Stars bring audiences to theatres, but ultimately story runs the show: S S Rajamouli

For "Baahubali" director SS Rajamouli, the key to making a true pan Indian film is not about bringing big stars from different industries together as the filmmaker says it is important to have a story that connects universally, sometimes without even dialogues.

By :  migrator
Update: 2021-12-27 12:50 GMT
Director SS Rajamouli

Chennai

The director, who is back with another mega-budget multi-starrer in "RRR", five years after the release of the second part of "Baahubali", says he is someone who believes it's the story and not stars who ultimately run the show in a pan Indian film.

"A pan Indian film does not mean that actors from different languages come together. A pan Indian film means a story that connects to everyone irrespective of the language. While creating a story, I think 'if I switch off this dialogue portion, will the audience still connect to my movie?' Many times, the answer is a yes," Rajamouli told PTI in a Zoom interview from Hyderabad.

The 48-year-old director said it is easy to be "regional" when there are big stars in the film as one can easily "play to the gallery" but one should not fall into this trap.

"If your basic storyline is about universal emotions then you have to build up the scenes that way, not to the stars' status. The actor in the star should be able to support your movie. I always believe stars are there to bring the audiences to the theatres but once they are there, it is the story that runs the show, not stars," he added.

A pre-Independence fictional story woven around two real Indian revolutionaries in the 1920s -- Alluri Sitarama Raju (Ram Charan), and Komaram Bheem (N T Rama Rao Jr), "RRR" also features Ajay Devgn, Alia Bhatt and Olivia Morris.

Rajamouli said he did not approach Bhatt or Devgn because it was an "economically viable" option but because their presence was essential to his film.

The director said he always wanted to do a fictional story on a real hero and the timelines of Raju and Bheem's revolt were so similar that he thought this would be a perfect story to set up his film.

"Even though the film is inspired by freedom fighters and the Independence struggle, it is not about patriotism but the friendship between these two heroes and how they inspire each other to grow. Because it is a fictional story, I did not go too much into the authenticity in terms of their clothes and the way they speak," he said.

What connects the universe of "Baahubali" and "RRR" is the theme of fighting against oppression, Rajamouli said.

"I don't analyse my films too much, but if I look back, yes, oppression and the rise against it is a very strong human emotion. I love weaving stories around oppression and uprising."

The director said he is aware that those who have watched "Baahubali" will expect something similar with "RRR", though both the stories are different.

"I'm aware that people who have gone and watched 'Baahubali' would be expecting a similar thing with my next film, RRR in this instance. But I don't get bogged down by that. When people say, 'we need another Baahubali' what they really mean is that they want a similar experience with what they had with 'Baahubali'."

Asked about the instructions he gives to his actors, especially about their physical appearance in the film, the director said he narrates his story in a way that actors understand what's required of them.

"I don't tell the actors that you have to build your body but when I narrate scenes, they understand they have to be physically and mentally fit to ace those scenes. If I tell NTR Jr that your first action sequence is with a tiger, he understands what he needs to do. If I tell Charan, your intro scene is with multiple fighters, he understands what he needs to do," he said.

The director said having worked with both the actors in the past, they were on the same page when it came to their performance.

He, however, is looking forward to the dubbing they have done for the film in four languages: Hindi, Tamil, Kannada and Telugu.

For "RRR", Rajamouli has once again collaborated with his father, writer K V Vijayendra Prasad, best known for "Bajrangi Bhaijaan", "Baahubali" and "Manikarnika: The Queen of Jhansi".

The director praised his father for his penchant for creating dramatic scenes with great flourish.

"From a young age, I had this vivid imagination... When my father started working, he would tell us scenes he had developed and I would amp them up in my own way... He realised I have something in me and asked me to join him as an assistant."

Rajamouli said after assisting his father for five years, they developed a shorthand about how their individual minds worked.

"He's the best story writer I know. He wrote almost all of my films, except one or two. We understand each other well. But as a writer-director, it is me who dictates the scenes. We have our own share of arguments and quarrels."

The COVID pandemic delayed the film by a year but the director took it in his stride, saying it only gave him more time to polish the film.

Now that the release date is near, Rajamouli said he is going through emotions of anxiety and excitement.

"I always say that before the release of a film, my mind is split in two, on one side, there is the confidence that it is going to do well and on the other side, it is anxious and full of questions like 'will it really do as well as I expect?'"

"RRR" will arrive in theatres on January 7.

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