After bringing films with a historical touch like Lagaan and Jodhaa Akbar to Indian screens, filmmaker Ashutosh Gowariker is ready to roll the cameras for Mohenjo Daro, set in the Indus Valley civilisation.
He says he’s loving the challenge of going “further back in time” with each project.
In an interview, he speaks about the film, his research for it and about working with Mohenjo Daro’s lead actor Hrithik Roshan.
Simply the lack of information about that period, and therefore the challenge of recreating lives about which little is known. There was very little about how they lived, what they ate, how they felt... whatever information is available on the era is minor and superficial. That lack of information about the period troubled me on a subconscious level. I decided whenever I get a story to tell that can be located in those times, I’d grab the opportunity.
Yes, you can say that. When I researched and read up on the various cities that existed during that period I realised every city in Mohenjo Daro had its own story to tell. It took me three years to piece together the entire civilisation through various cities and then weave a love story into it. Incidentally, I seem to be going further and further back in time with each film. Lagaan was modern India. Jodhaa Akbar was medieval India. Now Mohenjo Daro takes me to ancient India.
My first two films Pehla Nasha and Baazi were set in modern times. I find it fascinating to recreate another period. I find it very challenging to visit different cultures and eras in the past. I wouldn’t want to return to the same era twice. And this fascination with the past has got nothing to do with the times we’re living in. I like to explore different cultures. Whatever the backdrop, the behaviour and attitude of that culture has to be recreated in minute detail.
It’s a responsibility to recreate a manner and mores of a culture. If I’ve taken on the responsibility of recreating a culture, then the work required to get the details and nuances right follows. There is no escaping the personal joy of that journey undertaken into another era. Luckily, I have actors and technicians who believe in my vision. The journey starts with me. But I need many others to accompany me to get to the chosen destination.
Let’s put it this way. Just by his presence in Mohenjo Daro, he will make the entire city and civilisation believable. Likewise, I may have succeeded in creating the Mughal era without Hrithik in Jodhaa Akbar, but the era would not have come alive without him. I am glad we’re back together. The film will go on the floors in three months.
I don’t know how a section of the media came to that conclusion.