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This is an archive article published on March 23, 2023

Mrunal Thakur had doubts about playing a cop in Gumraah: ‘I would tell the director I can’t do it’

Mrunal Thakur will be seen playing the role of a cop in upcoming film Gumraah, whereas co-star Aditya Roy Kapur will be seen in a double role.

Mrunal ThakurActor Mrunal Thakur will be seen playing the role of a police officer in Gumraah. (Photo: Varinder Chawla)

Actor Mrunal Thakur says it was challenging to play a cop in her upcoming film Gumraah, a role that she has tried to deal with responsibly. The crime thriller is the Hindi remake of 2019 Tamil hit Thadam, starring Arun Vijay and Vidya Pradeep.

Gumraah features Thakur as a cop while Aditya Roy Kapur will be seen in a double role. The Jersey actor said since her role of a cop demanded her to sound firm she was unsure if she could pull it off, primarily because of her soft voice.

“When you play a cop there is a responsibility. For the first time, I have played someone, who is firm. It is difficult to play a cop. But the way my character is written is interesting. There are a lot of shades, there are a lot of ups and downs. It was challenging,” Thakur told reporters here at the trailer launch of the film.

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“There were times when I would go to Vardhan (Ketkar, director) and tell him, ‘I don’t think I can do it’ and he would say, ‘you got this. And sometimes my voice is sweet that we had to be firm’,” she added.

The actor said she also took notes from her family members, who have been police officers to flesh out her character properly.

Gumraah Actors Aditya Roy Kapur and Mrunal Thakur at the trailer launch of Gumraah. (Photo: Varinder Chawla)

My family belongs to the police department and it was nice to go back to them, take some anecdotes, listen to their stories and implement them in my character,” she added.

Thakur, who garnered wide critical acclaim for her performance in Love Sonia and Sita Ramam, said she is grateful to writers for penning powerful roles for female actors and hopes this trend continues.

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“There are strong women personalities out here, who do not get the recognition… It feels good to be in the centre (of the poster in Gumraah), who wouldn’t want to? It’s about time. We need to change the definition of how Indian actresses were treated role-wise and not the other way. It is lovely to get such powerful roles and I hope there are many more to come,” she added.

Speaking of comparisons with Tabu and Rani Mukerji, who have played cop roles in two different films, Drishyam and Mardaani respectively, Thakur said, she looks upto both the actors and hopes she has done justice to her role in Gumraah.

“I look up to Tabu ma’am and she is the goddess I worship. One of the reasons why I want to do Gumraah is when I heard the story, I could picture only Tabu ma’am. This is something I want to explore, this space and this genre. I have never been part of a thriller movie and this is a film, where you will sit at the edge of your seat, and your mind will be at play. I am happy they are comparing me to Tabu and Rani ma’am, I hope I do justice,” she said.

The film follows the story of a murder investigation by the police, who find two lookalike suspects (Aditya) claiming to not know each other. For Kapur, the challenge was to make the two characters look different.

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He also credited the writer Aseem Arora and Ketkar for making his job easy as an actor because they had written it as two different characters.

“What was interesting was the character needed to feel very different and we couldn’t play with the look and you will realize it when you see the film. So, we had to find a way to make them speak differently… I did some diction classes to bring about the difference in the way they speak,” he said.

Aditya said Gumraah pushed him to tap into a space as an actor that he had not explored in his 15-year-long career. He also said even though two of his projects, Malang and web-show The Night Manager have been successful thrillers, he was excited to explore the genre again with Gumraah.

“When you do a film that has worked in that space like Malang came out and this (The Night Manager) was in that space, (then) you want to do more of it. Having said that, you don’t want to keep repeating yourself. What I found with this (Gumraah) was that the role was exciting. It was an opportunity to push myself to do something I had not done before. So, it all added to that,” he said.

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Produced by Bhushan Kumar’s T-Series and Murad Khetani’s Cine1 Studios, Gumraah will release theatrically on April 7.

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