Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Don't think heroism in cinema will ever die: Salman Khan

Fresh from the success of Dabangg 3, Bollywood superstar Salman Khan says there are times when the makers go overboard with "heroism" but believes he is lucky to have struck the right balance in his films.

Dabangg 3 saw Salman reprise his role of Robin Hood-like cop Chulbul Pandey and the film released on December 20, minting over Rs 90 crore in its opening weekend.


The actor, who has cemented his image as a larger-than-life hero with films like Wanted, Kick, Bharat and the Dabangg series, said heroism is here to stay.

"I feel when fans go to theatre they should want to be you and they should come out happier. Basically that is my funda to do movies. I don't think heroism can ever die.

"It can never die. There are times when you feel there is too much of it (heroism) so you try and control it, to get the right balance is difficult. I am lucky on cracking it," Salman, 53, said in a group interview.

Growing up, the actor said, he watched Bruce Lee on screen and used to imitate the moves of the Hollywood martial arts legend.

"I am a big movie fan myself. We would see the posters of a film and decide whether we want to see the film or not. Today, we have trailers and people make their mind to see a movie if they liked it. When I would come out of a movie theatre after watching a film, I wanted to be that hero, feeling good.

"We would watch all the films of Bruce Lee and we would fight and kick people around (like he used to). Everyone was a martial artist at that point of time in a fun way," he said.

Salman said no star has the power to hold the audience in the theatres if the film is not good.

"... Till the time the emotion is correct... If you do something selflessly for someone—it could be your mother, family or wife or dog or country—that emotion works. You say star power (works), but if the film is not good, then it doesn't hold at all," he said.

"The subject is important. The scenes and music have to be good. If a boring scene comes, people get busy with their phones," he added.

Salman is currently busy shooting for Radhe.

"I am hearing scripts from Farhan (Akhtar) when something comes up, we will see," he added.

The actor also has Kick 2 and Veteran, the Hindi remake of 2015 South Korean film.

More For You

porn ban

Britain moves to ban porn showing sexual strangulation

AI Generated Gemini

What Britain’s ban on strangulation porn really means and why campaigners say it could backfire

Highlights:

  • Government to criminalise porn that shows strangulation or suffocation during sex.
  • Part of wider plan to fight violence against women and online harm.
  • Tech firms will be forced to block such content or face heavy Ofcom fines.
  • Experts say the ban responds to medical evidence and years of campaigning.

You see it everywhere now. In mainstream pornography, a man’s hands around a woman’s neck. It has become so common that for many, especially the young, it just seems like part of sex, a normal step. The UK government has decided it should not be, and soon, it will be a crime.

The plan is to make possessing or distributing pornographic material that shows sexual strangulation, often called ‘choking’, illegal. This is a specific amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill. Ministers are acting on the back of a stark, independent review. That report found this kind of violence is not just available online, but it is rampant. It has quietly, steadily, become normalised.

Keep ReadingShow less