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Films like this don’t get second chances. They live or die this weekend..
Show up. Take someone older. Take someone younger. Some stories need a full theatre ;not ���Over the Top “ on your living room
#MainVapaasAaunga
“There is even a poster & other material lying around somewhere in my computer/hard-disk,” Shah Rukh Khan told me during an interview once (around 2006) — about how, at one point, he was actively scouting for moneybags for Ashutosh Gowariker’s Lagaan, so he could star in it.
Only, the funding was hard to find. After a failed meeting w/ producer Ratan Jain (Venus), SRK told Gowariker to remember all these people, who had no faith in him —once he made it big.
Jain promptly called me after this SRK interview was published. I asked him to sort it out with the star, instead.
To be fair to Jain & others, Gowariker — co-actor of SRK (from Circus, Kabhi Haan Kabhi Naa, Chamatkar), & Aamir Khan (from Ketan Mehta’s Holi) — had directed two films before Lagaan.
Neither had particularly worked (in a commercial sense).
Both were heavily inspired by Hollywood productions — Aamir starrer Baazi (1995), from Die Hard; & Pehla Nasha (1993), kinda lifted from Brian de Palma’s Body Double.
Also, rural settings had fallen off Bollywood’s map. Along with a period film (expensive, by their very nature), even a movie on sport, according to Aamir, was a no-go.
He had himself starred in a cricket movie, Awwal Number (1990), directed by Dev Anand, that was a disaster, alright.
But it has since been championed by connoisseurs of deliciously trashy Hindi pictures. No mean feat!
Against the advice of veterans like Javed Akhtar, once Aamir came onboard Lagaan: Once Upon a Time in India (2001) as a debuting producer — sufficiently mitigating business risk — finance in the form of Jhamu Sugandh must’ve naturally followed.
Late Sugandh had been a prolific film distributor, until he backed some seminal films as presenter/producer, before Lagaan— Bombay, Rangeela, Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, Daud, Chachi 420, Earth, Astitva.
The filmmaking behind Lagaan, unusual for the time — sync sound for a massive outdoor production, AD system, call sheets, one-schedule shoot, etc — has been meticulously detailed by Satyajit Bhatkal in the documentary, Chale Chalo, & the book, Spirit of Lagaan.
Was Lagaan the biggest hit, or even the trendsetting film of 2001?
(An old column👇🏽reposting on #25YearsofLagaan)