I am not sure-mnay of you must have come to know about
this young lady from Assam.There are quite a few
features on her on print and electronic media.

Reema Kagti is glad her parents forced her to pursue
graduation. Had they not insisted upon it, she may not
have attained the recognition she enjoys today in the
Hindi film industry.

This 33-year old Assamese has had the distinction of
having worked with some of the biggest names in the
industry -- from Ashutosh Gowarikar and Mira Nair, to
Farhan Akhtar. She has carved her image as an ace
behind the camera, and is all set to direct Akhtar's
next venture, Honeymoon Travels Pvt Ltd.

The film is a take on love, relationships and
marriage. It is about a package honeymoon tour. There
are many short stories that go along simultaneously,
and it ends with a message that life is hard but
honest personal relationship can offer some solace in
a difficult world.

There are 14 characters playing 6 couples: Boman Irani
and Shabana Azmi, Abhay Deol and Minisha Lamba, Amisha
Patel and Karan Khanna, Sandhya Mridul and Vikram
Chatwal, and Kay Kay and Raima Sen. Reema is searching
for a girl to star opposite Ranvir Shourie as the
sixth couple. Arjun Rampal is also set to put in a
special appearance. She wanted Farhan to act in the
film too, but he was busy directing Don and was thus
replaced by Abhay Deol. "I have lost him as an actor
but I have him as a producer," she says.

A mass communication graduate from Sophia College,
Mumbai, Reema has been a part of the industry since
the past 7-8 years. Films always fascinated her. She
was pretty clear from the beginning that she wanted to
get into this profession.

Her family is not connected to films at all, despite
the fact that her grandfather once part-produced a
film. "I never met my grandfather, who died before I
was born. Since then, my family has had no association
with films, which is probably why my father was very
concerned when I told him I wanted to do films," says
Reema.

She tried to get into Film and Television Institute of
India (FTII), but was rejected thrice. Determined to
get into the movies, Reema decided to do her
internship (part of her course in college) under a
filmmaker instead of a television production house.
Through her contacts, she met Rajat Kapoor, who said
he would be happy to take her on. But he had one
condition -- that she would work with him not just for
a month, but do the whole film.

Reema KagtiThat is how Reema landed her first
assignment -- Private Detectives. There has been no
looking back.

The turning point in her career came with Ashutosh
Gowarikar's Lagaan. "Working on those sets was fun.
First assistant director Apurva Lakhia and I had
worked together earlier on Bombay Boys. The best thing
was there were so many different people around. I
hadn't done a commercial Bollywood movie before. There
were noted Bollywood folk and some who hadn't done
something like this before. Then there were lots of
British actors. There were all kinds of people who
wanted a free holiday in India. People with varying
talents."

Reema never underwent a course in movie direction. She
learnt by watching other directors at work. She says,
"I worked in an American system where assistant
directors are not necessarily involved in the creative
aspects of filmmaking. It is more about executing the
director's vision. But you can learn a lot from that
too. It depends on whether you pick up something or
not. I would say I learned a lot from my DVD player
just by watching all kinds of films."

Reema knew Farhan before they began working on Dil
Chahta Hai. She met him through Zoya Akhtar (Farhan's
sister), with whom she had worked together on Bombay
Boys. "For an assistant director like me, Farhan is
superb to work with. He is really calm and cool. He
does everything you need him to do. He is very open to
doing anything that might help him. He is the smartest
person I have worked with.

"As a producer, he is also supportive and
non-interfering at the same time. And he is not at all
a dictator on sets as people think he is. Every
director has to be on some level; after all it is his
vision. I am yet to meet a director who is not like
that. It goes with the territory you are working in,"
she adds.

Reema wrote the script of her new movie a year and a
half ago, at around the same time Lakshya was being
released. Farhan and Ritesh Sidhwani decided they
should look at her script, and she is glad they gave
her a way out. "I did want to write something, a
feel-good kind of movie. Honestly, I had written a
script before this, and it was a darker project. I had
also done semi-casting, but I had a hell of a time
getting it made. So I consciously wanted to write
something lighter."

Reema is nervous about Honeymoon Travels Pvt Ltd. But
then, she has always been like this. "I think I would
be worried if I weren't nervous," she jokes. Her
project starts on March 9 and the movie will be shot
primarily in Goa. The relatively low-budget film,
keeping in mind the number of actors, may be released
post July.

Is being a female director an obstacle or bonus in any
way? Reema doesn't think so. At least it never
mattered to her.



 
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