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Kajols cousin Ayaan Mukherjee has been quietly shooting Wake Up Sid with Ranbir Kapoor and Konkona Sen Sharma. Ayaan is barely in his twenties and he has his own youthful sensibilities, comments his producer, Karan Johar. So Ive largely left it to Ayaan to make the film the way he wants to. He wanted a particular sound, so I let him record his music his way. I only step in when the director wants me to help out with something. Like when Rensil Dsilva (whos making Jehad for the same production house, Dharma Productions) told me he cant understand film music, I did the music of his film. Otherwise, I try not to cramp the directors style.
One thing’s for
sure. Karan has his
pet themes and
they’re there in the
films, whether he directs them or not. For
instance, in Wake Up
Sid, Konkona is Ranbir’s older love inter est in the film. The
older-woman-
younger-boy angle
was something Karan
himself had wanted
to explore in Kabhi
Alvida Naa Kehna
where the script had
been written for Kajol
and Abhishek
Bachchan as a couple.
With the wife being
chronologically older
than the young husband, the incompatibility would’ve been
her irritation over his
immaturity. Of
course, when Kajol
refused to do KANK
(her daughter, Nysa
was too young for
Kajol to go off to New
York for a long spell
of shooting) and a
younger Rani
Mukherjee took her
place, the whole
script went for a toss.
KANK was no longer about an older
wife and a younger husband once Rani
and Abhishek played the couple. So
Karan has now got the theme-that-remained-unfulfilled-during-KANK in
Ayaan’s Wake Up Sid.
There’s another equation that
Karan had wanted while scripting
Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham. Originally,
the maid’s girl from Chandni Chowk
was to have been a Muslim. In other
words, Kajol was to have been the Muslim girl Shah Rukh Khan marries
against his father, Amitabh Bachchan’s
wishes. But by bringing the Hindu-Muslim angle into the story, Karan found
his script getting unwieldy and complicated. He was also unsure then of how
to keep the balance in a sensitive issue
like the clash of two religions. Thus,
K3G finally had Kajol playing the loud,
lower-middle class girl who fascinates
the upper crust Shah Rukh Khan. It
was watered down into a class clash
and not an issue between two religions.
But long after making K3G, the
equation he had discarded must’ve continued to linger in Karan Johar’s mind
for he has got it off his chest by writing
a Hindu-Muslim angle into his new film
My Name Is Khan. Yes, Shah Rukh is Mr
Khan, Kajol is his Hindu wife in the
film and when their life is disrupted
after 9/11, there is a conflict between
the husband and wife.
Working on a story set in America
after 9/11 (for My Name Is Khan) seems
to have influenced Karan quite a bit (he
researched deeply on
the subject) because
the same thought
runs in his other production, Jehad, too
(also set in the US,
post terror). However,
if inside sources are
to be believed, it was
not Karan but a su perb film called Arlington Road that in spired Jehad. For that
matter, Arlington Road
is said to have in spired both Jehad and
Yashraj’s New York!
One knows that
Karan and Aditya
Chopra are close
friends. But so close
that they’re individu ally even making the
same subject?
“Rensil’s film is
hardly Arlington Road
anymore,” retorts
Karan Johar. According to him, by the
time the Hindi film
was scripted, it was a
new film altogether.
One doesn’t know
about Rensil’s directorial capabilities (he
did do a fine job of
scripting Rang De Basanti for Rakeysh
Mehra) but Karan
Johar sure can turn
any script into a
unique film of its
own. That’s why
Karan is not one of
those who hold the
script close to their chests — he is com pletely confident that he alone can turn
it into a grand film. His assistant Tarun
Mansukhani (who directed Dostana for
the banner) recalls that during K3G,
several copies of the script were made.
A master at style and scale and superb
at bringing a tear to your eye, Karan
wasn’t in the least bit perturbed over
somebody hijacking his script and mak ing it into a film before him because he
was so certain that “I alone can make
this film”!
With that sort of confidence, it’s no
big secret that SRK in My Name Is Khan
is a Muslim personally affected by 9/11
and that he is autistic in the film.
There’s no question of trying to plug
a leak for Karan is super sure that he
alone can make My Name Is Khan into
the film you have to watch this December.
Bharathi S. Pradhan is Managing Editor,
Movie Mag International
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