Bollywood

Abhishek Bachchan to Build Self Confidence and Muscles for Dhoom3

Abhishek Bachchan to Build Self Confidence and Muscles for Dhoom3

Abhishek Bachchan's preparation for Dhoom 3 — the third installment of Yash Raj Films' action franchise — involved a physical transformation that the actor discussed publicly with a degree of candor that was somewhat unusual in an industry where the gap between actual preparation and mythologized preparation is usually maintained carefully.

Bachchan acknowledged that the role required him to be in significantly better physical condition than his previous work had demanded, and that this meant treating training with the kind of seriousness that Bollywood actors of the earlier generation rarely needed to demonstrate publicly. The globalization of cinema and the rise of social media had created new audience expectations for action films: audiences who had watched the Marvel Cinematic Universe and its systematically built superhero physiques expected Indian action heroes to meet comparable standards.

The self-confidence element of his stated preparation was the more interesting admission. Abhishek Bachchan had spent his career managing the particular challenge of being the son of Amitabh Bachchan — the most dominant actor in Bollywood history — while trying to establish his own creative identity. The shadow was long and the comparison was unavoidable. His candor about working on confidence as well as physique suggested a degree of self-awareness that the role required.

Dhoom 3 would eventually release in 2013 with Aamir Khan in the lead — not Abhishek — and become one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films in history. The preparation discussions from 2011 captured an interesting transitional moment in Indian action cinema's relationship with physical transformation.

Related Stories

Bolly Volley : Bombay Velvet – jazz and pizzazz
Bollywood

Bolly Volley : Bombay Velvet – jazz and pizzazz

By ( 16 May 2015 In the book “Mumbai Fables – A History of an Enchanted City”, in Chapter 3, author Gyan Prakash (professor of History at Princeton University) talks about the seduction of Bombay and how in the backdrop...

Bolly Volley  :  Piku – Peculiarly Pleasant
Bollywood

Bolly Volley : Piku – Peculiarly Pleasant

Films with father-daughter as the central characters are quite rare in Bollywood. “Daddy” (1989) and “Khamoshi The Musical” (1996) are two of the most memorable ones. Films discussing bowel movements in all its glory are...