Was more interested in being heard than being subtle: Anubhav Sinha on 'Mulk'

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

It's the right time to establish the concept of "hum", says whose latest "Mulk" is that rare mainstream which engages with contemporary issues and mirrors India's many divisions in the name of patriotism and religion.

The director, whose phone has not stopped ringing with congratulatory messages flooding in, said he wanted to make a sensitive but accessible

The Rishi Kapoor-Taapsee Pannu starrer, which centres around the plight of a Muslim family on trial in court and in society because their son becomes a terrorist, has won critical and audience acclaim.

A large chunk of the film is set in a courtroom with the delivering a climactic speech, defining the message of oneness and secularism that the film hopes to deliver in these fractured times.

The is named Harish Madhok' and his initial would be Hum'. I wanted the audience to agree with him and I am hearing that people are standing and clapping in the final scene. He has ended up representing the thought of people, which is a huge victory, told in an interview.

Reacting to criticism that the film could have been subtler in delivering its message, said the loud tone was intentional.

At a time when channels are screaming louder than the worst crowd, you can't be subtle if you really want to say something important. I was more interested in getting heard than being called subtle, he said.

Also, I have a take about such films. I insist that these films need to run. It cannot be doing Rs 3 crore lifetime business, which means nobody saw it or a niche audience saw it. I wanted everybody to see it, and I wanted it to be accessible.

The 53-year-old can rest easy.

The film's Monday business was almost equal to its opening day earnings of 68 crore. It has made Rs 9.86 crore in just four days, which is great for a small budget film like

Sinha, whose career has been chequered at best with films such as Tum Bin, One and Dus, said is his best yet.

Something must have shifted inside me that I changed as a filmmaker. I don't know what that was. Someone pointed out to me that I have started reading a lot in the past few years. Now, I will have to be more responsible.

Comparisons with M S Sathyu's 1971 classic Garm Hawa, which dealt with the plight of Muslims in post-Partition India, are humbling, he said

Interestingly, Mulk, which also features seasoned actors such as Manoj Pahwa, Rajat Kapoor, Nina Gupta, and Ashutosh Rana, has no Muslim And this was a conscious decision.

Maybe, I was getting cynical but I did not want Muslims defending themselves. I know that the audience is watching a character and not an but at a subliminal level you feel, ye to bolega hi'. When says something, it is easy to call her a Pakistani but when Sinha says it, it is not that easy, though they still do.

The has avoided stereotyping surnames. So a is more sympathetic to the Muslim family but a Muslim is shown as being prejudiced against his own community.

Sinha said he struggled while writing the character of SSP Danish Javed, beautifully depicted by

The day I took the decision to have Danish as a Muslim character, he became very complex. He has struggled hard and worked hard to join the mainstream and now he himself has become them. He looks at his own community with prejudice.

I did not want him to receive any sympathy in the end but at the same time, he had to be human. He is not a diabolical man. Showing his internal issues and conflicts without overstating that character was tricky.

According to the director, was to show that religion and caste identity cannot be above humanity.

It does not matter who you are, at the end of the day, it matters what you are as a human being."

For example, Murad Ali's (Rishi Kapoor) friend Chaubey, who has turned against his neighbours, can see that these people are in trouble and is tempted to help them, but does not. He is torn. This is how we are divided right now. A lot of us are doing things because we think this is what we should do. Maybe at heart, we don't even believe in this," he explained.

Though Sinha has not directly commented on the spate of lynchings in the country, he has depicted the voyeuristic nature of such violence -- when SSP Danish orders that a terrorist's body is dragged through the crowd.

"It shows the insensitivity of both the and the crowd... As spectators, as audiences, we have become so insensitive that we can at times, if not celebrate it, kind of cheer it."

Sinha had initially thought of setting the film in but his friends, filmmaker Sudhir Mishra and Manoj Bajpayee, suggested Varanasi, the director's childhood home.

His familiarity with the city is evident as he beautifully captures its 'Ganga-Jamuni tahzeeb' and how it is threatened by the radicalisation of its unemployed youth.

I have gone back to my roots and inside myself and the recent stuff that is going on," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 08 2018. 15:55 IST