'Mohanlal
is the best actor India has ever produced'
Shobha
Warrier
Priyadarshan
was the
director who first presented a humorous Mohanlal
to the people of Kerala. Together, they made
several slapstick comedies. They stopped when
film-makers hopped on the comic bandwagon, making
a series of crude and vulgar comedies.
It has been
years since they made films like Chitram
or Kilukkam, but even now, Malayalis name
these two films as their favourites. Here,
Priyadarshan talks about his childhood
enemy-turned-friend, Mohanlal:
Mohanlal
was my sister’s classmate, and I was three years
his senior in college. Even though we lived in the
same area, both of us played cricket for different
colleges and clubs. I was the opening batsman for
our college cricket team, and he was the opening
bowler for his. So we were always on the opposing
sides.
We were real
enemies then. We went to college in the same bus.
But we would pick fights there too, mostly over
girls!
We became
friends only because of cinema. A common friend of
ours made a film called Thiranottam,
which we were both associated with. That was the
beginning of our friendship.
I found him
hilarious company. Later on, when I came into
films, I wanted to make use of that talent, even
though he began as a villain in Manjil Virinja
Pookal.
And so in Enginey
Nee Marakkum, people came to know about this
facet of his character. Through humour, he became
a hero.
I've made 27
films with him. In each, I have seen at least two
new expressions that I hadn't seen in any of his
earlier films. That is how much he surprises me.
I know that his
contribution has got a lot to do with the success
of most of my films, especially the humorous ones.
There is a thin line between buffoonery and humour.
He goes to the edge but never crosses that.
I admire his
spirit with all his coartistes. He has no ego
hassles with anyone. He is ready to do anything
for a film. Many people have asked me whether he
really licked Amrish Puri’s shoes in Kalaapani.
He did. He felt the scene would look realistic
only if he did it. He wanted the shoe to be
cleaned properly, that’s all!
He
never prepares for any role or scene. He is not
bothered how he looks or what he does. Once the
camera is on, he is a transformed person. As he
does only one film at a time, he knows everything
about the film, nothing more.
All you have to
do is tell him what the shot is just before you
shoot. He immediately changes into that character.
I haven't seen this ability to transform
completely, without any preparation, in any other
actor in my entire career. And, mind you, I have
worked with almost all the actors from the South
and the North.
This man is
amazing.
I remember Mani
Ratnam telling me, "Hereafter, I will never
work with a man of whom I am a fan." I asked
why. He said he often forgot to say 'Cut' in Iruvar.
Mani said he did not expect him to perform at that
level.
He stunned
me in two films: Vaanaprastham and Vaasthuhara
(the late Aravindan’s film).
I saw a
different Mohanlal in both. A Mohanlal I don't see
normally. You see him as a man carrying a heavy
heart. From his body language, you could feel that
he had a heavy heart. I don’t know how conveyed
it to us. It was so real.
I didn't ask him
to analyse it. Because, knowing Lal, it would be
stupid of me to ask such things. He never plans
for anything or prepares anything. It just
happens.
Take Thalavattam.
After he becomes mad, he doesn't blink his eyes. I
didn't notice it when I shot the film. Only when
someone asked me whether we did it purposely, did
I notice it.
Both
of us -- Lal or I -- didn’t know that mad people
rarely blink their eyes. In the climax scene of Kireedam,
you see him clenching and unclenching his jaws.
People do that when they're tense. All this comes
to Lal so naturally.
Recently,
Madhavikkutty said that Lal was born in the wrong
place. I agree. His potential is so much that I
don't think an Indian director can ever make use
of it totally.
Do we have any
other actor in India who is accepted by the common
man and the critics? He is a superstar. People
adore him. They throw coins at the screen when he
appears, like they do to Rajanikant.
At the same
time, he is a super actor, too, having won three
best actor awards at the national level. But we
are yet to see the full potential of Mohanlal.
Mohanlal is a unique phenomenon in Indian cinema.
In fact, he is
the best actor India has ever produced.
<<Previous |