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Suriya's Interview

Thursday, June 27, 2013 • Tamil Comments
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To say that Singam had the audiences in a frenzied state would be saying very little. A film that kept audiences all over the country enthralled for days and weeks, Singam was hari’s magnum opus indeed. Following the 2010 film is its prequel, Singam 2, which stars Suriya, Anushka Shetty, Hansika Motwani, Vivek and Santhanam. Slated for a worldwide release on June 14, 2013, the film will also be dubbed in Telugu, as Yamudu 2. Anushka, Suriya, Vivek, Vijayakumar, Nassar and Radha Ravi will be reprising their original roles, while Hansika Motwani comes on board in a pivotal role. The film has been shot in picturesque and beautiful locales in Kerala, Tuticorin, Chennai, Hyderabad, Malaysia, Kenya, Johannesburg and Cape Town in South Africa, Tirunelveli and karaikudi. With foot- tapping music from Devi Sri Prasad, Suriya’s arresting and maginificent screen presence and the sheer wow factor that the whole Singam franchise brings with it, this King of the Jungle is all set to lord over the box office all over again!

Sitting at the edge of your seat already? Hop onto our spotlight bus this month and check out the behind –the – scenes and never – heard- before stories!

Suriya’s voice is filled with that indefinable fatigue comes with endless travelling and not enough sleep, perhaps. “I’m still trying to figure out the time zones,” he grins languidly. “I think my body hasn’t been able to process all the jet lag, even thought I came home a couple of days ago.” The moment he starts talking of Singam 2, his blockbuster –in-the making, however, all traces of exhaustion vanish, and it’s as though he’s just back from the shooting – spot, still completely involved in the movie. Over to one of the most bankable stars of this era. Who manages to keep both mass and class happy

How has Singam’s shaped up, so far?

It’s been a lot of work. I tell you. Also, I wouldn’t necessarily call this a sequel. This is also, in its own way, a standalone movie; it starts and ends by itself. The thing with Singam was, it appealed to all age groups. Sometimes, you appreciate a whole body of work. You treat it as such. This film carries its own identity with characters and people that no one forgets. Whom everyone always remembers. They keep referring to him on many occasions. Everyone liked Duraisingam. And this is the first time I’m doing a sequel, because of the sheer love for character. And, so we were able to do something more situations to push the envelope it’s an entertainer, of course, but we’ve worked it to bring it to the next level.

An entertainer, you say; does this mean that this one too will have lots of punch dialogues? Like the first movie?

See, what we showed in the movie was simply the way the people who live in a particular place, speak, whether it’s a village or city. Now as far as Singam 2 is concerned, the hero spends most of his time in Thoothukkudi. He works there, and the film’s about what he feels, how he faces new challenges, how he reacts when when he’s pushed, what level he tries to reach and all that. So, punch dialogues are not necessarily the main focus. He faces a lot of personal loss, and has to go through emotional phases. The dialogues simply reflect that.

Singam actually ended with a marriage, didn’t it? At which point does the sequel beginning? Right from where the original ended?

Ha, we didn’t really end with a marriage, did we? (smirks) was there an actual wedding, or a thaali? The lead pair simply traveled together… and then, what happens? (laughs)

Clever. So does the prequel follow essentially the same format? What about the villains?

Singam 2 is an entertainer in its own genre; IT CANNOT BECOME SOMETHING ELSE. The movie has to fit into those patterns. Duraisingam will do what he has to do. He has to take the emotions to the next level. So, how would someone like that react? So far, he’s always handled himself a certain way. But, now he faces new scenarios. He didn’t expect things to happen a certain way, but when they do, how does he go about it? He’s not just a cop in india, this time; he has to be an Indian cop. Who takes on crime in foreign parts, and take on foreign traitors (smiles)

What was it like, working with the cast and crew?

It’s like family, you know, meeting the same people. Right from the light-men to the photographers: I’ve worked with them before, and we were just meeting again. Everyone part of the film understood how thing were supposed to work: the art director, music director – we all knew how things were done; what really worked. And here, I have to mention that Hari sir –well, the focus was all on him. He keeps things going all the time; director Hari does the work of ten men all by himself; it’s like he has the thinking abilities of ten different people. Ten different angles. I haven’t worked with one director so many times (laughs). He has the one who took me into this genre. Until then, I’d been doing experimental work; you know, movies that centred around the city. He was the one who brought me here to – what do they call it, I don’t even know if there’s a right word to use – well, mass films. Movies that reach the people directly; more mainstream. Take Singam 2. Everybody is talking about the trailer; it’s got so many lakhs of hits on youtube. And everybody’s waiting to see Duraisingam on Screen. So, you know whatever works.

Any interesting anecdotes to share about the shoot?

This film has an amazingly huge cast. Lots of actress too. You’ve already got Anushka, Then there’s Hansika. We also have Nasser sir, Radha Ravi sir…also, I’ve never worked with Mansoor Ali Khan sir before. Only seen him shoots. It was different experience. Seeing him on and off set (smiles) Rahman sir, too. I remember when I was in the eight standard or so; I saw him when he worked with my father, on shoots. He used to take photos. I still have them. It was a different experience working with him and he still takes photos. He is very interested in photography and we often talked about the good old days. He’d ask me diet and fitness. I had a great time working with this film’s villan too. Danny is his real name and also his name in the film. Coincidence, right? He told me he came from a theatre background; and he wanted to see what a south Indian film was like. He was a big fan of singam. He watched the film, wanted to be anther Prakash raj. And he kept asking will I be doing this, that, everybody? (laughs). He was charged everyday. He worked out with me, went jogging and we talked about so many things: foreign actors, British actors, Hollywood….

Any word on Anushka and Hansika?

Their names are Kavya and Sathya, in the movie. Obviously I’ve worked with Anushka before, and Hansika was revelation. This is the first time I’m working with her and she was such a happy person. I couldn’t make it out at first (laughs). I mean, usually it’s the done thing to practice dialogues and all that, but this girl was all happy, having fun. It was, you know, very surreal. Like watching the next generation growing up in front of your eyes.

The next generation?you’ re a part of it!

(Langhs) I’ m 38. Also it’s my feeling that they don’

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