• 2 days ago
In an exclusive interview with IANS, Prithviraj delves into the distinctive storytelling style of Malayalam cinema and its bold genre experimentation. Prithviraj opens up about the challenges of self-doubt in his career and shares his perspective on the widespread admiration he receives from women of all ages, discussing the impact it has on him personally and professionally.

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Fun
Transcript
00:00Yes, I agree that Malayalam cinema is going through a great phase, we are making great
00:09films, fantastic content consistently for many years now and I hope this phase never
00:14ends.
00:15I hope this phase is like for lifelong.
00:16But I disagree with the fact that Malayalam is the only industry making great cinema.
00:21There is great cinema happening everywhere.
00:23Malayalam is going through an extraordinarily good phase, that I agree.
00:27I was just talking to the other friend from media that not too long ago we were looking
00:32at Hindi cinema and thinking, how are they doing this, how are they able to come up with
00:37such a breakthrough content.
00:38When RGV came in and suddenly completely changed mainstream filmmaking, we all thought, wow,
00:46Bollywood is really cracking it.
00:48When Anurag Kashyap's Vikramaditya Motwane and all these new age filmmakers burst into
00:53the scene in Hindi, I remember the conversation in Kerala was, wow, how is Hindi cinema able
00:58to do this?
00:59Now the same is being spoken about Malayalam cinema and I hope that that conversation continues
01:04forever.
01:05There is great cinema being made everywhere and I hope that every industry, sooner rather
01:12than later, identifies their own strengths and makes films the way they really can.
01:20One thing, if at all, that I especially like in Malayalam cinema is the fact that we have
01:24never lost sight of the fact that writers are the cornerstone of cinema.
01:32So even that documentary I saw, I remember that 70s and 80s Bollywood, the biggest superstars
01:39were Mr. Salim and Mr. Jadhav.
01:41So maybe there is a lesson there.
01:43For me, cinema is always a team sport.
01:52So an actor's performance can only be good if his co-actors are equally good.
01:59And an actor can only be good in a film.
02:01I know now that I am a director saying this, it's a bit immodest, but an actor can only
02:06be good in the film if the director lets him be good in the film.
02:10A great performance needs to be shot well for people to understand that it's a great
02:16performance.
02:17A great performance can be made to look mediocre if you have shot the performance in the wrong
02:23way.
02:24So the technicians who work behind the camera hold that much power over the way the content
02:29is served.
02:30Like I said yesterday on stage, I believe I have the world's best team.
02:34I think my chief technicians are world class.
02:38None of them are like, sitting in Bombay, you might not be able to identify even one
02:45single name from that.
02:46But to me, they are superstars.
02:47You know, they are the world's best technicians to me.
02:50And I strongly believe I have a team that can handle a project of any scale, any magnitude,
02:56anywhere in the world.
02:57And I wanted them to be on stage with me because without them, I was not going to be able to
03:01pull this off.
03:02If I change one of them and replace them with someone else, there's going to be a difference
03:07in the film.
03:08I don't know if it's going to be better or worse, but what I've made is not going to
03:10be possible with one of them not being there.
03:12So on my set, from my associate director to my cinematographer to my production boy, they
03:18all have equal ownership over the film.
03:21And I keep saying this, I edit my films on location, online, and everyone is welcome
03:26to come and watch it.
03:27When you come to my location evenings, when we wrap, you'll see everyone, the production
03:32boys, the drivers, everyone coming and watching the scene that we shot that day.
03:36Because I think we're all part of the process, we've all made the film together.
03:44Self-talk never leaves you.
03:46The basic thing of being an artist is that you question yourself.
03:51The day you start thinking, that's it, I'm now fantastic, there's nothing more to be
03:58improving upon, is the day you sort of hang your boots and walk away from this.
04:03Self-talk never leaves you.
04:05And every actor will tell you this.
04:07Every actor, the good ones at least, will definitely tell you this.
04:12I can see Mohanlal sir becoming nervous.
04:15I can see, I've had the privilege of acting with Mohanlal sir as a co-actor.
04:22I remember a scene where, there was something in a scene where he comes in,
04:26this is working, you tell me, this is working, you think it's working.
04:29And I was blown away that he's doubting it.
04:32And that is the process.
04:33These legends, they are still constantly doubting themselves.
04:37Like Mammootty sir and Mohanlal sir, they have nothing to prove now.
04:41If they stop what they're doing today, they'll still go down in history as two of the greatest
04:45actors the world has ever seen.
04:47But even today they come on location, and they read a scene, and sometimes they're tense,
04:52they're worried.
04:53So self-talk never leaves you, it should never leave you.
04:56I'm an M, I'm very flattered, but I've always, I've not thought of myself as a very good
05:07looking guy, ever.
05:11And it's just, also the kind of cinema that I do, maybe, I don't end up doing a lot of
05:16films where it's about my looks and all that, which is what was very refreshing for me about
05:20my first Hindi film.
05:22I did a film called Aaiya, where the whole film was about me neck downwards.
05:26That was very refreshing for me because I didn't think that I could be shot like that
05:31objective desire.
05:33So yeah, I mean, maybe that was the only film where the film was largely about my looks
05:38and all that.
05:39Other than that, even the kind of films I do are not about me looking good.
05:43So I've not been constantly fed with the thought that I'm like this really good looking man
05:48and all that.
05:50And so yeah, I'm flattered that, if women do find me attractive, I'm flattered they
05:57do, but I'd much rather that they find my work attractive.

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