Mumbai:
Gangs of Wasseypur writerZeishan Quadri had put a condition before director AnuragKashyap that he would part with his story only if he gets toplay a key role in the film that deals with the coal mafia.
Anurag agreed on one condition: Quadri had to appear forauditions. Eventually, he got through the auditions and baggedthe role of Definit, a wily and street smart goon whoimitates Salman Khan.
Quadri's journey from the country's coal capital ofDhanbad is no less interesting than a film script. His Herobanna hai aim took him to Mumbai in 2009 but after severalauditions he got no break. Meanwhile, he began watching worldcinema and got attracted to films like Men of Honor, Cityof God, No Man's Land and No Country for Old Men.
It was then that the idea to write a script on Wasseypurcoal mafia gangs struck him. After about two months ofresearch and picking up real incidents and fictionalising thema bit, he was ready with the skeleton of his story.
"One fine day, I met Anurag Kashyap at Prithvi theatreand told him about my script. I gave him a eight-page conceptof my story said I also want to act. He was impressed by mystory and on my acting condition, he said I had to go throughthe audition rounds," Quadri said.
Gangs of Wasseypur, also starring Manoj Bajpai,Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Piyush Mishra, Shabana Azmi and ReemaSen, tells the story of three generations of a family who aredeeply enmeshed in tentacles of crime, extortion, murder andhow they wade through its morass.
Quadri a.k.a the stubborn, eccentric and crude guyDefinit belongs to the third generation of the family who ishungry for power. He has also co-written the film's screenplayand dialogue.
"Definit is a follower of Salman Khan and aspires tobecome the biggest goon of Wasseypur. He imitates the actor'sstyle and hairdo right from his Maine Pyar Kiya days toTere Naam and beyond," said the 28-year-old.
The five hours and 20 minutes story of Gangs ofWasseypur deals with incidents between 1941 and 2009. It gota rousing reception at this year's Cannes Film Festival. "Theaudience at Cannes had the patience to sit for five hours and20 minutes and appreciate it," Quadri says.
"Zeishan was from Wasseypur and a few things that he toldme about his place dragged me back to my roots, my backyard,my growing up and my tryst with Bollywood and the politics ofmy region. The few anecdotes that Zeishan shared with me ofthis place then went on to be retelling and an analysis of thehistory of the place explaining its evolution as a burninginferno and its fight for coal to the way battles werefought," says Kashyap.
"From digging coal to killing someone over an innocuousbrawl to vengeance being inherited, Part One of the film getsto the roots of the people and explains why they are the waythey are. Part 2 explains the Bollywood obsessed growing up oftheir inheritance of vengeance," he says.
Towards the end of colonial India, Shahid Khan (JaideepAhlawat) loots British trains, impersonating the legendarySultana Daku. Now outcast, Shahid becomes a worker at RamadhirSingh's (Rajat Bhagat) colliery, only to spur a revenge battlethat passes on to generations.
At the turn of the decade, Shahid's son, the philanderingSardar Khan Sardar (Manoj Bajpai) vows to get his father'shonour back, becoming the most feared man of Wasseypur.Staying true to its real life influences, the first partexplores this revenge saga through the socio-political dynamicin erstwhile Bihar in the coal and scrap trade mafia ofWasseypur.
In the second part of film, Wasseypur is no more the townthat was once consumed by the raging war between Sardar Khanand Ramadhir Singh. It has spawned a new generation of moneysquandering lobbyists, turning into foolhardy gangs overnight.
With illegal profiteering through scrap trade auctionsover the Internet, corrupt government officials, electionrigging and hooliganism, the town got murkier.
Everyone wanted alliance with the most powerful man ofWasseypur, Faizal Khan (Nawazuddin Siddiqui). His soleambition however, is to annihilate Ramadhir Singh, the manwith the grand scheme. The second part is a fitting conclusionto this story of vengeance, which by now, not just the familybut also this town has come to inherit.
Anurag agreed on one condition: Quadri had to appear forauditions. Eventually, he got through the auditions and baggedthe role of Definit, a wily and street smart goon whoimitates Salman Khan.
Quadri's journey from the country's coal capital ofDhanbad is no less interesting than a film script. His Herobanna hai aim took him to Mumbai in 2009 but after severalauditions he got no break. Meanwhile, he began watching worldcinema and got attracted to films like Men of Honor, Cityof God, No Man's Land and No Country for Old Men.
It was then that the idea to write a script on Wasseypurcoal mafia gangs struck him. After about two months ofresearch and picking up real incidents and fictionalising thema bit, he was ready with the skeleton of his story.
"One fine day, I met Anurag Kashyap at Prithvi theatreand told him about my script. I gave him a eight-page conceptof my story said I also want to act. He was impressed by mystory and on my acting condition, he said I had to go throughthe audition rounds," Quadri said.
Gangs of Wasseypur, also starring Manoj Bajpai,Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Piyush Mishra, Shabana Azmi and ReemaSen, tells the story of three generations of a family who aredeeply enmeshed in tentacles of crime, extortion, murder andhow they wade through its morass.
Quadri a.k.a the stubborn, eccentric and crude guyDefinit belongs to the third generation of the family who ishungry for power. He has also co-written the film's screenplayand dialogue.
"Definit is a follower of Salman Khan and aspires tobecome the biggest goon of Wasseypur. He imitates the actor'sstyle and hairdo right from his Maine Pyar Kiya days toTere Naam and beyond," said the 28-year-old.
The five hours and 20 minutes story of Gangs ofWasseypur deals with incidents between 1941 and 2009. It gota rousing reception at this year's Cannes Film Festival. "Theaudience at Cannes had the patience to sit for five hours and20 minutes and appreciate it," Quadri says.
"Zeishan was from Wasseypur and a few things that he toldme about his place dragged me back to my roots, my backyard,my growing up and my tryst with Bollywood and the politics ofmy region. The few anecdotes that Zeishan shared with me ofthis place then went on to be retelling and an analysis of thehistory of the place explaining its evolution as a burninginferno and its fight for coal to the way battles werefought," says Kashyap.
"From digging coal to killing someone over an innocuousbrawl to vengeance being inherited, Part One of the film getsto the roots of the people and explains why they are the waythey are. Part 2 explains the Bollywood obsessed growing up oftheir inheritance of vengeance," he says.
Towards the end of colonial India, Shahid Khan (JaideepAhlawat) loots British trains, impersonating the legendarySultana Daku. Now outcast, Shahid becomes a worker at RamadhirSingh's (Rajat Bhagat) colliery, only to spur a revenge battlethat passes on to generations.
At the turn of the decade, Shahid's son, the philanderingSardar Khan Sardar (Manoj Bajpai) vows to get his father'shonour back, becoming the most feared man of Wasseypur.Staying true to its real life influences, the first partexplores this revenge saga through the socio-political dynamicin erstwhile Bihar in the coal and scrap trade mafia ofWasseypur.
In the second part of film, Wasseypur is no more the townthat was once consumed by the raging war between Sardar Khanand Ramadhir Singh. It has spawned a new generation of moneysquandering lobbyists, turning into foolhardy gangs overnight.
With illegal profiteering through scrap trade auctionsover the Internet, corrupt government officials, electionrigging and hooliganism, the town got murkier.
Everyone wanted alliance with the most powerful man ofWasseypur, Faizal Khan (Nawazuddin Siddiqui). His soleambition however, is to annihilate Ramadhir Singh, the manwith the grand scheme. The second part is a fitting conclusionto this story of vengeance, which by now, not just the familybut also this town has come to inherit.