A long pause after his first film "Kyun Ho Gaya Na", Samir Karnik is
now releasing "Nanhe Jaisalmer" with Bobby Deol. The film-maker tells
us how the film is rooted in reality despite delving into the fantasies
of a child.
Q: The poster of your new film displays the tagline "where does the inspiration come from", we ask you the same question.
A: The answer is also written on the poster. From hope, faith,
discovery, courage and acceptance. I think faith is the most important
among them. If you have the real passion to achieve something and you
believe in it, you'll surely get it. Faith is the strongest criterion
for reaching the goal.
Q: You are back with your second film after a long gap after your first one. Are the films very different in terms of subject?
A: There was no one to allow me work after "Kyun Ho Gaya Na". Then I
started writing stories and reading them out to actors. But either
there were some problems with those stories or the actors got busy.
That's when I thought I can make a child the hero of my film. I had no
story then but my intension was strong. Once I left for Delhi by car
and stayed at my friend's house in Ajmer on the way. His mother told me
about some children who despite being illiterate could speak four
different languages. After reaching Delhi, I decided to make that the
subject of my film. I returned to Jaisalmer and completed the story
within a month.
Q: Why Bobby Deol and Dwij Yadav?
A: We selected Dwij by audition. He worked very hard and I think there
couldn't be a Nanha Jaisalmer better than him. He remembered not only
his dialogues, but others' too. He is happy, intelligent and with a
flair for learning. Bobby Deol, because he showed interest in the
subject. When I met him he never took it into account that I had
directed just one movie which had flopped. Instead, he tried to find
what I had for him.
Q: Why did "Kyun Ho Gaya Na" flop despite the big star cast?
A: May be it was my fate. Probably my luck ran out the very moment
Aishwarya and Vivek injured themselves in an accident during shooting.
Such impediments affect the flow of work. And in the end, the final
product changes its form.
Q: How much importance do you give to fate and hard work in the film industry?
A: Fate is important, but hard work is even more important. If you sit
at home and wait for good fate, it'll not turn up. This is true in
every field. If I don't believe in my work and start a project hoping
for good fate it'll just be a false hope. In this industry, many people
have their relatives and friends to help them out, but I have none.
Being alone, I had to work harder to get this second chance. When
despite a big star cast, a film flops, all the burden comes on the
film-maker. Everyone isolates you then.
Q: In "Nanhe Jaisalmer", is the star in the child's life or the child in the star's life?
A: That's quite a good question. It's a film where there's child and a
star. The story is not for any one of them. It's definite that the star
affects the child, but at times children do things that become a lesson
for adults. It's a different issue that grown-ups don't take such
lessons seriously.
Q: Do you think the film will impress both children and adults?
A: Sure. It's for all. Whatever children learn is from adults only.
Often, when our family members say something we don't grasp it, but
when a close friend says the same thing we try to understand and imbibe
it. Apart from children, adults will learn from this film how they
affect children. Children always try to be someone who affects them the
most.
Q: Any special reason why you have shown a child being star-struck?
A: See, ours is a star-struck nation. Here if one child wants to become
Shah Rukh, another idolizes Salman. Now it becomes the responsibility
of the stars how they carry themselves so that the children learn
something good from them. In my film, the child never wants to be a
star. He wants to go to Mumbai to meet his friend. He believes he is a
good friend of Bobby. It's enough for him to think that they are good
buddies.
Q: How will the film affect children?
A: I hope it affects children very much. These days, children have
become so irresponsible. They must learn something from the film.
Children in Mumbai still know the reality, but there are far-flung
small towns where children live in their dreamlands. Everyone will meet
such children through this film and they'll know the value those
children give to their dreams.
Q: Don't you think that the film is very imaginative?
A: Not at all. I have already told you this is the story of faith.
There's a scene in the film where the mother complains that the child
always dreams and the child replies that if I tell him (Bobby) just
once that my name is Nanhe Jaisalmer, he'll surely embrace me. Just see
the faith of that child.
Q: How much hopes do you have from this movie?
A.: My hope is on my next movie "Roshan". It's faith that I have in "Nanhe Jaisalmer".
Q: Tell us about you future plans.
A: I just have finished shooting a film titled "Roshan". It has the
same child actor, Bobby and Kangana Ranawat. Besides, I'm going to
finish the shooting of multi-starrer "Mera Bharat Mahan", starring
Salman, Preity, Sunny, Bobby, Mithun Chakrabarty, Dino Moria, Vatsal
Seth, Sohail, Riya Sen and Amrita Arora. Just the way "Nanhe Jaisalmer"
is based on faith and "Roshan" on hope, "Mera Bharat Mahan" is based on
pride. These are the values people need to succeed in life.
Q: As the name suggests, "Mera Bharat Mahan" must be a patriotic film.
A: You must have noticed one-liners "OK tata", "Horn Please" and "Mera
Bharat Mahan" painted behind trucks. Actually, my film is also about a
journey. It'll be complete very soon.
-Rajnee Gupta (SAMPURN)
Copyright Sampurn
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