Cinema

I should not have been a star, I broke all rules and made everything impractical: Aamir Khan

Published by
Tahir Bhat

I don’t know how I became a star, says actor Aamir Khan, stressing that in his career of over 30 years, he did everything that broke the many “rules” of stardom.

Speaking at a session during the 56th International Film Festival of India (IFFI), the 60-year-old actor said his filmography comprises of films that were “impractical”.

“I don’t know how I became a star. By all logic, I should not have been a star. I broke all the rules and I made everything impractical. So, I feel grateful that I received so much respect and success. Otherwise, practically speaking, none of the steps I took were from the point of view of achieving success,” Aamir said.

Whether it was “Sarfarosh”, “Lagaan”, “Ghajini”, “Taare Zameen Par”, or his latest “Sitaare Zameen Par”, the actor said all of them were experimental and shouldn’t have worked at the box office.

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“In fact, almost every film I used to pick, I used to be like, ‘I don’t know whether this is going to work.’ Like ‘Sarfarosh’ and ‘Lagaan’, when we were releasing the film, we had no idea if people are going to like it or not.

“Then ‘Lagaan’, there was even ‘Dil Chahta Hai’ which was very unusual for its time and now ‘Sitaare Zameen Par’, all these films that I have picked, they were not meant to be successful,” he added.

During the session, titled “The Narrative Architect of Social Transformation”, Aamir said he likes to “surprise my audience and myself” as an actor.

“I don’t want to do the same thing again and again. It’s just out of how I am as a personality that I have picked different scripts. And I have always gone with what excites me, personally.”

Aamir said these days a lot of film people tend to try and second guess the audience.

“They are like, ‘What is it that I should make today?’ The obvious answer is what people are watching and what are the films running nowadays in the market. So, you try and make that genre.

“If it’s action, you make action. If it’s comedy, you try and pick up a comedy film. But I have never thought that way. I have not been able to think that way. I pick films based on my own personal excitement towards the story. And most often, that goes against what is the norm at that time.”

Aamir said when he did “Ghajini” in 2008, action films were not being made in the industry.

“Everyone told me that, ‘Man, you are doing action now. Action films are not running nowadays.’ So, ‘Ghajini’ came in and with it, action came in to fashion,” he said.

Aamir’s last release was “Sitaare Zameen Par”, which released in theatres in June, followed by its digital release on YouTube under pay per view model.

Directed by R S Prasanna, the movie featured Aamir as Gulshan, an assistant coach of a major basketball team. After being fired from his job, he is ordered to either go to jail or do 90 days of community service as the coach of a team of specially-abled basketball players.

Aamir said he was surprised by the success of the film, which earned over Rs 250 crore at the box office.

“The audience has proved everyone wrong in the way the film got a reaction. The kind of love and respect the film got was unprecedented. So, I am really happy that audiences don’t only want to watch one kind of film.

“At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what genre you are making it, what genre you are working in, but every film that you make has to be really hitting on the right notes. So, even if you are making an action film, at the end of the day, you need a good story for that.”

Aamir’s films have often been praised for providing entertainment with a dose of message, whether it was “Sitaare Zameen Par”, which spoke about neurodivergent children or his earlier films like “Taare Zameen Par”, “Dangal” and “3 Idiots”.

The actor, however, stressed that he is not someone who picks up social causes actively.

“I am not an activist and nor am I someone who is interested in actively taking up issues. That’s not me. What is me is storytelling, what is me is films. That’s my world. And I am very sharply aware that when a person comes to a cinema hall, he or she is not coming there for a lesson in sociology. For that, they would go to a college,” he said.

His first and primary responsibility is to entertain audiences and Aamir said he is aware of that.

“But the word entertain is not just make you laugh. I can make you cry also and entertain you. Basically, I want to engage you in one way or the other. I can scare you by making a horror film. I can make a suspense thriller. I can make a family drama. I can make different genres.”

The actor said he is now looking for his next film.

“I am deciding which one to do. So, I am not thinking and have never thought that which is the next social topic I should pick up. That does not occur to me at all. So, the first attraction for me is the great script. And if that great script is also telling us something which is socially relevant, it’s all the better. But I am not trying to look for social themes,” Aamir said.

Tahir Bhat

Tahir is the Chief Sub-Editor at Patriot and hails from north Kashmir's Kupwara district. He holds a postgraduate degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from the University of Kashmir. His previous stints in the field of journalism over the past eight years include serving as online editor at Kashmir Life, where he covered a range of political and human-interest stories. At Patriot, he has expanded his focus to encompass the lifestyle and arts scene in Delhi, even as he has taken on additional responsibilities at the desk. If there’s news about Kashmir in Delhi, Tahir is the person to turn to for perspective and reportage. Outside of journalism, he loves travelling and exploring new places.

Published by
Tahir Bhat

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