logo
Exclusive: Stories like Bhaag Milkha Bhaag don't fade, they mature with time, says Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra

Exclusive: Stories like Bhaag Milkha Bhaag don't fade, they mature with time, says Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra

Time of India3 days ago
Director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra
As
Bhaag Milkha Bhaag
turns 12, director
Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra
looks back at the film's journey, relevance and longevity in an exclusive conversation with Bombay Times.
'I grew up in Delhi idolising Milkha Singh, Dara Singh and Dhyan Chand. They were our Sachin Tendulkar and Virat Kohli. Milkhaji didn't have shoes at one point, so he ran barefoot. I identified with it because our whole generation grew up without having proper facilities'
What makes Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (BMB) relevant even today?
Some stories don't fade out. They mature with time. Samay ke saath aur gaadha ho jata hai. Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is one of them. The story is timeless not topical, so it does not lose its relevance with time.
I always wanted to tell a story weaved around the partition of the country and in Milkha Singh's biography, I found that. Besides being the first biopic made on a sportsman in our country, there were two tracks in the film. One was Milkha Singh's journey, and the other was one of the most seminal point in modern Indian history -- the partition of India. The plot and the character are intertwined in each other. They coexist because of each other.
I am glad it's re-releasing in theatres on August 8. Certain films are meant for the big screen. We should develop a culture of revisiting our classics. Not just for business, but legacy. That's more important for me.
Why did you want to tell a story that was woven around the Partition?
The partition is a seminal point because millions were celebrating the independence of the country, and millions were suffering the partition.
I was born in the 60s. I grew up listening to both horrific and beautiful stories of partition. They left an indelible mark on me. When I entered college, we shifted to a colony in Delhi which was given to refugees of partition, and they rebuilt their lives from scratch there. Everybody had come from Pakistan there.
I used to hear their stories of how they loved their land. Vatan aur desh mein farak hota hai (sentimentally).
A Sindhi will consider Sindh as his land. A Punjabi will consider Punjab as his vatan and three-fourth of Punjab is in Pakistan. Borderline politics is another thing. I see myself through the lens of human beings. I don't see it from the lens of aaj kal kya ho raha hai, log kya soch rahe hain. I am drawn to common man. Ek aam aadmi kya kar raha hai, kya soch raha hai, uske sukh-dukh kya hai. What moves them is very important for me.
As a filmmaker, you get to choose your gaze and mine is human.
Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra and Farhan Akhtar on set of Bhaag Milkha Bhaag
While the story belongs to Milkha Singh, it also resonates with your past. Tell us about that.
It is a story of have-nots. Milkha had nothing to lose. When you don't come from privilege and you make it, that resonates with me a lot. I grew up in Delhi. I used to swim and play cricket in the National Stadium. Before my time, Milkha Singh, Dara Singh and Dhyan Chand used to practise there.
We grew up on these three names. They were our Sachin Tendulkar and Virat Kohli. Milkhaji didn't have shoes at one point and ran barefoot.
We all identified with it because our entire generation grew up without having proper facilities. I come from a lower middle-class family. I could relate to characters who were thrilled when they got to wear a Team India blazer like Milkhaji did. He won his first race for a glass of milk and two eggs.
He didn't win to make a world record or become a great athlete. I have practiced swimming because at the end of the practice section, we would get a glass of warm milk with Horlicks and two boiled eggs. It was great breakfast and that too for free. This is everybody's story in India.
The late Milkha Singh on sets of Bhaag Milkha Bhaag
At three hours and six minutes, the film's duration was much talked about. In hindsight, would you make any changes in terms of length or otherwise?
It was a difficult story to mount because everyone said where is the romance, hero is just running.
Where is the action? Athletics kaun dekhta hai India mein? Saare sawaal sahi thay. But it was important for me to prove the detractors wrong. If I didn't believe in what I made, I wouldn't make it in the first place. Pacing derives its essence from the story and how it is told. A length of the film is the length that works. A two-hour film can feel long and a three-and-a-half-hour film, can seem perfect.
Look at the modern-day epics like Avatar, Oppenheimer, Brutalist (3 hours, 34 minutes).
Lagaan, was longer than these at 3 hours and 44 minutes. When you're enjoying a movie, you are completely lost in that world and time flies. This whole length concern came from distribution. It never came from the audience or critics. It was a distribution thing because they believed they could pack one more show if a film is shorter. Longer films mean lesser shows and perhaps lesser business, but they are totally mistaken.
All these films including Milkha dismissed that notion.
Director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, still from Bhaag Milkha Bhaag
The casting of the film was one of its highlights. Take us through that process.
If you cast the right actor for the right job, that's half the battle won. Every journalist has asked me if
Farhan Akhtar
was my first choice to play Milkha. He was the right choice. Let me put it like that. His eyes reminded me of Milka sir. They have the same intensity and depth, the way he looks at you. Farhan doesn't have many lines in the film because his eyes speak.
We bumped into the club almost every day. I knew he's an athlete. He's good on the treadmill. He's good at sports. He's kept himself fit. So, the getting into shape part I knew he will cross the bridge.
It was painful for him to go through that body transformation process in 18 months, but pain is a part of sports.
Rishabh Pant
met with an accident. He was out of action for a year. Look at the way he's bounced back. It's not a miracle. It's a story of inspiration and determination.
When you're playing a character like Milkha, something intangible happens to you. Farhan didn't play the role. He became the part which is my brief to all my actors. Don't play yourself. Play the part.
'Sonam only charged Rs11 for Bhaag Milkha Bhaag'
'When I approached
Sonam Kapoor
, I clearly told her she would appear for 15 minutes. Her character changes Milkha's life by making him question his choices. I told her she won't appear later in the film, and I don't know if she will appear in the trailer or the poster. She heard me out and said the film must be made, and she will charge me a bomb for it. I told her bata dena fees, koshish karenge. Her contract came, and she had only charged me `11 as a shagun. She brought so much dignity to the part.
'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jaya Bhattacharya recalls being most underpaid actor on Kyunki: Got Rs 1000 raise
Jaya Bhattacharya recalls being most underpaid actor on Kyunki: Got Rs 1000 raise

India Today

time28 minutes ago

  • India Today

Jaya Bhattacharya recalls being most underpaid actor on Kyunki: Got Rs 1000 raise

Actor Jaya Bhattacharya, who played the scheming Payal Parikh on 'Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi', recently shared her experiences with pay inequality on the show. During a recent interview, she discussed the financial challenges she her conversation with Siddharth Kannan on his podcast, Bhattacharya revealed she was 'most underpaid actor' on the sets of 'Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi'. Although her colleagues received raises, she did not experience the same financial kabhi raise hi nahi mila (I never got a raise)," she said. When Siddharth asked her if that was the case for all seven years, Jaya Bhattacharya confirmed, 'Ek baar mila tha maangne pe (I got one raise after asking for it)." She further explained that while other actors were given Rs 2000 hikes at the time, she was offered only half of that. "Jahaan sabko do-do hazaar mile the raise, wahan mujhe ek hazaar mila tha (Where everyone else got two thousand rupees as raise, I got one thousand),' she recalled. 'Mere ego ko lag gaya. Ek toh mujhe maangna pad raha hai, aur phir mujhe wahi nahi mil raha jo doosron ko mila. Kya main itni important character nahi Hoon (My ego got hurt. I have to ask for something, and then I am not getting what others got. Am I not such an important character?)?" she said that moment made her vow never to ask for a raise again, even though others around her continued to get regular increments. 'Toh maanga nahi. Baakiyon ka toh lagataar raise hota rehta tha,' she said, pointing out how others went on to become more successful than Bhattacharya was part of the original ensemble cast of 'Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu', which starred Smriti Irani in the lead role and went on to become one of Indian television's most iconic daily soaps. As Star Plus gears up to launch a reboot of the show on July 29, it is unclear if Bhattacharya will return to reprise her role.- EndsMust Watch

‘He should have asked his bowlers to bowl underarm like Greg Chappell': Ashwin takes a dig at Ben Stokes' draw offer and sledging Jadeja
‘He should have asked his bowlers to bowl underarm like Greg Chappell': Ashwin takes a dig at Ben Stokes' draw offer and sledging Jadeja

Indian Express

time28 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

‘He should have asked his bowlers to bowl underarm like Greg Chappell': Ashwin takes a dig at Ben Stokes' draw offer and sledging Jadeja

The final day of the fourth Test between India and England in Manchester saw its share of controversies as England captain Ben Stokes showed frustration over Indian batsmen Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar refusing a handshake and draw offer with one hour remaining. While Jadeja and Sundar stitched an unbroken 202-run fifth-wicket partnership to end England's hopes of victory, Stokes targeted them verbally, asking Jadeja: 'You want to get a Test hundred against Harry Brook?' With Stokes opting to bowl part-timers Harry Brook and Joe Root in the mandatory last hour, former Indian spinner Ravichandran Ashwin sarcastically suggested Stokes should have gone further. 'I am actually disappointed. He (Ben Stokes) should have asked his bowlers to bowl underarm like Greg Chappell. It would have looked nice. Please don't talk about the spirit of cricket, sportsmanship. This is ridiculous,' Ashwin said on his YouTube channel Ash Ki Baat. 'What is the rule? If both captains believe the game cannot head towards a result, they can agree to a draw. One captain wanted to close it out. Why? First, he didn't want to tire his bowlers. Second, 'I am frustrated. You should also not be happy.' The second point isn't in the rules. According to the first point, India was right. If I were captain, I would have played all 15 overs.' While Stokes cited protecting his frontline bowlers from fatigue and injury, the incident drew reactions from across the cricketing world, including Indian coach Gautam Gambhir, who defended India's right to bat. At the start of the final hour, Jadeja was on 89 and Sundar on 80. Both went on to complete centuries—Sundar's maiden Test hundred and Jadeja's fifth. Ashwin called Stokes' behavior 'double standards.' 'Double standards. They defined it in the last ten minutes today. You're frustrated you can't win, so you fight with your players, punch the ball, do whatever. But by offering a handshake, you're saying, 'I'm frustrated, so you also don't get a hundred. You also go crying.' How is this fair? He's battled since morning against Archer, Hoggard, Gough, Flintoff. Should he leave his century? Your question was, 'Do you want a century against Harry Brook?' No, he wants a century. Bring Steve Harmison, bring Flintoff! They wouldn't say no. You're bowling Harry Brook—that's your mistake, not ours.' Stokes exchanged words with Jadeja, while England openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett also sledged the Indian pair. Crawley was heard telling Sundar: 'F***ing hell Washi, get on with it,' with Jofra Archer adding: 'If you wanted a hundred, you should have batted like it earlier.' Sundar reached his maiden Test ton before the teams agreed to a draw after five overs. Ashwin mocked Crawley's comments, declaring the result an 'Indian win': 'Zak Crawley told him, 'If you wanted 100, you should have batted quicker.' That's his choice. You want quick runs and get out at 70? That's your game. Zak Crawley or Ben Stokes, if you were batting, would you leave your hundred for the 'spirit of the game'? I feel like laughing. It's crazy. That's why I say this isn't a draw, it's an Indian win.'

Under-fire Ben Stokes gets backing from Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott: 'Very easy to have a pop at him'
Under-fire Ben Stokes gets backing from Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott: 'Very easy to have a pop at him'

First Post

time28 minutes ago

  • First Post

Under-fire Ben Stokes gets backing from Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott: 'Very easy to have a pop at him'

England batting greats Kevin Pietersen and Jonathan Trott have thrown their weights behind the Test team captain Ben Stokes as he faces criticism for venting frustration at India declining his initial offer for a draw on Day 5 in Manchester Test. read more Former England batting greats Kevin Pietersen and Jonathan Trott have come out in support of embattled Ben Stokes as the England captain faces accusations of behaving like a "spoiled kid" over his outburst after India declined his offer for a draw on Sunday in the Manchester Test. Stokes offered a handshake to Ravindra Jadeja with 15 overs left in Day 5's play as a draw looked like the only possibility in the match, but the Indian all-rounder, who was batting on 89, declined the handshake. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Soon after, Jadeja went on to hit his fifth Test hundred as Washington Sundar completed his maiden century. India eventually agreed to a draw after both player completed their milestones. Later, Stokes defended his decision by claiming that he didn't want his bowlers to suffer any injury, but faced criticism from former cricketers, including Nasser Hussain, who called out Harry Brook's 'silly' bowling. Pietersen, Trott speak in support of Stokes But Stokes has also found some support from former England cricketers, including Pietersen and Trott. Pietersen wrote on social media that Stokes should be allowed to display his emotion and was well within his rights as the team had toiled hard in the field and a result was not possible. '2 days fielding and no result on the cards - you WANT to get off the field! You cannot have a pop at Ben Stokes for his frustration. Very easy to have a pop at him when you're sitting in your lounge watching. You're NOT in the battle. Leave the men in the ring to be emotional,' Pietersen wrote on X. 2 days fielding and no result on the cards - you WANT to get off the field! You cannot have a pop at Ben Stokes for his frustration. Very easy to have a pop at him when you're sitting in your lounge watching. You're NOT in the battle. Leave the men in the ring to be emotional. — Kevin Pietersen🦏 (@KP24) July 28, 2025 Trott said that Stokes offering a draw when two batters were nearing a hundred is a normal tradition in England when a draw becomes the most likely outcome of a match. 'I am not sure if it was necessary, but the common practice — certainly here in England — is that if you're offered the opportunity to finish the game early, it's usually more about the game situation than personal milestones. From Ben Stokes' perspective, no personal milestone comes ahead of the team's goal. In this case, India's goal was to secure a draw, and they achieved that,' Trott said on JioHotstar. 'So for England, the expectation was that India would shake hands and walk off with 80 not out — that would normally suffice. But I can also understand the other side. For someone like Washington Sundar, who has batted so well, giving up the chance to score a debut hundred is not easy. You never know when another opportunity will come. So, I understand both viewpoints. England are probably a little frustrated but that's natural. What this does, though, is set things up nicely for the next Test. It's going to be spicy, and I'm looking forward to it.' STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Catch Day 1 of the fifth Test of India's tour of England on 31st July, live from 3:30 PM, on JioHotstar.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store