Bollywood star Aamir Khan on adapting Hollywood hit 'Forrest Gump' to Indian tastes, his favourite scene with Kareena Kapoor, and more
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Read the full story here: https://gulfnews.com/entertainment/bollywood/watch-bollywood-star-aamir-khan-talks-laal-singh-chaddha-with-kareena-kapoor-forrest-gump-and-more-1.89832320
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00:00Though I have to say that a couple of times on set, while we were on shoot, when we were
00:05trying to, we were having difficulty in a couple of things, I remember Adhya Reddy and
00:10I saying, let's go and see how they've done it.
00:12Really?
00:13And I had loved it.
00:14I saw it three or four times, two or three times at that time and it had affected me
00:18deeply and I loved Tom Hanks' performance and the way the film was.
00:25Aamir, this is Manjusha from Gulf News.
00:27You need to impress me.
00:28Hi Manju.
00:29Yeah, six minutes is what we have.
00:31Okay.
00:32Be on the clock.
00:33Tell me why I should watch your movie.
00:35I've seen it, I'm sold but you need to tell me why should the ones who have not seen
00:39Forrest Gump perhaps watch this one?
00:42Well, I really loved the script that Atul wrote and the adaptation that he wrote.
00:47It really touched my heart and that's when I felt so drawn to it that I had to do it.
00:54I think it's a film that we've made with a lot of love and care.
00:58The character of Lal, his innocence, his purity, he's so pure of heart, doesn't have a negative
01:04bore in him and I think that's such a wonderful thing to see in someone and that's something
01:10that makes me feel very nice, it's very reassuring, it's very...
01:14I wish I could be a little like Lal.
01:16Right, of course, we overthink everything and that's what when I was watching the movie
01:19I thought, you know, Lal is almost extinct, he does not, there is no Lal anymore.
01:25I mean we are so filled with cynicism and hate I would say, not hate, we tend to disbelieve
01:30people like I wouldn't so, you know, where is Lal really in today's times?
01:36No, there is, there are a lot of people who are very innocent and pure and I think that
01:44maybe in all of us also there is a little bit of that if we just tap into it.
01:51Right, right, with this, did you watch Forrest Gump?
01:55I know you worked very hard to get the rights for the movie etc.
01:59But why this one?
02:00When sometimes you feel a classic shouldn't be touched and it is such a cultural phenomenon
02:05why would you even, you know, tweak it?
02:08Exactly, that's what my thought was.
02:10When Atul told me I've written an adaptation in two weeks of Forrest Gump, that's what
02:14my reaction was.
02:15I was like, why are you messing with it?
02:17Just leave it alone.
02:19So, I had the same feeling but when I heard his adaptation, I was sold.
02:23That's what really made me feel that he's done such a beautiful job of, I could have
02:28never imagined that a film like Forrest Gump which is so rooted in American culture could
02:34be actually placed somewhere else and the way Atul did it made me, by the time I finished
02:40listening to the script, I thought I had heard an Indian story, that's how well he had
02:45done it.
02:46So, that's what really, it wasn't something I had planned to do, it was just something
02:50that happened.
02:51Right, right.
02:52How difficult was it to weave the historical bits into like see because you know the American
02:58history people are familiar with but this was set in a different time as well.
03:02Did you also have a say in it on which are the events that you think shaped people's
03:06life or an Indian's life?
03:07Well, I think that was a decision that Atul took when he wrote the adaptation and it's
03:12something that came out of him but what I heard was, it made sense to me so it didn't
03:19occur to me to add any more incidents in this because of course there are many incidents
03:23in the life of any country, sociopolitical incidents but I think the ones that he picked
03:28were made sense to me so I didn't have to offer any change in that.
03:33Right, Amit, it's been such a tough time for us in the last two years with the pandemic,
03:38jobs being laid off, I mean we are being laid off even now like journalism is really going
03:42down so what do you think like do you think this is like the kind of movie that we want
03:46where there is just no cynicism, it's just ignorance is bliss kind of thing, philosophy?
03:51Well, I think certainly all of us have been through a rough time with COVID and it's you
03:55know still in many ways has changed our lives so dramatically and affected us so dramatically
04:00so yes I think a film like Lal Singh Chaddha does make you feel nice, it calms you down, it
04:07makes you believe once again in miracles.
04:10Yeah, Amit even the changing patterns have changed dramatically, we have been exposed to
04:16content from around the world, why do you think Forrest Gump aged so well because there have
04:21been many articles that say it hasn't and many movies haven't aged well when you revisit it,
04:26why do you think this one in your case do you think it has aged well and it still works?
04:31Yeah, I think well to be really honest it's been ages since I saw Forrest Gump.
04:38So I saw it when it first came out and I loved it, I saw it three or four times,
04:43two or three times at that time and it had affected me deeply and I loved Tom Hanks'
04:47performance and the way the film was but when we started to make it because we heard Atul's
04:52script and we kind of locked into that and that had its own you know story to tell so we didn't
05:00kind of revisit the original and try and look at it, we didn't do that though I have to say that
05:07a couple of times on set while we were on shoot when we were trying to, we were having
05:13difficulty in a couple of things I remember Adivya and I saying let's go and see how they've
05:17done it because now with laptops and internet you can watch a film anywhere in the middle of a
05:23mountain you can watch some stuff so we did do that a few times but we didn't really like look
05:29at the whole film and try and take from that no, so the scene where I meet Kareena after very
05:35long and she sees me as a Sardar for the first time that's I think one of the key scenes of the
05:41film and that's also my favourite scene from the original and that was the scene that I was
05:50yeah it's such a moving scene I just love that scene so I hope I did it all right.
05:56Brilliant, I've just I've been asked to wrap. I thought Jenny was being penalised in the
06:00original, do you think even Kareena's character Rupa is also penalised to a large extent for
06:05following her dreams and did you want an update a modern update about it?
06:10Well I think that you know so Kareena's character or Jenny's character in the original that was
06:18Jenny that's one character that's that's gone through a lot of change in its adaptation to the
06:24Hindi version Lal Singh so Jenny has become Rupa but there are large changes because
06:30culturally what exists in America doesn't exist in India so we couldn't have that hippie culture
06:34and all of that instead we had what what happens in India for you know what would happen in India
06:40in a scenario like this perhaps so so actually what was your question again?
06:52Was she being penalised? I just wanted to ask.
06:55No, no actually in in in Lal Singh Chaddha I think it's it's also her what I find is that
07:03Rupa's character is a character who's had a lot of trauma in childhood and and and her
07:10she she finds her she finds it very difficult to come out of a relationship which is damaging
07:18you know I think that's the the sad part about her that you know that's the sad part about her
07:25so I don't think she's being penalised I just think that she's it's rather unfortunate that
07:30she's not able to come out of the of the darkness that she's experienced as a child and that kind
07:37of affects her through her life. Right, she should have done running too. Thank you so much I think
07:42she should have run for another four years of her life but thank you so much for entertaining us
07:46Aamir, my time's up. Thank you, nice talking to you. Thank you for your time, lovely talking to you.