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For nine years, he has lived Chulbul Pandey in what he calls is a “parallel existence”. If the maverick cop of planet Dabangg defines Salman Khan’s superstardom more than any of his other screen avatars, the actor has now opted to become a part of the creative process driving Chulbul’s mojo. He has turned screenwriter for the lucrative franchise with the upcoming Dabangg 3.

“Working on a popular character and franchise is not that easy. Audiences have certain expectations from the franchise and it is imperative that the next installment should meet the criteria,” Salman tells IANS.

Getting into the third “Dabangg” film happens with an obvious advantage. “It is indeed a benefit that the material has been tested and approved by the audience in the form of appreciation over the past two installments,” explains the actor, about the blockbuster series that has played a big role in taking his stature as a pop icon to an altogether different space.

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Salman Khan Reveals The Reason Why He Made Dabangg A Franchise

If Chulbul has indeed come to share a parallel existence with him, turning writer of the series was in a way a form of self-expression.

“While playing any character on screen, I take 25 percent of that character back home. In the last nine years, with two successful installments of the franchise, I have been living this character and seeing constant love from the audiences for the character Chulbul. There have been strong thoughts and curiosity in all our minds about the origin of Chulbul Pandey, and his journey — of how a common man became Chulbul Pandey,” says Salman.

Dabangg 3 traces the back story of  Chulbul and brings in Prabhudeva as director. While Sonakshi Sinha returns as Chulbul’s wife Rajjo, Mahesh Manjrekar’s daughter Saiee makes her debut as Chulbul’s one-time romantic interest. Kannada superstar Kichcha Sudeep is the antagonist.

Salman underplays the idea that a four-language release is meant to be a winning strategy against piracy. “The franchise has received immense love from the audience and so I am not worried about piracy. I trust my fans. They will only definitely prefer to experience this journey in the theatre. If the content is good, people across the country would want to watch regardless of language and culture,” he says, adding with a note of confidence: “Hindi audiences have always shown immense love for South content. The South audiences will give the same kind of love for Hindi films as well.”