The success stories of puppy fat and pimply romance are gone. It’s the
more mature guys who are making the adrenalin rush now. Gone are the
days when we used to watch ‘puppy-love’ movies like Bobby, Prem Rog or
Love 86 with teenage lead pairs singing and running around the trees
and trying to hold their hard-beating hearts. The focus from lead
actors in their late teens or early 20s has shifted to more mature
looking heroes and heroines especially while they are in their 30s. And
all those Rishi Kapoors and Kumar Gauravs with puppy fat and chubby
cheeks have given way to more seriously ‘men’ lookers like Hrithik
Roshans and Abhishek Bachchans. And even these superstars of the
transition period have earned their place under the sun after years of
struggle. In other words, by crossing the lean phase of their 20s!
In 2000, when 26-year-old Hrithik Roshan blazed up the Indian screens
with Kaho Naa...Pyaar Hai, critics and audiences alike felt that a new
star was born. But when his releases, thereafter weren’t received as
positively, he was quickly written off as a one-film wonder. The
success of Koi...Mil Gaya in 2003 made his detractors say that the
light-eyed actor only excels in his dad Rakesh Roshan’s films. But 2006
changed all that. Krissh, Dhoom: 2 and the multicrore deal with Adlabs
pushed Hrithik to the Most Wanted league. And he is also now considered
as a versatile actor who excels both in positive and negative roles.
Critics have somersaulted and now say that it was only Hrithik who
could have made “two scriptless films” reach the target of over Rs 100
crore in the 2006. The actor, now all of 33 years, is being christened
“the most valuable person in the industry” and “the sexiest man alive”.
For Hrithik Roshan, the 30s have obviously been a magic phase.
For Bachchan Junior, too, things haven’t been different. Audiences,
which had rejected Abhishek in his prime 20s in film after flop film,
are now accepting his movies with open arms. A movie critic, who once
ridiculed him, saying, “Since the time Abhishek Bachchan has started
acting, every roadside loafer now thinks he can be a hero,” must have
been regretting his words after watching his mind-blowing performances
in Guru.
Saif Ali Khan’s story is another who fumbled into the 30s and only then
earned his spurs. Even having the status of Sharmila Tagore’s son
couldn’t stop people from writing off the Chhote Nawab after a score of
flops in a row. For years, the media awaited his announcement to retire
hurt when most of the producers refused to sign him for any of their
movies. But one Dil Chahta Hai was enough to silence everyone. With his
solo act in Hum Tum and the national award for best actor thereafter,
he further consolidated his position. Now he is considered an able
actor along with being a bankable star with eye-catching performances
in films like Salaam Namaste, Race and of course Omkara.
Abhishek Bachchan, Saif Ali Khan and Hrithik Roshan" src="http://www.india-forums.com/bollywood/images/uploads/abhi_saif_hrithik_big.gif" align="right" border="" hspace="5" vspace="5">
So what made Saif the Waif a superstar? “Times have changed. Saif has
become mature; he gave his first hit when he had just crossed 30. He is
now 38 and in last seven years, he has been an integral part of around
10 films which rocked the box-office,” says a producer on whose door
Saif used to religiously knock for a film. “In fact, all the heroes —
Hrithik Roshan, Akshay Kumar, Ajay Devgan, John Abraham, Akshaye
Khanna, Arjun Rampal, Abhishek Bachchan and even Shiney Ahuja — are
considered 30-plus hot commodities. Actually, you learn a lot about the
rules of Bollywood, from acting to presentation to marketing as you get
older playing the game here,” he continues. Like, the same Saif now
doesn’t even answer his phone calls!
While the BO and the producers are favouring more mature actors, the
guys who are in their 20s like Shahid Kapur, Kunal Khemu and Zayed Khan
are either not offered any leading roles or even if they get any, their
movies are washouts. Shahid’s Vivah got its moolah only in small towns.
He though tasted success in Jab We Met. Kunal’s Kalyug and Traffic
Signal was greeted with mixed responses both by cine-goers and critics
while his last release Superstar proved to be a disaster at the box
office. Zayed Khan has not given a hit in ages. Maybe they are awaiting
their 30th birthdays more eagerly than any other.
This trend was not as visible before 2000. Every other film was either
based on the life of college kids or was a love story involving pimply
youngsters who couldn’t get married because of their parents blocking
their path. Probably these kind of films got outdated as the actors who
played these characters grew older. They started preferring characters
they could fit into properly, rather than standing up top and be
taunted for their younger roles (we are not talking about Dev Anand, of
course). Aamir Khan, who was once a teen idol, started accepting
serious films like Akele Hum Akele Tum, Sarfarosh and Lagaan. His
success inspired the other Khans to exit from the boy-next-door image
and to experiment with new ideas and stories. Shah Rukh excelled as an
actor in Devdas and Salman was appreciated in the awesome hit, Tere
Naam.
The emergence of the multiplex phenomenon has also played a prominent
part in creating the present scenario where mature actors are
acknowledged more (after the initial period of the giggle gaggles
munching on their caramel popcorn and cooing over caramel cine-stars).
Today, if a viewer spends Rs 250 for a movie, then he wants value for
that kind of money. The audiences now choose movies carefully, or so it
seems, at least. The viewers want more than just a teenybopper love
story. They don’t have any qualms about accepting ‘different’ films
like My Brother...Nikhil, Omkara and Rang De Basanti.
“Basically, with the actors, the audiences have also matured. The
liberty that viewers today have was not found in their counterparts who
used to go to theatres before this millennium. A common Indian has the
option of seeing all kinds of movies, whether masala mainstream, hoary
Hollywood or classic European-style movies. Simply put, the audiences
are more exposed today to better and diverse cinema. The mature actors
are not shying to experiment with their looks and characters. In his
late 30s, Arshad Warsi has become a bigger star by doing supporting
roles than he was doing 10 languishing years ago. Now every director
wants him in the movie. Writers are crafting parts exclusively for him.
He, like many of his colleagues, only accepts a comic or an offbeat
role now,” asserts Homi Adjaia, director of Being Cyrus, the only
Indian English film that grossed more than Rs 20 crore.
Does that mean that the era of romancing around trees is over? Film
critic Mayank Shekhar differs. “The concept of young romance is not
going to die. Sooraj R. Barjatya tried to keep it alive by featuring
Shahid Kapur and Amrita Rao together in Vivah. Earlier the competition
was not that tough and actors were getting things easily. But now the
whole scenario has changed. There are too many cute faces coming in and
to get the right one is a tough job. In the 70s and 80s, there was a
demand for fresh faces, which has now faded away. Only a few directors
are willing to take chances on a newcomer and that occurs only if he or
she is a star-son,” he analyses.
“At a macro level it looks perfect, but when observed at a micro level,
even this trend has its holes. To get a hit film today, the entire
packaging is important; the audience would accept you as a superstar
only if you are ‘worth’ it. The Munna-Circuit hit pair of Sunjay Dutt
and Arshad Warsi was not enough to save a mundane film like Anthony
Kaun Hain? The actors are only accepted if they give good performance
in outstanding films. It does not matter if you are Saif or Shahid,”
adds Mayank Shekhar.
Veteran filmmaker Ramesh Sippy concludes, “Maybe the people don’t have
good scripts and subjects that can present teenagers in a better way.
But there are a few people like Sanjay Leela Bhansali who is made
Saawariya with Anil Kapoor’s daughter Sonam and Neetu and Rishi
Kapoor’s son Ranbir Kapoor. There are no rules in the game of BO
Success. Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio were very new and created
history after Titanic. To change and adapt is a law of nature and if
the audience change, cinema has to adapt to the changes.”
Copyright Sampurn
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