John Abraham photographed at an event in Mumbai.
Mumbai:
In an industry where it's easy to follow a formula, John Abraham likes to break convention. Whether it's with his acting projects or productions, the Bollywood talent said that he finds it "boring" to be in a "safe" zone.
A former supermodel, John made his acting debut with Jism in 2003 when erotic thriller was not as popular a genre as it is today. Back then, it was clutter-breaking.
And in 2012, when he turned producer with Vicky Donor, it turned out to be a perfect example of a clean entertainer with a powerful message about a subject as hush-hush as sperm donation.
He opened up on his choice and taste of cinema in an interview with IANS.
"When I play safe, I fail, and people ask me why, and I say 'Conventional is boring!' I will always experiment. Jism was very different, and Vicky Donor as a producer again very different. I will always experiment with my films. Even if they fail in the short run, they will work in the longer run," said the 43-year-old, who has delivered powerful performances in films like Water, No Smoking, Aashayein and Madras Café among others.
"I have to play unsafe. John works when he is experimental, he works when he is unconventional. I cannot play safe; safe is so boring for me that it shows on my face! Safe is monotonous for me," conceded the actor. He however likes to maintain a balance between commercial films and those driven by good content.
"I will always first be an actor, then a producer. When the actor's life cycle comes on a low stage, the producer will pick up. As an actor, I will do commercial films like Welcome Back and Housefull 2, but will I make them under my banner JA Entertainment? No, I will make a Madras Cafe and a Rocky Handsome.
"I will make a film that has the fabric which I really believe in as a producer. I am driven by content so aggressively that people have got fed up of me. I only concentrate on content. While others are creating films, I am only building a bank of content," he added.
His next production Rocky Handsome, in which he co-stars with Shruthi Haasan, will have plenty of action, perhaps much more than some of John's previous action movies. But he's not bothered about being typecast in the genre.
"Somewhere in all the content I see and I explore, there is a basic thread that holds it all together, and that's a little bit of action. I don't have a problem with that and I don't look at it as getting typecast.
"I have the physicality of an action hero. I have signed up for action for my next three films. If I really wanted to be careful, then I'd probably dance," quipped the actor, who's known for his well-built physique.
Besides, the fitness freak also said that he enjoys performing stunts.
In fact, he says the USP of Nishikant Kamat-directorial Rocky Handsome is "the action that's backed by the emotion or the emotion backed that's by the action". (Also Read: John Abraham Has Swag as Dangerous Rocky Handsome in This Teaser)
"With Rocky Handsome, I just felt that any amount of good action is worthless without the right and requisite emotion," he concluded.
A former supermodel, John made his acting debut with Jism in 2003 when erotic thriller was not as popular a genre as it is today. Back then, it was clutter-breaking.
And in 2012, when he turned producer with Vicky Donor, it turned out to be a perfect example of a clean entertainer with a powerful message about a subject as hush-hush as sperm donation.
He opened up on his choice and taste of cinema in an interview with IANS.
"When I play safe, I fail, and people ask me why, and I say 'Conventional is boring!' I will always experiment. Jism was very different, and Vicky Donor as a producer again very different. I will always experiment with my films. Even if they fail in the short run, they will work in the longer run," said the 43-year-old, who has delivered powerful performances in films like Water, No Smoking, Aashayein and Madras Café among others.
"I have to play unsafe. John works when he is experimental, he works when he is unconventional. I cannot play safe; safe is so boring for me that it shows on my face! Safe is monotonous for me," conceded the actor. He however likes to maintain a balance between commercial films and those driven by good content.
"I will always first be an actor, then a producer. When the actor's life cycle comes on a low stage, the producer will pick up. As an actor, I will do commercial films like Welcome Back and Housefull 2, but will I make them under my banner JA Entertainment? No, I will make a Madras Cafe and a Rocky Handsome.
"I will make a film that has the fabric which I really believe in as a producer. I am driven by content so aggressively that people have got fed up of me. I only concentrate on content. While others are creating films, I am only building a bank of content," he added.
His next production Rocky Handsome, in which he co-stars with Shruthi Haasan, will have plenty of action, perhaps much more than some of John's previous action movies. But he's not bothered about being typecast in the genre.
"Somewhere in all the content I see and I explore, there is a basic thread that holds it all together, and that's a little bit of action. I don't have a problem with that and I don't look at it as getting typecast.
"I have the physicality of an action hero. I have signed up for action for my next three films. If I really wanted to be careful, then I'd probably dance," quipped the actor, who's known for his well-built physique.
Besides, the fitness freak also said that he enjoys performing stunts.
In fact, he says the USP of Nishikant Kamat-directorial Rocky Handsome is "the action that's backed by the emotion or the emotion backed that's by the action". (Also Read: John Abraham Has Swag as Dangerous Rocky Handsome in This Teaser)
"With Rocky Handsome, I just felt that any amount of good action is worthless without the right and requisite emotion," he concluded.