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This is an archive article published on June 19, 2011

Age is Just a Number

He is happily angry— a jovial ageing gangster who is brought back to the city for a mission but who detests being called old,” said Amitabh Bachchan,describing his character Viju in his upcoming film,Bbuddah Hoga Terra Baap.

He is happily angry— a jovial ageing gangster who is brought back to the city for a mission but who detests being called old,” said Amitabh Bachchan,describing his character Viju in his upcoming film,Bbuddah Hoga Terra Baap. The superstar,who returns as the angry man of Indian cinema,attended the Screen Chatroom on Friday at Express Towers in Mumbai to talk about the film. In tandem with his character,Bachchan was dressed in dark blue distressed denims with a silver back pocket,a grey sweatshirt with skulls printed in silver,a white silk scarf and red-framed glasses.

The film,which releases on July 1,has been directed by popular South Indian filmmaker Puri Jaggannath,and is also Bachchan’s home production,with AB Corp backing it. However,the director,who made the Tamil superhit Pokkiri,has brought those sensibilities into the film to make Bachchan’s character look rather flamboyant. “He is arrogant and has an attitude,so his outfits also have a bright and colourful touch with yellow scarves,printed shirts and funky sunglasses,” Bachchan explained.

Bachchan,in the film,is also seen riding a Harley Davidson motorbike which,the actor says,made him nervous at first. “I’ve never been much of a biker and this is the first time I rode such a heavy-duty machine. I got it right after some practice in traffic,” he recollected,“But now I know why people enjoy riding powerful machines — it gives you such a sense of being in control.”

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The actor has yet again lent his voice to the title track of the film. However,this time,he has gone a step ahead and performed it a-capella style,producing sounds of the guitar and drums. But Bachchan brushes all the credit away by calling it machine-aided. “These days you have such fabulous technology that it can convert a screech into a guitar strum and make a terrible singer like me sound good,” he laughed.

Though he has done solo-hero roles in the past with Cheeni Kum and Nishabd,Bbuddah… sees him return as the much-loved classic hero of Indian cinema. Recounting what made him sign the movie on besides the script,he said,“After I returned to films,most of the roles I was being offered were rather sublime,submissive and of a weaker man. And I’d heard many people say that they didn’t want to see me this way. That stayed with me and when I read the script,I considered it a great opportunity to return in a different avatar.”

However,the 67-year-old actor also feels that on the flip side,age has had its advantage. “In the early part of my career,I was expected to be aggressive,bash up villains,woo the girl and perform the routine. But now,there is much more variety. Most of my roles have been challenging,be it in Cheeni Kum,Paa,Nishabd or Aag,even though some didn’t go down well with the audience. I wouldn’t have had a chance to do these roles early on.”

(Detailed coverage follows in Screen issue dated July 1)

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