'How's The Josh?': Aditya Dhar

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Apr, 2019 09:45 PM

    While "How's the josh?" from the film "Uri: The Surgical Strike" remains etched in the minds of Hindi movie lovers, the film's director Aditya Dhar says that at one point during the shoot, he was about to change the line following a suggestion from actor Vicky Kaushal.


    Recalling the incident, Dhar said: "We first shot the line 'How's the josh?' during the Myanmar sequence. Two minutes before the camera rolled, Vicky came to me and asked me to change the line because he thought somewhere the 'feel' was not coming. I tried to explain that to motivate their team, army commanders talk like that, so let's give it a try."


    "I still remember when Vicky said that line for the first time, 30 members of our team had goosebumps on hearing it," added the 36-year-old director during a conversation with veteran screenplay writer Robin Bhatt as part of a programme titled "Wartalaap" by the Screenwriters Association (SWA) here on Sunday.


    What was the story behind the line?


    "I used to visit the Army club in Delhi along with my friends when I was a little boy. There used to be a former Army officer, who would ask all of us children to stand in a queue and ask us 'How's the josh?'. The game was, one by one, all children have to reply, 'High, Sir'. Whoever would say it the loudest and the best, would get a chocolate. Most of the time I used to win the chocolate," Dhar recounted.


    It was just a memory that stayed with me, shared the film director.


    When Dhar started writing the script of "Uri: The Surgical Strike", he wrote the dialogue as part of Vihaan's character without realising that the dialogue will become such a hit.


    As the film has received a lot of appreciation from the audience and critics alike, asked if any producer has approached him to make such a film again, Dhar said: "Yes... Bollywood functions based on what is trending. Once a rom-com is hit, people will start making dozens of rom-coms. If a war film is hit, people will start making many of that. When I made 'Uri...', war film was not a commercially successful genre of the present time.


    "Now that everyone wants to make films on war and Indian Army, I would look for something very different and start a new trend and will find a new challenge. When I start writing a story, I think about it two, three years ahead of its time," he added.


    Bhatt said it is important for a writer to think ahead of his or her time because it is natural that after writing the script, it takes at least a year to release the film.


    "Your story has to hold relevance till then and also it should have recall value. After a point, only 10 stories exist, the freshness in the narrative comes from a perspective and the expression of the storyteller," explained Bhatt, an award-winning screenplay writer who penned films like "Baazigar", "Aashiquia, "Omkara", "Koi Mil Gaya" among many others.

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    Majority Of Society In A Time Warp: Nawazuddin Siddiqui

    Majority Of Society In A Time Warp: Nawazuddin Siddiqui
    As the film has not got the green light for release, writers, activists and journalists got together last week to protest in different cities of Pakistan.

    Majority Of Society In A Time Warp: Nawazuddin Siddiqui

    Guru Randhawa May Go On Pakistan Music Tour

    Guru Randhawa May Go On Pakistan Music Tour
    Popular singer Guru Randhawa, who has the track "Lahore" to his credit, says he has discussed a plan to visit Pakistan for a music tour.

    Guru Randhawa May Go On Pakistan Music Tour

    As Kids, We Were Kept Away From Glamour Of Filmmaking: Aamir Khan

    As Kids, We Were Kept Away From Glamour Of Filmmaking: Aamir Khan
    Actor Aamir Khan, son of late filmmaker Tahir Hussain, says during his childhood days, he and his siblings were kept away from the glitz and glamour of showbiz.

    As Kids, We Were Kept Away From Glamour Of Filmmaking: Aamir Khan

    Age Or Life Stages Should Not Affect A Woman's Career: Kareena

    Age Or Life Stages Should Not Affect A Woman's Career: Kareena
    Actress Kareena Kapoor Khan, who is in her late 30s and is a mother, says a woman's career must remain unaffected by her age or stage of life.

    Age Or Life Stages Should Not Affect A Woman's Career: Kareena

    I Love To Work With Ajay Devgn: Prakash Jha

    I Love To Work With Ajay Devgn: Prakash Jha
    Filmmaker Prakash Jha says he loves working with actor Ajay Devgn and added it would be fantastic if there is a subject that brings the two together again.

    I Love To Work With Ajay Devgn: Prakash Jha

    Rakul Preet Looks Forward To A Busy Year

    Rakul Preet Looks Forward To A Busy Year
    Actress Rakul Preet is excited about Milap Zaveri's "Marjaavaan", and says it is a very performance-oriented role but with a commercial touch.

    Rakul Preet Looks Forward To A Busy Year