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Our films should carry the Bollywood stamp: Sanjay Leela Bhansali

In his initial films the 48-year-old kept to traditional themes where stories played out in the backdrop of lavishly mounted sets and elaborately dressed actors.

Our films should carry the Bollywood stamp: Sanjay Leela Bhansali

 The new wave of realistic cinema shouldn't undermine the "Bollywood stamp of melodramas", says Sanjay Leela Bhansali, the unapologetic maker of opulent, over the top movies like Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam, Devdas and Saawariya.

"I feel that every filmmaker is in a great mood right now! There's a new wave, a new dimension in the industry... but I only hope that in this new wave, we do not lose our great Bollywood stamp of melodramas, song-dance rituals, classic literature and all that form the very distinct Bollywood style of filmmaking," Bhansali told IANS.

In his initial films the 48-year-old kept to traditional themes where stories played out in the backdrop of lavishly mounted sets and elaborately dressed actors. He interspersed classical and folk music and dance to add the Indian touch in films like Hum Dil De...and Devdas.

Though he moved away from the genre to go experimental and make films like Saawariya and Black, and an emotional drama like Guzaarish, Bhansali says he does not want the desi flavour to go away from the Hindi film industry, known worldwide for its colourful song and dance routines.

"Of course, we should have different genres like songless films, experimental films, realistic films...but we also must have filmmakers who make the kind of films that I make...films like Devdas, like the Bollywood musicals which the West is interested in.That breed of young filmmakers, able to shoot a song with lavishness, is something I am still not seeing coming in.

"Maybe they are distancing themselves from it. There's a tendency of the young filmmaker to look down upon the traditional Bollywood film, the classical kind of filmmaking...that shouldn't be there. Running with a hand-held camera through the lanes is as difficult as any other shot.so I think we should hold on to all different genres," Bhansali said.

Interestingly, however, as a producer, Bhansali is treading a new path with projects like My Friend Pinto, Rowdy Rathore and Shirin Farhad Ki Nikal Padi. But as a director, he wants to go back to his original love.

"I'm dying to make a full on song-dance melodrama. I am in a full, upbeat mood...it will be in the 'Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam' space, but I am giving finishing touches to the script. In some time, I will get down to begin work on it.

Prodded a little further, he added: "It will be my style. The audience comes to me and tells me - 'We loved Black, we loved Guzaarish, but we want Hum Dil..., we want Devdas.' So I wonder what is it about those films that still holds and makes the audience hungry for it.

"Also, it is best to do what comes naturally to you. I've done Black, I've done Guzaarish...I have explored and experimented, but now it is important to go home and do a masala film with my sensibilities intact."

 

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