Bollywood
icon Aamir Khan says next film will be biggest yet
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[October 03, 2017]
By Anshuman Daga and Raju Gopalakrishnan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Aamir
Khan, the Bollywood superstar with a conscience, says
his next movie about a small town teenage girl who uses
the Internet to become a singing sensation will be much
bigger than his last film, which was India's highest
grossing ever.
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Khan, 52, plays a sleazy music producer in the
film "Secret Superstar" and says he is second lead to teenager
Zaira Wasim, playing a schoolgirl who defies her conservative
Muslim family to pursue her dream of a singing career.
Khan's last film "Dangal", or wrestling pit, was based on the
true story of a former wrestler who trains two of his daughters
to become champions in the sport. It was the highest grossing
movie for Bollywood, as India's Hindi film industry is known,
and was powered by huge collections in China.
"While both are about the empowerment of the girl child, I feel
it (Secret Superstar) is a much bigger film," Khan said in an
interview in Singapore ahead of the movie's release later this
month. He and his wife have produced the film.
"While Dangal was about the dream of a father which a daughter
fulfils, this is about the hopes and aspirations of a
14-year-old girl from a small town in India. I don't know what
the box office will be but it's a bigger film than Dangal in
what it's trying to say."
Three of Khan's films are in Bollywood's top four all-time hits.
Besides Dangal, these include "PK", in which he played an alien
dealing with religious divisions in India, and "3 Idiots", about
the frailties in India's education system.
All three have also done well in China, and Khan said he was
"very happy with the type of relationship that's building
between me and my audience in this part of the world with each
film".
He also produced and acted in a popular television documentary
series on social ills in India called "Satyameva Jayate", or
Truth Alone Triumphs.
That series led him to set up a non-profit to work on a project
to ease the shortage of water in the western Indian state of
Maharashtra, he said.
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Despite the social messages in his movies, Khan said he has no
desire to become politician, as some other Bollywood stars have.
"The desire in me to contribute back to society is something I can
do very well in the field that I am in," he said. "I don't have to
join politics. That's an area I don't ever want to go into."
Khan, who belongs to India's Muslim minority, was embroiled in
controversy two years ago when he said his Hindu wife had asked him
if they should move out of India over concerns about insecurity.
Khan later said the family had no plans to leave.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist government has been
accused of intolerance towards liberal and dissenting views.
Khan said intolerance had not affected his ability to express
himself as an actor.
"For me, when I'm making a film, my primary responsibility is to
give my audience a good time. Then if it's giving a message which is
important and creative, if it's changing the way we look at things,
great.
"If it's giving a message which is highly negative, then I would not
be a part of it."
(Reporting by Anshuman Daga and Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by Alex
Richardson)
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