Did not like it – How is the Josh? at first I did not know if the Indian army was working like this: Vicky Kaushal



[ad_1]

  The actor Vicky Kaushal during an improvised fight
The actor Vicky Kaushal during a discreet process | ThePrint

Text size:

Mumbai: "How's the josh ?" The dialogue of the recent Bollywood hit, Uri-The Surgical Strike ] is the actor Vicky Kaushal told ThePrint that it was not an emotion, but that it did not bother him to use it to gain political time .

Interview with Shekhar Gupta, editor of ThePrint, and Manasi Phadke, deputy editor, at Off the Cuff, Kaushal said that once a film had was sold to theaters, it belonged to the audience.

" Friday, there is no what hamari nahi rehti (The film does not belong to us after Friday)", he added.

"After Friday, it's the public film. From politicians to sports personalities, to anyone in the country or in the world, everyone is a member of the public. Ab woh jo chahe kare uske saath (They can do it as they please), "said Kaushal.

Born in Punjab and raised in Mumbai, Kaushal, 30, is the son of director Sham Kaushal. He made his film debut as an badistant director on the sets of Gangs of Wbadeypur of Anurag Kashyap .

He made his film debut in 2015 with Masaan a famous mosaic.

Four years later, he became one of the most promising actors of Bollywood, with successes such as Sanju and Raazi to his credit.

Feel aa rahi hai & # 39;

In Uri inspired surgical strikes conducted by India in 2016 on Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, Kaushal plays special forces of the Indian army. officer who directs the operation.

"How is the Josh ", a dialog spoken by Kaushal's character, has taken over the contemporary lexicon like few other recent film dialogues. The MPs were heard on Tuesday when the budget speech delivered by Union Finance Minister Piyush Goyal was delivered.

Expressing to Off the Cuff the actor confessed that he was quite uncertain about the dialogue when he read the script for the first time.

"I read the script and the first line of discussion was," How's the josh, sir, how's the josh top sir? . I did not feel it, "he added.

" Mujhe Laga Cool Bada Ban Raha Hai (I thought he was trying to be too cool). I did not know if the army really worked that way, said Kaushal.

"So, I sat with the director (Aditya Dhar) after that, and I said I was not really sure about that. And he said: "There is one thing I'm sure about in this film, is this dialogue". ", added Kaushal.

It is when he actually played the scene in question that the impact of the dialogue finally became aware, he said.

" I went to Aditya and I said: sahi lag raha hai, I felt like a rahi hai (That seems right to me.) That's why I've recently tweeted that this n & # 39; It was not just a line, but an emotion, "he added.

Kaushal did not delay in dismissing allegations that Uri published several months before the Lok Sabha elections was celebrated as an operation. According to the Narendra Modi government, the propagandist is one of his greatest achievements.

"Our main intention was to pay tribute to the Indian Armed Forces," said Kaushal. "It's a story based on real events. If the director is to show a story based on a surgical strike that occurred in 2016, he must show the government that he did. "

" We just tried to tell a story, "he said. Kaushal, adding that the films had limited impact and did not necessarily have the power to form governments or undo them.


Read also: Who is the modern Bollywood man? Vicky Kaushal, Rajkummar Rao and Ayushmann Khurrana


His Favorite Role

In the space of one year, Kaushal played the roles of Indian Army Officer and Chief of Staff. Pakistani Army Officer (1945-9016) of Raazi Kaushal explained that his approach to the two characters did not correspond to their differences in nationality, but to the circumstances in which they were.

"When you play a character, the least of your concerns st nationality the character belongs to, "he said.

"Especially when it comes to Hindustan and Pakistan. Hamara culture same hain, boli same hain lagbhag (Our culture and our language are almost the same)," added Kaushal.

The character of Iqbal in Raazi was "refreshing", he said, destroying the stereotype of the ugly Pakistani army man and showing his sensitive side.

However, his favorite role up to now remains the one he played in Masaan : Deepak, a young man from the Dom community whose family is working on cremation ] Ghats burns funeral pyres.

"I really liked Deepak as a person," Kaushal said. "He really learned a lot of things from me."

He remembered spending time in Varanasi before filming, observing the ghats and the corpses brought there for the last sacraments.

"The first time I went to a ghat I could not stay there for more than 15 minutes.This was so claustrophobic.The air has a special smell because of Burning fat and, at any time, at least 20 bodies are burning around you, and at its peak, it's sometimes 100, 150, 200, "Kaushal said.

"In three weeks, I reached that stage where … I could sit next to a burnt body and talk to a tea merchant about the tea that needed more sugar .It was very important for me to make this trip to be able to play Deepak. "

The question of nepotism

Nepotism may have been the biggest cross of Bollywood to wear , so-called "strangers" often complaining that their road success was much more complicated than that of actors belonging to families in the area.

In dwelling on the nepotism debate, Kaushal said that he had spent a lot of time fighting and auditioning before getting his first break, while acknowledging That's the son of a member of the industry helped to take this first step.

"My father is from the industry. He is neither actor nor producer. He is himself a small technician who has made his own trip, "said Kaushal. "But yes, it helped me in some ways. Meeting with a director, meeting with a producer, saying that I am his son. I have direct access to tell a director that I want to be an actor, "he added.

Nevertheless, he said, he has always been told never to take this access for granted


Also Read: We asked a Pakistani Bollywood amateur to review Uri and she asked for Indian directors.


  http://theprint.in/ [19659006] Discover the editorial perspective of ThePrint on the news of the day in just 50 words

[ad_2]
Source link