Nikhil Advani donning many hats

Noted film producer and director Nikhil Advani is also a jury member for the feature films category at the International Film Festival of India. Café catches up with Nikhil to learn more about the films he is working on
Nikhil Advani donning many hats
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Nikhil Advani recently produced the film ‘Lucknow Central’, starring Farhan Akhtar, while Akshay Kumar starrer ‘Airlift’ released last year. Speaking about the response his films received, he said, “The delivery was disappointing as ‘Lucknow Central’ was a good film. It needed a better time period to have a clean run. The problem with films like ‘Lucknow Central’ is that it can get lost amongst the larger films. I am very proud of the film and of Ranjit Tiwari as a director. It got a lot of critical acclaim but I just feel that it needed space to breathe. There were a lot of releases in the week.”

“Everything I have chased, runs away from me but the other things that I do, fall into my lap. In the case of ‘D-Day’, I wanted to make a very simple, frothy, desi version of ‘Sex and the City’ for women, but studios kept asking me, ‘Hero kaun hai?’ because at that time it was unheard off to do a film with only women. Suddenly, Osama bin Laden was captured and killed and my driver asked me,‘If they can do it why can’t we?’ I went back to office and everyone in office was asking the same question. Even for ‘Lucknow Central’, Ranjit had read a small article and he came to me and said this is what I want to do. I said I hope you can write something on this because I am sceptical. The rest is history,” he says.

As a director himself, Nikhil understands the qualities required in a director. “Everything depends on the director. Cinema is a director’s medium. You can give the same script, set of actors, locations, songs, same amount of budget to two different directors and you will still see two different films. The film is not only in the script, it is in the director’s mind – the vision he has and how he works with the actors and converts them into his characters,” he explains.

He adds, “I think the biggest challenge for me is to keep my director’s hat on the side and look at it as a producer. In ‘Airlift’, my role was to become a wall between studio and my other co-producers and keep Raja Krishna Menon, (director) away from everything so that he could just direct the film. There is a certain level of trust that a director has with one person he has on his side.”

Nikhil’s next projects include, directing a biopic on Dr K Radhakrishnan, the former Chairman of ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) and the man behind India’s Mars mission aka Mangalyaan, and producing ‘Batla House’. “I am directing the Mission to Mars story with Dr K Radhakrishnan, who is one of the top scientists in the country. It took him a year to trust me. This is the reason films have a disclaimer that it is based on true events. For ‘Batla House’ too, we had to get the NOC in place and still, every name in the film will be changed because it is not fair to the people involved in the real incident. Saif Ali Khan has agreed to play a role in the film,” he says.

Nikhil is a jury member for the feature films category at IFFI and he shares his experience of how the festival has grown. “I am an IFFI child as I have been attending IFFI since 1993. My first brush with the film industry and cinema was at IFFI because I was always following Sudhir Mishra. He took me to IFFI in Mumbai and Hyderabad. ‘Airlift’ was at IFFI last year, and before that, ‘Delhi Safari’ was featured at the festival. I love the festival. It is a great place to meet people and talk, without getting stressed that your film is releasing on Friday,” laughs Nikhil. “As a jury member, I have watched almost 21 films of the festival, including ‘S Durga’ and ‘Nude’.”

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