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New Delhi: She is set to make her debut with "Dhadak, the Hindi adaptation of critically-acclaimed Marathi film "Sairat that explored the themes of caste divide and honour killing, and Janhvi Kapoorsays the movie is a cut above mainstream Bollywood which has mostly "glorified the conflict.
Janhvi, daughter of late actor Sridevi, says the Shashank Khaitan-directed film, in which she plays a girl belonging to the erstwhile royal family based in Udaipur, is set against the backdrop of class divide.
Janhvi, 21, says "Dhadak is not a typical Bollywood saga that whitewashes the "harsh reality that is still relevant. "... I feel up until this point, a lot of films in mainstream Bollywood have glorified that divide. Because it creates a sort of conflict that I can't live without the love of my life'. I feel they have glorified that divide a little bit.
"But I think, it should be condemned and with Dhadak', we have set out to condemn it. That it's a harsh reality. Dhadak' is not a Bollywood saga that ends with either the parents agreeing or typical, magnificent ending. It's an ugly truth, she told PTI in an interview.
Janhvi says for some reason, monetary value is often brought into the dynamics of love and emotion. "We found that very strange, she adds. The actor remembers discussing the class divide with Khaitan and says going into the film, it was a "pressing issue to deal with. "I remember Shashank and I talking about how classism is prevalent not only in the lesser-educated sections of the society but also in the well-educated strata, she says.
Janhvi says her character, Parthavi, is stronger than her real self. Comparisons with Rinku Rajguru's Archie, the female lead of "Sairat are unavoidable but the actor is already prepared herself for that. "Archie's character was so inspiring to a lot of young girls. She didn't have to be saved. I'm fortunate to play Parthavi. She's also assertive like Archie, but a lot of that comes with her sense of pride and responsibility that she belongs to an effluent royal family, she says. Her co-star Ishaan Khatter is relatively more experienced, having made his debut with Majid Majidi's "Beyond The Clouds early this year but he never tried to impose.
"I feel one film is worth a number of experiences, not only as an artiste but also as an individual that helps you channel a plethora of emotions. It's only going to be good for me and the film. I know Ishaan has helped me react well on screen but he never tried to impose. I learnt a lot from him. "Dhadak releases this Friday.
Director Khaitan takes a volley of questions on whether Dharma Productions and Karan Johar influenced the Sairat remake, going with the original music composers, and more.
Mumbai - 18 Jul 2018 7:00 IST
Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania (2014) and Badrinath Ki Dulhania (2017) maker Shashank Khaitan, known as the director who brought Karan Johar's Dharma Productions back to its Indian roots, has taken on perhaps his biggest challenge this time round remaking the Marathi blockbuster Sairat (2016) in Hindi.
Khaitan has taken his lead characters, played by Janhvi Kapoor and Ishaan Khatter, out of a village in Maharashtra's Solapur district and placed them in the royal city of Udaipur, Rajasthan. Still a little removed from urban centres like Mumbai, Delhi or Chennai, Udaipur has its own charm, and that is visible in the trailers.
There are several complaints against Khaitan, especially from those who have watched Nagraj Popatrao Manjule's original, for the unrealistic portrayal and glamorization of small-town India', based on the promotional material that has been released so far.
When we met the director, it was quite obvious that we would investigate if Dharma Productions or Karan Johar had made a glamorized version of Sairat, which has the caste system and honour killing at its core, or it was just a matter of audience perception.
We threw a bunch of questions that may be troubling your mind about Dhadak at Khaitan, and he took them all sportingly, replying to each question, justifying his choices, and offering some insights into the film in the process. Here are edited excerpts of the interview:
On glamorizing Udaipur in Dhadak
My local roots are not glamorized. Udaipur itself is glamorous. I didn't have to make any special effort to glamorize it and that was never the intent. If you have been to Udaipur... even if you click a picture it looks beautiful.
There has been a certain discussion that have you strayed away from reality and made it a glamorous Dharma film. I think when people see the film, they will realize that Udaipur is a character. That's how the city is. It has a certain kind of royalty there. It's a city I am very fond of. I have travelled a lot there.
When I decided to make Sairat into Dhadak, I was very sure that's where I wanted to set the film. I understand that city. I wanted to present it the way it is. There was no idea to glamorize it, or, for that matter, to pull it down and say isko aur gareeb dikhane ki zaroorat hai'. I have tried to be as authentic as I can. Lake Pichola is what it revolves around. If you stand on any terrace, it looks like one of the most beautiful places on earth. And that was the effort, to be honest.
On the film being only Dharma-gareeb or realistic
It rewards me by giving me another film so... When I finished writing a draft of Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania (2014), a lot of my friends told me don't go to Dharma, they are never going to make that movie. [But] that's the only company I approached. I went there first because I thought if I have to hear a no, I should hear it from them. I came, narrated the script to the creative team. Three weeks later, I am sitting in front of Karan Johar and he said, 'Let's make this movie.'
There was never a discussion ki ye gareeb lag raha hai ya yeh kaunsi duniya hai. We don't give as much credit to Karan Johar's intelligence as we should because he has been a producer for so many years. There is something that he is doing right, that he understands.
There was never a discussion after that when I said I want to set my film in Jharkhand, Jhansi or Kota. He has never asked me why. He has read the script and said, It's a lovely story'.
Only when the films work do the cities work. If the story fails, you can set the film anywhere, yeh kyun wahaan gaye, yeh toh Bombay mein bhi ban jaati.'
So I think the effort really is to pick up characters from these respective cities and then say that what do they add to the film?' What is the journey of these characters through the movie. If that journey feels authentic, then the place also feels authentic.
On glamorizing the look of the lead characters (or not)
Actually they [his lead artistes] are more gareeb [poor] than if you actually go to Udaipur and see... if you walk the streets of Udaipur. Today, people everywhere are shopping online. The biggest consumers of online are not us, sitting in the metros. It's these tier II cities who are logging in every day. And there is a brand and then there is a cheap rip-off of the brand available everywhere.
So we are kind of stuck in our own time and we have preconceived notions about how people are dressing in towns. What we need to do is, unfortunately, when we make movies, is arre nahi yaar, thoda gareeb dikhate hain taki lage aisa'.
So we have not made any effort [to glamorize]. Madhukar Bagla, who is Ishaan, he looks like any other guy who lives in Udaipur. The character is of Parthvi and she is a rich girl in the film. So she is going to dress up how those girls [dress] over there. Just because I am making a Dharma film, to prove that no no, they should look authentic', I can't suddenly make her gareeb. She is going to wear what she is wearing... when I was travelling I saw people wearing those clothes and that was the brief given to our designers.
A lot of this comes from the fact that we say 'oh Dharma is making this film, so we will do this with it'. But all these things get shattered when they see the movie.
Even when I was making Badrinath..., a lot of people said, Arre yeh to bahut glamorous lag raha hai'. But when they saw the film, they realized it is authentic. Even when people see Dhadak, they will realize we have just been true to the city in which it is based. When people walk out, I hope they would have loved the story.
On comparisons with Sairat and the criticism
When you make any creative work, you put it out there. Some are going to appreciate it, some are going to dislike it. The biggest gratitude in my life is that I am getting to make movies. I think that is the most envious position to be in. I am blessed I am getting to make it.
I am sure when I make my next film, which will be an original film, there will be a lot of people who will like that and there will be some people who dislike it as well. That cannot stop me or bog me down. I genuinely don't react to it. I am not even reading so much of it because I am doing my job. My job is to make a film, put it out there, and promote it. Based on that, hopefully, people will come and see it. If they like it, very good, if they criticize it, I will go back and reflect on what I did wrong.
On staying true to the original
That film [Sairat] inspired me so much that the day I saw it I told Karan I want to adapt it. That's what the impact of the film was.
I have tried to be true to the essence of the movie. Yet, it's important that I give it my own voice. It cannot be the identical same film because otherwise we would have just dubbed it and released it.
I wanted to tell a story from my experience. The topic of the film is very relevant. It's a topic which plagues our country. I wanted to say it in my own language.
We have been true to the essence of Sairat, but I feel Dhadak is our film. It has got its own unique language and I am hoping that when people see the film they will appreciate it.
On the 'Dharma-ization' of the lead characters
You need to be true to the region. When I decide to set a particular film in a land, in this case Udaipur, I decide to give them a certain economic background. Then I delve deeper to say what brings about those characteristics in that character. There is this girl who is rich and lives in Udaipur. She comes from a certain royal background. What is her demeanour and behaviour like?
Similarly, Madhu, who is this small-town boy from Udaipur hustling every day to make something of his life. He would have a different aura or energy about him, which is going to be different from Parshya in Sairat. Udaipur is a big tourist destination and because of that you will see that there is a certain language the film has or that region has that is different. You will meet young boys there who know functional English to sell a product, but they cannot answer anything else in English.
These are interesting things I have learnt along the way knowing Udaipur and these are the things I have brought into the film. So yes, definite differences in characters. And you will see new shades of the characters. It would have been very easy for me to cheat and show characters in the same way [as the original]. Then there would have been no effort on my part. I wanted it to be true to the region I have set it in, then say here come my two characters and now experience their journey.
On swapping caste conflict for class conflict. A safer option?
When it comes to class and caste socio-economic structure, that's the tangle you find society in. And you can't cut off either one. All of them are related. People can be from two different castes, but if they are rich, somehow they will find synergy among themselves. We need to be understanding and respect the fact that we are making a Hindi film. It's for a broader audience. It cannot get so state-specific that the other states get disconnected.
We have definitely touched upon all these issues in our way. On a subtext level it [the socio-economic divide] is present in every scene of the film. On a text level, where we wanted it to be in your face, it is definitely present because you cannot make a movie like this and not talk about it.
We can choose to not show everything in the trailer because people should watch the film also. Trailer mein sab bata diya... aur ending bhi bata diya toh film dekhne aao hi mat [If we show everything, including the ending, in the trailer, why would anybody come to watch the film?].
On bringing Sairat music composers Ajay-Atul and the song 'Zingaat' to Dhadak
When we decided to remake Sairat and because it is an official adaptation, we thought that whatever we find right in the film we will take and whatever we feel we don't want we won't take. That was the advantage of officially approaching Zee.
I felt more than the lyrics, more than the music, the energy of 'Zingaat' is the energy of what half of my movie is. I have two kids who have such amazing energy. I think the energy just matched.
And when it came to 'Pehli Baar', the original of which was 'Yad Lagala', that song has such a languid flavour to it. It's got a theme. I felt like if I lose that song, I'll lose that theme, and I didn't want to lose it. For me, that theme is the theme of the film.
Just to keep those two was essential for me. And then I was like we need a title track which is unique. And so we came up with the Dhadak title song, which is an original. It became the most loved song of the album. So I feel we got a nice balance of some things from the original and some new.
On the Maharashtrian-style composition of 'Zingaat'
The word 'Zingaat' sounds Marathi, but that is also almost gibberish. It's not a real word. The song has electronics, it's got the dhol, which is quite universal. We feel like it's Marathi because it is in a Marathi film. We dance to Tamil songs at Punjabi weddings also. Everyone's playing everything. So we just said 'lets go with it'.
Originally posted by: SrideviFan4ever
Photo clicked and shared by Avinash Gowariker. Probably from their look test. My favorite photo of theirs from all the publicity stills.So the film finally releases tomorrow. It was fun to try out and maintain a BW update thread for the first time. I don't think I've given so much time to any other film,especially a Dharma film ever in my e-life.😆 That's all from me. Can't spend any more energy and time looking for their interviews or pictures from instagram fanpages run by hyperactive teenagers who treat Janhvi and Ishaan as god and goddess.😆The thread is pretty much updated with everything. Only Masand's interview is left, I'll add whenever it drops. Moving on to the review thread tomorrow. Hope Dhadak, Ishaan and Janhvi lives up to the hype they have created and it turns out to be as beautiful and important film as Sairat for Bollywood.😃Signing off!
https://youtu.be/GRq6nXiJdug https://x.com/DharmaMovies/status/1942818741345292339
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DA8sGQVvl6B/?igsh=MWZ5bzBubHdsdGliYQ== It is sad to see her going this far..she looks almost unrecognizable
Mega star Sridevi's daughter Jhanvi : Flop Second daughter Khushi : Disastrous start Mega star Shahrukh Khan's daughter : Flop with disastrous...
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