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Deepika Padukone, who has just amazed us with her spectacular performance in Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Padmaavat, is jumping in joy and is overwhelmed by the response she has been getting for the film. Last we saw her outstanding performance in Bajirao Mastani but with Padmaavat, she has taken her bar at the next level. Every scene in the film is so magical, grand and pure, the film literally takes my heart away!
Recently, Koimoi.com met the gorgeous lady who has redefined the meaning on cinema with her brilliant act. Deepika spoke about her happiness, current state of mind, her co-stars Ranveer Singh and Shahid Kapoor, her favourite director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Sapna Didi and much more!
Excerpts from the interview:
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1. Finally the film has been released after facing backlashes from several groups. Padmaavat is doing so well at the box office too. So how is the feeling right now that the film has finally released?
It’s almost a surreal feeling to be very honest. I think we have been through so much and when I say so much, I don’t necessarily mean in terms of the episodes that happened in the last 2-3 months but even just as a film. Right from the casting of the film to the production of the film, it’s not easy for the kind of scale and the kind of impact that this film needed to create. Then of course the challenges and the roadblocks along the way. It kind of feels extremely surreal but at the same time the kind of love and the appreciation and of course the success of it, I always look at it in two parts. Success is what it does at the box office and the numbers. You want every film of yours to do well and in a lot ways that is today the definition of a successful film. It’s good to own that as well. But at the same time, the intangible things which are the love and appreciation but most importantly the blessings. I have had film releases before, I have had successful films before, I have had films in 200-300 crore clubs before, I have won awards before but it’s been very unique with this particular film. I feel that there are a lot of blessings that I have got with this film. I am not been able to entirely articulate the feeling but I feel like I am protected in a way. I am feeling a connection with people and I feel people are blessing me.
2. Talking about the box office numbers, not only at the Indian box office but also in overseas the film is doing really great. What do you think has worked for the audience worldwide, what do you think is connecting people with the film?
I think so much! I think to begin with let us not forget the powerful story that it is. And a powerful story told in a time when women have come to the fore, when women are being heard. This is such a powerful story and a relatable story in that sense. Then of course, I think the large part of it is to do with the curiosity because of all the incidents that happened. So, one is the relevance of the subject and the story and the woman Padmavati, how relevant it is in today’s time. I think a lot of it has to do with a fact that the controversy surrounding the film and people’s curiosity about what is this film all about. I would also like to believe our popularity, whether it’s Sanjay sir or myself, I would like to believe somewhere that our popularity also has a lot to do with success of this film and not just in India but globally as well.
3. At any point, did you feel that this film will not release and what all things were going in your mind? Did you feel depressed?
No, I don’t think. I would have given my life to if I had to, to make this film release because that is my right as a citizen of this country it is the right of everyone to ensure that when you create something, people have the opportunity to view and to see and to enjoy and to experience. So, if this film took me down that path where I would have to go to extreme way to whatever it took to make this film release, I would have done that. But no, I didn’t lose faith in that sense. I was very certain that it would release. Yes, I can say that I wasn’t sure when it was going to happen, but I was very sure that it would happen at some point.
4. How difficult was it for you to shoot the Jauhar scene in the film?
Extremely difficult because when you know that you are leading hundreds of women into an act that we do not believe in or endorse in today but you set yourself back into the 12th or 13th century, when it is a ritual that was practised and performed, you then have to think about. For me it was not about the act of committing jauhar but for me it was her way of winning the war. And it was her way of leading hundreds of women to victory. So for me in those moments, I feel powerful, I feel strong and I think those are the qualities that come out from when I see Padmaavat in the last final moments. It reminds me of how strong and powerful and diligent women are. And women do all of what they do with so much of dignity.
Now I am not talking about the ritual specifically, but these are the thoughts that come to my mind. I feel so powerful and alive as a woman. But as an actor, it is really hard because there’s not a single word, there are no dialogues in the last 10-15 minutes of the film. The entire climax is just with the visuals and the fact that Padmaavati has to convey so much, that I had to convey so much through just my eyes, everything that she was feeling and everything that’s going on in her mind at that point. She knows her husband has just been killed, she is the queen, she has to hold forth, she is in a way the strength of all of these women and she is the one who’s emanating her power to all of them. So she has to be so strong in that moment, but to express all of those things. She is also breaking from inside because so much has happened but you know to just express all of that just through the eyes, I mean that’s the only tool I had.