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Riteish Deshmukh’s character in Marjaavaan revealed

Shah Rukh Khan’s dwarf character Bauaa Singh from his upcoming film Zero has become the talk of the town ever since the trailer of the Anand L Rai directorial was released on the former’s birthday on 2nd November. While Khan’s movie is yet to enter cinemas, we hear another Bollywood actor is set to follow suit and play a dwarf man in his next.

We are talking about Riteish Deshmukh who is preparing for his next film Marjaavaan. The film mounted the shooting floor yesterday in Mumbai and today we came to know that Deshmukh is playing the role of a dwarf.


The makers are tight-lipped about the actor’s character in the movie, but insiders reveal it is an important one. It looks like we will have to wait until the trailer of the movie comes out, to know whether or not Riteish plays a dwarf man in it.

Also starring Sidharth Malhotra, Rakul Preet and Tara Sutaria in lead roles, Marjaavaan is directed by Satyamev Jayate (2018) fame Milap Zaveri.

The film is produced by Emmay Entertainment and T-Series Films. It is set to release on 2nd October, 2019.

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Aamir Khan says film failures leave him ‘depressed’ for months: ‘It feels like losing a child’

A film flop still feels deeply personal to Bollywood’s perfectionist

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Aamir Khan says film failures leave him ‘depressed’ for months: ‘It feels like losing a child’

Highlights

  • Aamir Khan said he goes into a period of emotional distress after a film fails
  • The actor compared a rejected film to “losing a child”
  • He revealed that disappointment can stay with him for two to three months
  • Aamir also spoke about reworking films such as Delhi Belly and Taare Zameen Par after early cuts

Aamir says failure hits him far beyond the box office

Aamir Khan has opened up about the emotional toll film failures take on him, revealing that disappointing audience reactions can affect him for months. The actor said he becomes deeply distressed when a project does not work and admitted that he takes such setbacks very personally.

Reflecting on how strongly he connects with his work, Aamir said he often slips into what he described as a period of “depression” for two to three months after a film underperforms. Clarifying that he was speaking emotionally rather than in a clinical sense, he explained that every film becomes deeply personal because of the time and energy invested in it.

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