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Interview

Soaring with Kites

Published On: 2013-12-20

Author: unknown

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Soaring with Kites

 

 

Source: The Undaily 

Date: May 20, 2010 

 

 

Bollywood actor Hrithik Roshan hopes to fly high with the release of his new movie.

 

BOLLYWOOD heartthrob Hrithik Roshan, off cinema screens for the past two years, has high hopes for his new film, Kites, which also carries weighty industry expectations after a poor start to 2010. Hrithik, 36, has not been seen in a starring role since 2008, when he appeared alongside former Miss World Aishwarya Rai in Jodhaa Akbar, a love story about the Mughal emperor Akbar and his Hindu wife. Kites, to be released in India and 35 other countries tomorrow, is a romantic drama about a fugitive left for dead in the Mexican desert, who meets the love of his life – and goes on the run across the United States. “I’ve given more than two years of my life to this film and I’m hoping that people accept me in this film,” said Hrithik, whose chiselled good looks make him one of Bollywood’s most recognisable and talked-about stars. Kites has become the most anticipated Hindi-language film this year, given the lack of other movies to make an impact at the box office other than the recent comedy, Housefull. The lacklustre start to 2010 follows a disappointing 2009, which saw total Indian cinema revenues fall 14% after a producers’ boycott of multiplex venues, swine flu fears and a string of big-budget flops. Hrithik promised Kites would be different in terms of size and content. “The scale of this film is huge and Indian audiences have never seen anything like it here.”

 

Distributors Reliance Big Pictures said that the film, which has been aggressively marketed, would be shown on 500 screens outside India – making it the biggest-ever worldwide release of an Indian film. The film’s international appeal is being touted as a big draw, not least Hrithik’s Mexican co-star Barbara Mori, whose presence has raised hopes that Bollywood can make inroads into the untapped Spanish-speaking market. Two versions of the film have been made – a 130-minute Hindi edition and a shorter, 90-minute one in English, with the trademark Bollywood song-and-dance routines cut and apparently replaced with steamier scenes. Hrithik, whose father Rakesh produced the film, made his name in 2000 with the film Kaho Naa ... Pyaar Hai (Say, You Love Me), propelling him to superstar status among Bollywood’s hero-worshipping fans. He was mobbed by women in the street and was once even said to have induced mass fainting episodes across the country. But after a series of mediocre films, Hrithik changed approach in 2004, deciding to concentrate on making one quality film every one to two years – reflecting a trend among bigger name stars such as Aamir Khan. The strategy appears to have paid off. Lakshya (Aim), released in 2004 and based on a border skirmish between India and Pakistan in Kashmir; the superhero adventure Krrish, and action movie Dhoom 2, both in 2006; and Jodhaa Akbar – all did well. 

 

Roshan said his decision came after realising that fame was largely a fickle construct of celebrity-obsessed sections of the Indian media. “The people who praise you non-stop [will] turn their backs [on] you when you are not doing well commercially at the box office ... I’m not here to compete with anyone but to do good work and good films,” he said. “An actor cannot do more than 30 to 40 films in his lifetime. I could either do it in five years and get exhausted or act all my life. “I chose to be selective and do fewer films.” Hrithik, due to appear in Guzaarish (Request) later this year, said he is not worried that fans will forget him during his breaks from cinema. “I’m doing (television) commercials and my fans do see me and keep in touch,” he said. “There’s also my Twitter account.”