An actor with a salient portfolio of films that occasionally claim an eligible dwelling in India's cinematic history, like the revolutionary Rang De Basanti, or the inspirational Guru, or the provocatively motivational 3 Idiots,
R Madhavan has been very cautious in his choice of movies.
For him it seems, even more than the story, it's the intensity of the character he is set to enact that enlivens him to come on board. So what made him sign up Tanu Weds Manu, his latest release premiering this Friday?
Ankur Pathak finds out.
Tanu Weds Manu happens to be your next big release post the thunderous 3 Idiots. How bad is the pressure?
It is fairly bad. More so because the trailers and the music have generated a lot of excitement. I'm getting nervous because the expectations are high. The track Saddi Gali has become a rage and it is heard playing in almost every other wedding. Suddenly, Tanu Weds Manu has become a much bigger film than it started out to be.
So it's a small film?
Small in the sense that it is a film made on a budget of 8 to 10 crores. It is not as if this is a film to be made on a big budget, it is meant to be a small budget film.
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