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With the world of cinema now going beyond borders and reaching out to a global audience, steered by digital platforms, Academy Award-winning Christian Bale, who has voiced a key character in an adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book says it’s time filmmakers start mixing up culturally much more through their storytelling.

“You don’t get into filmmaking to look for repetition all the time. So, the idea to being able to travel with the film market…hopefully, becoming more global…that would be fantastic if we all could start mixing far more within our storytelling,” Bale told IANS in a tete-a-tete when asked if he would wish to experiment by trying his hands in Indian cinema.

Bale has always managed to push the envelope with his performance.

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Christian Bale: “Filmmakers Should Culturally Mix More Within Their Storytelling”

He is known for delivering shocking physical transformations — be it his skeletal frame in The Mechanist, his Herculean built in The Dark Knight Rises, the mentally exhausting character of a remorseless, sadistic archetypal psychopath and a deranged serial killer in American Psycho or his next as Dick Cheney in Vice, where he has managed to bulk up and try prosthetics.

It takes a toll, he said with a laugh.

“I am 44 now and everything hurts, and I need to stop thinking about that… As a young man, you can take all of these chances. Mentally, I still wish too and I did just recently (for Vice), but I think I have to try think of a different way and that different way may end up being performance capture because it is incredible what they are able to do now,” he said, pointing out how technology has changed the cinematic universe and the action sequences therein.

Even though Bale has given memorable performances in films and has been feted with an Academy Award and a Golden Globe, he is best known as the iconic superhero Batman from the DC World.