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PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2005 3:28 pm 
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Ghai: The failure of Kisna hurt

Arthur J Pais | April 29, 2005 13:08 IST


Subhash Ghai will not have anyone tell him his new film, the Vivek Oberoi starrer Kisna, is doomed. "I have just returned from Roger Ebert's 7th Annual Overlooked Film Festival (held from April 20 to April 24, in Illinois, US) where over 800 people came to see my (Aishwarya Rai starrer) Taal," he says from New York.

"Taal was a hit, but did I expect it to be chosen by a leading film critic in America and seen by 800 Americans at a festival, most of them white people, and that too four years after it was made? I am sure they were seeing a popular film from India for the first time. Even in India, many critics did not like the film."

Kisna, a shorter version of which will be screened at the Cannes Film Festival, could acquire a life of its own, he says. "Taal waited for years to get the recognition it received the other day (at the Overlooked Film Festival)."


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The Overlooked Film Festival screens films from all over the world that Ebert, a Pulitzer Prize winning critic and television host, considers Western audiences overlooked.

Some movies screened this year, like Jacques Tati's Playtime, were more than four decades old. And some like the Anant Singh produced AIDS drama Yesterday were made just a year ago.

At the interactive session, someone asked Ghai how much making Taal had cost. "When I said $4 million, there was a gasp," Ghai says. "It looked like a $40 million movie, he (the person who asked the question) said."

A woman wanted to know how every dancer in the movie was so graceful. "That is how it should be," Ghai recalls telling the fan. "We believe in sensuality and not sexuality."

He was aware of the importance of sensuality when he was making Kisna too, the director adds.

"When I began to work on Kisna, I knew I was taking a big risk," he says. "But I felt it was worth taking. The failure of the film did hurt. But I know I did not make a bad film. Had I made trash and it had made a lot of money, I would not have been happy at all."

The Overlooked Film Festival experience has made him more determined to do "exactly the kind of films I want to do."

What next? "I do not know what my next project is going to be," Ghai says. "It could be an all-out comedy, a musical or something I have not tried before. "

But he has no intention of reviving Motherland, the Shah Rukh Khan starrer that never happened. "When I thought of it a few years ago, I was excited about it," Ghai says. "But then there have been quite a few films including (Yash Chopra's) Veer-Zaara with the India-Pakistan relationship as a background, and the subject does not interest me at all."

Is there a movie project he has been planning but feels he needs to wait for it to happen?

"For the last seven years, I have been thinking about a three-generational story," he says. "It will be a huge, huge film but I feel I need to wait for some more time to make it. It should be my magnum opus.

"I will need a few more months to decide on my next project but right now I am excited about the film school -- The Whistling Woods International Institute for Film, Television & Media Arts -- that will start functioning in less than a year (in Mumbai)."

Ghai, who began his movie career after graduating from the Film and Television Institute of India in Pune about three and half decades ago, says while he learned a lot at FTII, he was also unhappy with the bureaucracy and limited exposure to cinema.

"What we want to offer is a clean and healthy atmosphere where people will have to work very hard but enjoy what they are doing and blossom into excellent craftsmen and artists in about a year and half."

Many actors and directors in Mumbai get a break because they come from film families, he says. "But there are also many young people out there who have no connections and need encouragement to get started."

He did not have any connection to the film industry when he started, he adds. His first film as an actor, Umang (1970), was a flop and pushed him into direction.

"I did not know anyone in the film industry before I went to the Film Institute," he says. "But there was someone who gave me the best encouragement right at the start, and he had no film connections either."

His father, K D Ghai, a dentist, had noticed how passionate young Subhash was about a film career. "He surprised me by ordering for the Film Institute application and handing it over to me, telling me that if I am serious about films, I should get started soon."

"Whistling Woods will my true legacy," Subhash Ghai says. "What will I do with the money after a certain limit?"

Photographs: Paresh Gandhi




*** Ghaii, is a MINDLESS, CORRUPT, VULAGAR film maker nothing else!!
Just trying to add, chadarless, village girls, backless, semi nude western, girls exposed in shower for what? to sell Kisna!!!Shame!!


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 30, 2005 4:50 am 
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arsh wrote:
"Taal was a hit, but did I expect it to be chosen by a leading film critic in America and seen by 800 Americans at a festival, most of them white people, and that too four years after it was made?

Liar Liar.
BTW is any of Ghai movie worth watching (including Taal, except songs ofcourse)


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 30, 2005 5:07 am 
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Meri Jung was good.... :wink:


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 30, 2005 7:03 pm 
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Location: Rolla, MO, USA
Then there's
Vishwanath : Shatrughan in his style "Jali ko aag kahten hai, Bujhi ko raakh kahte hai aur jale ke bhi na jale use Vishwanath kahte hai"

Kaalicharan: Ajits famous dialogue "Saara shaher mujhe lion ke naam se jaanta hai"

:)


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PostPosted: Sun May 01, 2005 8:15 pm 
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A good movie is one that stands the test of time. By that definition, there is only one film of Subhash Ghai, 'Karz', which can be classified as a good film and even that was not entirely an original film but rather inspired/copied from two hollywood films, namely 'Reincarnation of Peter Proud' and another film of which I cannot recall the name right now. All the other films of Subhash Ghai have only been mediocre at best. ALthough there is one film of his, 'Hero' which I really liked when it first came out and which I saw several times. But today when I see the film I find it hard to classify it as a good one.


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PostPosted: Sun May 01, 2005 8:23 pm 
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next step will be to cast AB, SRK, preity , RANI etc etc and add PRIYANKA too..some how, and churn BALLE BALLE!


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PostPosted: Mon May 02, 2005 9:29 am 
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Subash Ghai is one of the worst directors in India. You need to turn your brain off and snort some drugs to enjoy his films. Even then you will go WTF? How about he join a film school and learn how to make good movies instead of starting one. His movies are only good for laundering the money of the producer.


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PostPosted: Mon May 02, 2005 3:33 pm 
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spike86 wrote:
he join a film school and learn how to make good movies instead of starting one.
Subhash Ghai has just started a School for Film Making. I guess he ought to be it's first student. But on the other hand if the school is going to have the likes of him as teachers, then I dread the future of INdian cinema. :)


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PostPosted: Mon May 02, 2005 3:43 pm 
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I saw an ad for this "school" before the screening of Kisna. After watching Kisna and and Taal, I would like to know how he deluded others/himself into thinking he can direct and teach film.


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PostPosted: Mon May 02, 2005 8:36 pm 
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His films are no masterpieces, but before Taal, they were watchable for entertainment. Since Taal, they are pretty boring.


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