Manoj Bajpayee was a pain, has major mood swings, says Aligarh collaborator Hansal Mehta
2 min readProminent filmmaker Hansal Mehta has made stunning revelations about actor and collaborator Manoj Bajpayee. The Buckingham Murders director and Bajpayee have collaborated in two movies — Dil Pe Mat Le Yaar (2000) and Aligarh (2015). Sharing his expertise of working with the thespian, Mehta spoke about Bajpayee’s mood swings through the shoot of their 2000 movie.
The movie additionally starred Tabu, Gajraj Rao, Saurabh Shukla and others. In considered one of his newest interviews, Mehta recalled the difficulties.
In a roundtable by Cinema Express, the 55-year-old director said that he enjoys working with folks he will get alongside simply. “It’s in regards to the connection that you simply really feel. Manoj [Bajpayee] has major mood swings. We made Dil Pe Mat Le Yaar in 2000, and he was a ache in that movie,” the director mentioned.
However, Hansal Mehta additional clarified that Manoj Bajpayee will not be a ‘dangerous individual’.
“At coronary heart, he’s a good man. He’s not a dangerous individual. You get that vibe. When we had been working collectively, I used to get very irritated. I’d ask, ‘Manoj, why are you behaving like this?’ That was the time when Manoj would take the character and simply go,” he revealed.
“I don’t know the way he determined that the character ought to be irritable, however he thrust it on everybody. Everyone used to run away from him. Saurabh [Shukla] was like, ‘I went to talk to him and he was imply. What’s mistaken with him?’” he concluded.
Manoj Bajpayee flaunts new look
Bajpayee lately hit the headlines with an unbelievable bodily transformation. On new 12 months’s days, he posted a shirtless image of himself flaunting his chiselled abs.
On the work entrance, the actor can be seen within the comedy crime drama Killer Soup reverse Konkana Sen Sharma. The internet sequence will launch on January 11 on Netflix.
Directed by Abhishek Chaubey, it’s loosely impressed by a information headline and serves up a “tantalising mix of intrigue and darkish humour”.
(The article is printed beneath a mutual content material partnership association betweenThe Free Press JournalandConnected to India)