Didn't Join Bollywood to Make Films with Stars, Says 'Paan Singh Tomar' Director Tigmanshu Dhulia

The director, however, had to tweak the writing a bit as the film kept on getting delayed.

Tigmanshu Dhulia. (Image Credit: Stock Photo)

Mumbai, March 10: Filmmaker Tigmanshu Dhulia has a solid clarity of what he wants to do: make films which have his trademark style and never chase stars to get his dream on celluloid. The director, who has helmed mid-budget but critically acclaimed films like Paan Singh Tomar and Saheb Biwi aur Gangster series, has learnt over the years on how to avoid the pressure of having a star to headline his film.

"I don't want to sound pompous but I want my films to be a 'Tigmanshu Dhulia Film.' Whether it's a hit or a flop, doesn't matter. I came to this industry to make films, not to make films with stars. "Now I've learnt to not approach those producers with those kind of scripts where they will ask me to get a star. I don't fall into that trap anymore," Tigmanshu told PTI. Irrfan Khan is Perfectly Fine, Will Soon Shoot for Hindu Medium Sequel, Says His Filmmaker-Friend Tigmanshu Dhulia.

The pressure on a director to get a star on board can be quite daunting. Tigmanshu first hand experienced this while making his upcoming directorial, Milan Talkies, which earlier had several names attached to it, from Shahid Kapoor and Priyanka Chopra to Imran Khan. Though conceptualised around 2011, Tigmanshu had to cross several roadblocks to finally make the film.

"Earlier UTV was supposed to do it but I had a fallout with them because they weren't releasing Paan Singh Tomar. There was a gap then and Ekta pushed really hard. I'll give it up to her.

"Despite actors saying yes and no, dillydallying about it, she held on to it. But they needed a star. I requested her let me make it with whoever because otherwise this will never get made and she did." The filmmaker is now ready to release Milan Talkies on March 15, featuring Ali Fazal, Shraddha Srinath, Sikander Kher and Ashutosh Rana, among others. The director, however, had to tweak the writing a bit as the film kept on getting delayed.

"I started writing it in 2010-2011, that's why the film is also set in that period, where we had prints in theatres. Suddenly because of digital, the romance of cinema goes. I had to show the projectors, the equipments." Tigmanshu has often set his films, including Milan Talkies, in small towns and he says the reasons is that most of the intriguing stories come from there.

"If you take up the films set in small town and try to make it in Mumbai, it'll not work. Small towns bring a lot of conflicts of various kinds. Apart from Mumbai and probably Bangalore, every city in this country is a small town anyway, where values and traditions still exist. "Despite Delhi being the capital of the country, people there have small town mentalities. But not Mumbai. Mumbai is an office, not a home."

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