I have a theory that I really want my kids to know - the only coloration that they make between dad being in films and reality is just a lot of people doing a lot of hard work.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I think the father-son love story is a universal one which transcends color.
For horror movies, color is reassuring because, at least in older films, it adds to the fakey-ness.
A lot of times I think people, when they're doing a movie that's a family movie, they're worried about this being too esoteric or too dark or too weird.
When I was a kid, my grandfather used to watch Bollywood films. There's a lot of colour and vibrancy to the Indian films.
It's become a habit to make films where the father is absent. My father impresses me, but the father figure does not.
Simultaneously, the movie business now experiments with a colorblind approach to casting.
I'm hard to pin down. I tend to look different in films.
Initially, it would bother me when filmmakers, script writers, dialogue writers and choreographers tried to recreate a bit of my dad though me.
In a movie, you're raw material, just a hue of some color and the director makes the painting.
I think everything that any actor does, I would assume, is shaped by how and where they grew up.