> But Mehra says the film's nine songs will be used in the background,
not picturized as in typical Hindi films.

very good in fact. that hero heroine singing and dancing etc does not 
look realistic at all, at least it does not suite to Delhi 6 type of 
film.


--- In [email protected], Vithur <vith...@...> wrote:
>
>   Delhi 6' Reveals 'The Devil Within': Rakeysh Mehra   By LISA 
TSERING
> indiawest.com February 12, 2009 03:03:00 PM
> 
> It's 2:30 in the morning Mumbai time, but Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra is
> energized by the prospect of talking about his latest project, 
"Delhi 6."
> 
> The writer-director of the acclaimed box office hit "Rang De 
Basanti" aims
> to put his unique stamp on a theme that has been explored many times
> onscreen before — when a young Indian American man returns "home" to 
India
> for the first time, what will he find there?
> 
>  "Delhi 6 is a microcosm of India," Mehra told India-West by phone 
in a
> recent interview. "It's one of the oldest cities in India, almost 
1,000
> years old, and still holds those values and traditions. At the same 
time,
> it's in the middle of 'Global India.' It's a crazy dichotomy."
> 
> He was in an editing suite, putting the finishing touches on what is 
one of
> the season's most eagerly awaited films, to be released Feb. 20.
> 
> With music by A.R. Rahman and a cast that includes Abhishek 
Bachchan, Sonam
> Kapoor, Om Puri, Rishi Kapoor and Waheeda Rehman, "Delhi 6" is a 
story about
> Roshan (Bachchan), a man brought up in the United States who has to 
go to
> Delhi at the request of his aging grandmother (Rehman).
> 
> "Roshan is a second-generation Indian with an American passport, who 
has
> never been to India," explained Mehra. "When he gets there, his soul 
is
> happy — he feels a kind of attraction that you feel when you go home 
to your
> village."
> 
> Once he gets there, he meets Bittu (Kapoor), a girl who wants to 
leave India
> for the West. "She wants to get out," said Mehra. "Then, electricity 
happens
> between them."
> 
> "Delhi 6" is more of a character study than a "plot-oriented film," 
said
> Mehra. "I see it as a fabric; I try to weave different patterns." 
Mehra also
> juxtaposes a staging of the Ram Leela with Roshan's story to add a 
simpler
> good-versus-evil motif.
> 
> Abhishek Bachchan was the first actor Mehra considered for the role, 
which
> was just fine with the actor himself. "He knew I'd understand the 
role,"
> Bachchan told India-West Feb. 6 from New York, where he was visiting 
his
> wife, Aishwarya Rai, on her promotional tour for "The Pink Panther 
2."
> 
> "I spent a large part of my childhood abroad," he added. Bachchan 
had
> earlier spent three years at Boston University, where he studied 
liberal
> arts and drama, and found it easy to adopt an American accent. "We 
discussed
> the accent I would use in the film," he said. "We put a hint of an 
American
> accent in, not too much stress on it."
> 
> Bachchan praised Mehra's writing and directorial style — just enough
> pressure to craft a good performance, but not so much that the 
actors are
> stifled. "His script is so precise, so detailed. But he lets you 
loose on
> the set," he said.
> 
> Mehra said he first narrated the idea for the film to Bachchan seven 
years
> ago. "I really liked his interpretation of it," said Mehra. "He read 
between
> the lines. It was I who was scared to touch it. I kept that script 
under my
> pillow all those years."
> 
> A.R. Rahman introduces new talent Ash King on the soundtrack, which 
is an
> effective blend of classic qawaali styles and electronica-fueled 
dance
> music. But Mehra says the film's nine songs will be used in the 
background,
> not picturized as in typical Hindi films.
> 
> "With 'Rang De Basanti,' people accepted that the characters weren't
> singing," said Mehra. "I think I started a trend. A.R. has done a 
beautiful
> job."
> 
> To add another layer of realism, Mehra insisted the film be shot in 
sync
> sound. "There's no other way," he said firmly.
> 
> Knowing that shooting the entire film on location in Purani Dilli 
itself
> would be a massive headache, Mehra decided instead to build a huge 
set 100
> kms from Jaipur, and only shot a few selected scenes in Old Delhi.
> 
> Since the character of Roshan is of mixed heritage — his mother is 
Muslim
> and his father Hindu — the film touches on the issue of communal 
conflict.
> "There's a caste system and a religious divide," said Mehra. "The 
film
> starts getting deeper into troubled waters … it's a movie about the 
devil
> within. We disguise this devil with layers, but we are never able to
> confront it.
> 
> "'Delhi 6' is a black comedy, a social drama, but a family film, 
too," Mehra
> told India-West. "I grew up there. All my childhood memories are 
there. This
> film is semi-autobiographical — with the pigeons, the kites, the 
smells of
> the food. It's as real as it gets."
> http://www.indiawest.com/readmore.aspx?id=901&sid=3
> 
> -- 
> regards,
> Vithur
>



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