‘Hera Pheri was a frame-to-frame copy,’ says Priyadarshan as he reveals ’90 percent of South remakes flop’: ‘Nobody wrote the dialogues, they are all translated’

Priyadarshan opened up about his process of remaking South films in Hindi and why he never shows the original film to his actors.

Hera Pheri 3Sunil Shetty, Akshay Kumar, Paresh Rawal and Priyadarshan on the set of Hera Pheri.

While Priyadarshan is currently directing Hera Pheri 3, the filmmaker recently admitted that sequels come with a lot of baggage as they need to meet the audience’s high expectations. He also opened up about his process of remaking South films in Hindi and why he never shows the original film to his actors.

Speaking to Pinkvilla about his approach to remakes, he shared, “I never show the original film to the actor… I made this mistake a couple of times when I was remaking Malayalam films in Telugu, I showed Mohanlal’s films to actors and they tried to imitate him. Everybody has different body language. When I make it with Mohanlal, I know he has done the best, and then when I remake it with Akshay, I never show it to him. Also, I never make a film as it is. I always change.” He added, “I never compare two actors.”

Priyadarshan admitted that most South remakes in Hindi fail because they don’t connect with the sensitivities of the Hindi-speaking audience. He explained, “90% of remakes are flops because many South films, which are remade in Hindi, look like South films; they don’t look like Hindi films.”

Story continues below this ad

Sharing how he brings authenticity to his Hindi films, the director recalled how he grew up watching a lot of 70s and 80s Hindi cinema and incorporated that into his filmmaking. “Manichitrathazhu and Bhool Bhulaiyaa both have different cultures and backdrop, you feel Bhool Bhulaiyaa is a Hindi film, you don’t feel like you are watching a South film,” he said.

Speaking further about his remake process, Priyadarshan added, “I never copy the same film, except the one film which was made frame-to-frame, same as the original was Hera Pheri. Nobody wrote the dialogues in Hindi for that film; they are all translated.” Hera Pheri is the remake of the 1989 Malayalam film Ramji Rao Speaking, directed by Siddique–Lal.

On the subject of sequels, the filmmaker admitted that he sees them largely as a commercial exercise rather than a creative one. “I don’t like sequels, I don’t believe in them because the whole problem is once a film is made and it has reached its zenith, so people’s expectations increase, and you will never be able to satisfy that. So, it is just a business. You can’t put your heart and soul and make a film.”

Click here to follow Screen Digital on YouTube and stay updated with the latest from the world of cinema.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement