![]() It is not about duality of character, but playing somebody who has flaws, that makes them more tactile. With those flaws if you can rise to the occasion and overcome the bad, then you are a true hero, and I think that is what appeals to audiences today. People are flawed and that is the reality. When you humanise you are basically putting it out there that everyone is flawed that day and age is gone where we can be morally superior, in action and in deed and in thought. There is a general trend today to humanise the characters, and when I say that I don’t mean we are justifying them. Is the duality of the character of Bob Biswas part of the appeal for you? In Breathe: Into the Shadows also you played a man who is not what he seems to be. ![]() That makes him a character you want to sink your teeth into, and have a lot of fun playing. Here’s this portly guy, almost cherubic looking he has a bit of a waddle when he walks, he is always pleasant and smiling, but he does some nasty stuff. It is very contradictory to the image we have of a contract killer. Most importantly you are trying to do something you haven’t done before, and when you read Bob and hear about his past life, to visualise him like that was so interesting. ![]() As an actor you are continuously striving to achieve something that hasn’t been done before. Bob Biswas is somewhat of an odd character for Indian audiences, seeing as how he looks unlike any hired assassin one has in mind.
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