Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

Deepika's Film On Acid Attack Survivor Tells A Larger Story On Violence In India

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Dec, 2018 07:58 PM

    Filmmaker Meghna Gulzar, who is set to direct a film on acid attack survivor Laxmi Agarwal, says the movie is an attempt to explore a larger story on acid violence in the country through the real life subject.


    Deepika Padukone will be playing the lead role in the film, which marks the actor's first stint into production. Meghna says Laxmi's case is the most revealing example of how India's law, medicine and administration machinery came together for justice.


    "In the film with Deepika on acid violence, I'm using Laxmi Agarwal as a subject because she is the most known acid fighter. Plus her case and her story has been the most relevant in terms of where legislation on acid violence, medical advancement, compensation for victims and things like that was concerned," the director told PTI in an interview.


    "There was a whole socio-medical and legal impact that her case had. Therefore, I am using her as a lens to tell a larger story on acid violence in India because even though acid is banned and the sale of acid is regulated in our country as of five years now, we still have acid attacks. It is still the simplest thing to get in a 'kirana' store in a tier-3 city," Meghna added.


    In 2005, while Laxmi was waiting at a bus stop in Delhi, she was attacked by an assailant, a man twice her age, known to her family and an unlikely suitor whose advances she had declined.


    The film will showcase her journey in the time after her attack spanning a decade, a significant part of the story is the game-changing PIL in the Supreme Court which inspired the amendment on acid laws in 2013. Meghna is not new to recreating real life stories on the big screen, having made Talvar, a critically-acclaimed film on 2008 Aarushi-Hemraj twin murders of Noida and this year's Raazi, which is based on a book inspired by a real-life account of a female spy.


    The director has another project that will delve into the life of Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw but it is a not a biopic. "The film on Field Marshal Manekshaw is not a biopic. I'm looking at the man, his life and his times," she says, adding with a heavy sigh, "I'm way over my head over here (the story)," she explained.



    Meghna does not like being called a female filmmaker but says the concept of "male gaze" is relevant in cinema. She says every story has to be told from a certain perspective: case in point her film Talvar, which, she believes, required a male gaze.


    "And I was a woman telling the story. It's the most masculine film I've ever made, there's no room for emotion. There's one female character in that movie which is Konkona and the girl who comes only for a few seconds at the end of the film.


    Everything was about male gaze so even when you're staging a scene you've to go into the mind of all the different male characters. How would they stand, how would they react, how would they react to each other. What would their response be, what would their posture be?" she said.


    Meghna says she was careful in not taking sides with the story that became a tabloid fodder. And yet she wanted to give it a moral compass.


    "With Talvar, I said, 'I'm being objective'. I'm telling you both sides of the story but when I put that video footage at the end of the film which showed the only time that the girl was alive. That was my moral compass that I was leaving you with, that okay this is actually what happened, these two people died," she said.


    "If you want your story to be grey, there will be no moral compass. If you want to give a very definite take to the audience that they can go home with, at the end of your film, you will have a moral compass, and that moral compass could be any device. Sometimes the audience finds a moral compass that you didn't even realise you placed and that's the beauty of it," she added.

     

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    With 'Simmba', Rohit Shetty Has Taken Action To Next Level: Sonu Sood

    With 'Simmba', Rohit Shetty Has Taken Action To Next Level: Sonu Sood
    Tall and brawny actor Sonu Sood has done many stunts in his career. But he says in Rohit Shetty's "Simmba", he has done something "special".

    With 'Simmba', Rohit Shetty Has Taken Action To Next Level: Sonu Sood

    Akshay Kumar Quizzed By SIT Over His Role In 'Pardon For Dera Chief'

    The questioning began around 9.45 a.m. and was video recorded.

    Akshay Kumar Quizzed By SIT Over His Role In 'Pardon For Dera Chief'

    I Focus More On Character Than Genre: Sunny Deol

    National award-winning Bollywood actor Sunny Deol who is coming up with a new film "Bhaiaji Superhit" says that though he has a tag of an action hero, he does not choose a script based on genre but character and story.

    I Focus More On Character Than Genre: Sunny Deol

    Sabyasachi Clarifies Deepika's Wedding Sari Given By Her Mother

    Ace designer Sabyasachi Mukherjee has clarified on social media that Deepika Padukone's sari for her wedding with actor Ranveer Singh was given to him by the actress's mother Ujjala Padukone.

    Sabyasachi Clarifies Deepika's Wedding Sari Given By Her Mother

    Madhuri Dixit To Perform At Men's Hockey World Cup Opening Night

    Actress Madhuri Dixit Nene will be performing at the opening ceremony of the Odisha Hockey Men's World Cup Bhubaneswar 2018 on November 27.

    Madhuri Dixit To Perform At Men's Hockey World Cup Opening Night

    Kalki Wonders Why 'We Dont Hear About Female Dons' So Much

    Kalki Wonders Why 'We Dont Hear About Female Dons' So Much
    "Sapna Didi was my favourite story that spoke of the complete transformation of a meek woman who changed and became this legend to avenge her husband's death," she told IANS on email from Mumbai.

    Kalki Wonders Why 'We Dont Hear About Female Dons' So Much