Does SRK need a change of strategy? article - Page 4

Created

Last reply

Replies

236

Views

12.2k

Users

39

Likes

556

Frequent Posters

blue-ice. thumbnail
16th Anniversary Thumbnail Achiever Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 12 years ago
#31

Originally posted by: U-No-Poo


Is this the same woman?? No wonder. She's going to be attacking Aamir next - How can a superstar of his stature allow the film's story to over take his character's importance? 😲 He's going down, biatches.

The thing is, everyone is not made for 200+ crore ATBB bullshit. JTHJ was never marketed as a masala entertainer and thus expecting a similar economic response is just foolish. Even though it has SRK it does not cater to all the 60% of the masses who just want to go watch a couple of pelvic thrusts and a bunch of loud and preposterous action sequences. Salman Khan caters to that part of the audience. Good for him. SRK doesn't. KAHANI KHATAM.


That sums it up perfectly...SRK's movies are not made keeping the masses in mind...in India..masses overpower the classes...in numbers...that explains very well why SRK movies are a huge hit overseas and not so much in India...and its all good...everyone has a place...Salman is loved by masses...and SRK is loved by the classes...I am just happy that...no one is able to touch SRK's popularity overseas...
Terenaina thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Trailblazer Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 12 years ago
#32
Yes SRK is loved worldwide. The first hindi movie I watched was SRK's movie and that's how I got hooked on bollywood movies
Edited by Terenaina - 12 years ago
..CountingStars thumbnail
16th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 5
Posted: 12 years ago
#33
Seriously?😕
Shahrukh Doesn't Need To Change His 'Strategies' Because His Movies Aren't Doing Well! People Will Always Love Him Despite The Flops And All.
He's Successful ALREADY! Don't Tell Me A Movie That Didn't Hit 100cr or whatever affected his fan base or his bank for that matter😆
No Hits Or Flops Can Affect Him, He's Too Good To Be Forgotten 😳

745671 thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago
#34
SRK definitely needs a change in strategy but this article is total BS. The most hilarious part is how the other Khans take so many risks. What risk has Salman Khan ever taken? He's been doing the same thing over and over and over for ages. Even an Akshay Kumar takes more risks than Salman by doing movies like 8 X 10 Tasveer even if they flop.

All Salman has done is taken the Rajnikant formula from the South of extreme masala, stupid physics defying fight sequences and young girls doing item numbers and shaking their asses with dirty lyrics. These are movies made for the cheapo audience which India unfortunately has a lot of in the single screens.

SRK should forget about records, forget about the audience response, forget about his friends and his comfort and do things from the heart. Pick stories and movies that appeal to him personally and go for it. Don't worry about anything else. Success will follow on it's own if you make good, interesting projects without worrying about other things.
Edited by anonymous39 - 12 years ago
gilmores thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Visit Streak 365 Thumbnail + 8
Posted: 12 years ago
#35

I'm glad that Shah Rukh has decided to be his own man

I still remember the first time I met Shah Rukh Khan.

It was around a decade ago and he was shooting for Karan Johar's Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham. I anchored a show called Cover Story on Star World and we were filming an interview with Amitabh Bachchan. Because Bachchan and the rest of the cast were picturising the Shava Shava song, he suggested that Star might want to set up on a sound stage in the same studio. That way, it would be easy for him to give the interview.

It was while waiting for Amit to finish doing the trademark toilet-flush action that came to characterise that song that a member of my crew had an idea. Why not ask Shah Rukh, who was already on the sets, to also give us an interview?

By then, Shah Rukh was Bombay's biggest star and the industry had begun to be corporatised. You did not simply go up to a major star and say something like, "Listen, we are waiting for Amitabh to be free. So why not come to the sets and shoot with us?" You went through legions of PR people, set up the dates in advance and never ever suggested that the set had actually been prepared for somebody else.

To my astonishment, Shah Rukh agreed. "Give me a few minutes," he said. And then, while the crew chatted among ourselves, we suddenly looked up to find that Shah Rukh had arrived unannounced on the sets and slid into the guest chair on the other side of the anchor's table.

We shot the interview in real time. I asked him about Hrithik Roshan, who everybody suggested would usurp his crown. Shah Rukh was respectful of Hrithik but insisted that he faced no threat from him. Then, considering that I did not know Shah Rukh at all and had nothing to lose, I hurled a grenade into the interview.

At that stage, Bollywood insiders speculated that he was gay or, at the very least, bisexual. But of course nobody had asked him this to his face. I broke that rule and asked how he reacted to the rumours. He was momentarily surprised but then recovered and handled the question with aplomb.

Later, when film journalists asked him about my question and my nerve in daring to ask it, he laughed about the incident. "I don't know why Vir Sanghvi asked me that," was a typical response. "Perhaps if I had said yes, he would have asked me out on a date."

Of course Shah Rukh was right about Hrithik. The film industry is big enough for both of them and for Salman and Aamir and many others. And over the years, as I have interviewed Shah Rukh again and again, I have always been struck by his confidence and his refusal to even entertain the possibility that things could go wrong for him.

Last week, at the HT Summit, when I hosted a session with Shah Rukh and Katrina Kaif, I noticed that none of the confidence had evaporated. Nor had the accessibility.He is the one star I know who treats everyone in the same way and has no time for nakhras or attitude. Throughout our session, he was the Shah Rukh of old: easily approachable; willing to answer questions about anything; and well-mannered and chivalrous (he was extremely protective of Katrina Kaif who, he reckoned, did not have his experience at handling live sessions).

And yet, I think Shah Rukh Khan has changed. I told him that he had matured beyond the days when he kept insisting that he was the best at everything he did. ("Even when I shave, I have to believe that I am the best shaver in the world," he had once told me.) "Maybe," he said. "But I am still the best."

And perhaps he is. But he seems older and wiser now. I asked him on stage about the public meltdowns, the assault on a film director, the fight at a cricket stadium, and the public quarrel with Salman Khan. On his own, without my having to use the phrase, he insisted that he was not going through a mid-life crisis. Nor was he under the influence of alcohol or any other substance when he had these altercations.

"He is no longer a prisoner of our expectations or of the image cultivated over the decades. This is the real Shah Rukh: flesh, blood, anger, humour, and as always, that engaging intelligence."

So, why does he do it? And does he regret it?

Short answer: he has no regrets. His assault was justified with a joke: "Three fights in five years is not so bad, yaar." On Salman, he was uncompromising. Perhaps they will make up. Perhaps they won't. But it's something that will happen on its own when the time is right. He gave no indication that he had any interest in hastening the process. As for the incident at the cricket stadium, he left no one in any doubt that he believed he was justified in his anger. But, he said, it is not necessarily a good thing to show anger in front of kids.

Even in the one area where I thought he would offer some soft words of apology ' the shameful way in which his franchise treated Sourav Ganguly ' he was completely uncompromising. He had not a single regret about the decision to first sideline and then drop Sourav.

Many years ago, when I interviewed Shah Rukh for Brunch, I compared him to Tony Blair. It is said about Blair that he has never met anybody who he could not charm or win over. That's true of Shah Rukh too. When he turns on the charm, he can usually get around pretty much anyone.

But the Shah Rukh we saw at the HT Summit seemed to be the kind of guy who did not particularly care whether he could win over anyone at all. And he seemed to have lost interest in being seen as charming and likeable. His attitude was: this is me. This is who I am. Take it or leave it.

I asked him about the transformation both on stage and later. His answer suggested that after 21 years at the top, he is wearied of trying to be all things to all people. He has got tired of seeming likeable. And the controversies have now exhausted him to the extent that after a point, he doesn't really give a damn.

Obviously, Shah Rukh's fans will have their own views on the metamorphosis. And there will be people who know him much better than I do (we journalists tend to make broad generalisations on the basis of interviews even though we often don't see the private person when we talk to the public persona) who may dispute my assessment of the change in his personality.

But frankly, I think it is long overdue. He is now in his mid 40s. He can no longer be every mother's darling son and every teenager's heartthrob. As he complained on stage, audiences still expect him to play the romantic hero even though he is past that stage. (At one point, he spread out his arms in that famous romantic gesture and said that people even expect him to brush his teeth in that position.)

It's not easy to be as omnipresent as Shah Rukh Khan is: in the movies; on TV; at live events; at cricket matches; and in every second ad campaign. Obviously, there will be a backlash. People will get fed up of seeing him everywhere. And critics may feel that the cute persona that made him famous has now begun to jar a little.

So, I'm glad that Shah Rukh has decided to be his own man. If he is angry, he shows it. If he is upset, he talks about it. And if he's insulted, he lashes out. He has always been honest in his interviews but all of us who heard him at the HT Summit were struck by his candour. As he said, "I decided on the plane to Delhi that I am not going to continue being diplomatic."

I much prefer him this way. He seems real and genuine. He is no longer a prisoner of our expectations or of the image cultivated over the decades. This is the real Shah Rukh: flesh, blood, anger, humour, and as always, that engaging intelligence.

http://virsanghvi.com/Article-Details.aspx?key=871

Been trying to post this from HT website, but IF has issues. 😆 Anyways, this might not go fully with the article, but I couldn't find any other place to post it in...and I didn't want to create a new topic ...too much SRK on this forum currently. I hope its okay :)

Edited by chocolover89 - 12 years ago
Posted: 12 years ago
#36

Originally posted by: anonymous39

SRK definitely needs a change in strategy but this article is total BS. The most hilarious part is how the other Khans take so many risks. What risk has Salman Khan ever taken? He's been doing the same thing over and over and over for ages. Even an Akshay Kumar takes more risks than Salman by doing movies like 8 X 10 Tasveer even if they flop.


All Salman has done is taken the Rajnikant formula from the South of extreme masala, stupid physics defying fight sequences and young girls doing item numbers and shaking their asses with dirty lyrics. These are movies made for the cheapo audience which India unfortunately has a lot of in the single screens.

SRK should forget about records, forget about the audience response, forget about his friends and his comfort and do things from the heart. Pick stories and movies that appeal to him personally and go for it. Don't worry about anything else. Success will follow on it's own if you make good, interesting projects without worrying about other things.


Excuse me 😲

tera naam,, phir milenge, khamoshi, london dreams, Veer, were some movies where he took risks and am sick on people belittling his work.


Edited by wat_up - 12 years ago
gilmores thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Visit Streak 365 Thumbnail + 8
Posted: 12 years ago
#37
^Shahrukh is not loved overseas because of his business sense??? What does that even mean Jess? 😕

...never mind, as always you edited everything out.
Edited by chocolover89 - 12 years ago
..CountingStars thumbnail
16th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 5
Posted: 12 years ago
#38

Originally posted by: wat_up


Excuse me 😲

tera naam,, phir milenge, khamoshi, london dreams, Veer, were some movies where he took risks and am sick on people belittling his work.



I Agree, Salman is a risk taker as well when it comes to his movies. Otherwise wouldn't he be doing Action/Masala movies from the time he debuted till now?😳 He's come a long way, people criticized his work a lot ...recently as it seems so..but he's come a long way. Love Him <3
745671 thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago
#39
Just because they ended up being flops doesn't make them risky movies. He had minor supporting roles in Khamoshi and Phir Milenge, hardly something that matters. It's like people counting a movie like Gaja Gamini as some sort of proof about how innovative SRK is.

London Dreams was like any other average movie but it came in Salman's flop phase so it flopped.

Romance was big in the 90s so he did a lot of romance then. Comedy was big after that so he did a lot of stuff like that. Now masala is big and he keep repeating himself and will do so for years until the trend dies out. Then he will again jump on the bandwagon of whatever is working.

Yes, Veer and Tere Naam were risky but that's 2 films in 25 years. He's hardly some risky daredevil and anyone giving him credit for that is ridiculous.
Edited by anonymous39 - 12 years ago
blue-ice. thumbnail
16th Anniversary Thumbnail Achiever Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 12 years ago
#40

Originally posted by: chocolover89

^Shahrukh is not loved overseas because of his business sense??? What does that even mean Jess? 😕

...never mind, as always you edited everything out.

This has got to be the MOST asked question on BS and Twitter😆😆

Related Topics

Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: MiVida_Messi · 6 months ago

Apparently SRK fan called Ram Sharma leaked the movie online https://x.com/salmanicarman/status/1906265773946880184?s=46...

https://x.com/salmanicarman/status/1906265773946880184?s=46...
Expand â–¼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: mintyblue · 2 months ago

Is it just me or is War 2's marketing strategy surprisingly underwhelming? We’re talking about a film that stars Hrithik Roshan , arguably one...

Expand â–¼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 1 years ago

https://twitter.com/ocdtimes/status/1762110811676520841

https://twitter.com/ocdtimes/status/1762110811676520841
Expand â–¼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: JackSparrowcraz · 2 months ago

https://www.highonfilms.com/mockery-national-awards-71st/

Expand â–¼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: Bekind · 14 days ago

Oh my God. This is way too cute 🥰 yes Srk raised Aryan so well but not all sons/daughters show such respect towards their parents. Just love...

Expand â–¼
Top

Stay Connected with IndiaForums!

Be the first to know about the latest news, updates, and exclusive content.

Add to Home Screen!

Install this web app on your iPhone for the best experience. It's easy, just tap and then "Add to Home Screen".