Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Douglas, Jones

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ment. “It’s true,” he said, and added, “On Christmas, everybody in our country sings Christmas carols; our house sings all the songs from Om Shanti Om.”

A self-confessed “Bollywood fan”, Zeta-jones continued, “I don’t think people understand my obsession with Om Shanti Om.” She suggested that it would have made for a “fantastic” Broadway musical. “But I can’t play it because I’m not Indian,” she said regretfull­y. “You look Indian; my niece looks like you,” Kapoor said, which Zeta-jones took as a compliment. “I’m very honoured,” she said, “Some of the most beautiful women are from India.”

As a father of three children in the film industry, Kapoor asked the Hollywood actors about how their industry views the idea of nepotism. Children of actors “need to work twice as hard” as others because they are prone to more scrutiny, Douglas said.

Son of Hollywood icon Kirk Douglas, the Wall Street star said that he struggled to live up to the legacy of his father in his youth. Winning the Academy Award for his performanc­e in director Oliver Stone’s drama about 80s excess, Douglas said, was espec i al l y i mportant f or hi m, “because I felt like I‘d stepped out of the shadow of my father and created my own identity”.

“Be very appreciati­ve and very humble,” Douglas offered as advice to children of celebritie­s. “There are a lot of ways you could grow up in this world.” He said that his father, who will turn 103 on Monday, was instrument­al in shaping him as a person. “Ethics, tenacity and hard work,” Douglas said is the key to success.

This is the advice that the actors have given their kids as well, because they ‘want to be actors’.

Her husband’s “desire to make the world a better place, a more peaceful place”, Zeta-jones said, is what they have tried to instil in their children, Dylan, 19, and Carys, 16.

Unlike Douglas, Zeta-jones said she didn’t have any “family connection­s to the film industry”. She had to make it on her own, first in London and then in Hollywood. “I had a fearlessne­ss,” she said.

Kapoor, who has been married to his wife Sunita since 1984, asked Douglas and Zeta-jones about the secret to their long relationsh­ip. The couple tied the knot in 2000. “Happy wife, happy life,” Douglas shot back, and ZetaJones joked that people said their marriage “wouldn’t last”.

“I was lucky enough to marry my best friend,” Zeta-jones said. “The secret to our relationsh­ip is being kind to each other and having a sense of humour.”

She said that although they came close to appearing in a film together once – a part of it was supposed to be set in India – the project never materialis­ed. If they ever agree to working together in the future, she said, she wouldn’t want them to appear as a married couple, calling the idea “voyeuristi­c”. “There’s something unsettling about watching a married couple on screen,” she said.

The couple could get a chance to work together in the future, because Douglas, 75, has no intention of retiring anytime soon. Having being exposed to a younger generation of fans through the Marvel superhero films in which he appears as Dr Hank Pym, the actor said, “I’m planning on working till they take me out.”

Douglas’s connection to both the Marvel movies and Netflix – he stars in the streaming giant’s half-hour comedy The Kominsky Method – affords him a unique perspectiv­e on the debate around theatrical distributi­on, initiated by filmmaker Martin Scorsese recently. Scorsese had compared Marvel’s brand of filmmaking to “theme parks”, and suggested that superhero movies were taking away the audience’s right to choose what film they want to watch in theatres, therefore relegating smaller films to streaming.

“There has never been a better time in the history of films and television,” Douglas said, praising the arrival of streaming, and giving a shout-out to Scorsese’s The Irishman and director Noah Baumbach’s Marriage Story, two Netflix films considered frontrunne­rs at the upcoming Oscars. “A TV actor you can watch for free; you have to pay to watch a movie actor,” he said, describing age-old industry hierarchy. “Streaming is breaking these barriers.” He did, however, admit that movies these days need to be events. “This makes it more difficult for personalis­ed pictures.”

Douglas and Zeta-jones also briefly addressed US politics. “He just takes the air out of the room,” Douglas said about US president Donald Trump, and added that he thought he’d make it out of India without having to talk about him. “It’s a crazy time,” he continued. “I try to look outside our own country and there’s a strange populist movement that seems to be going around the world, certainly in our country and you’re seeing it in a lot of countries in Europe.” He added, looking at Kapoor, “I know you’re dealing with volatile issues here in your own country,” but that he wasn’t sure “where this polarisati­on is coming from”.

November 27.

The police, when questioned about the encounter at the site of the alleged crime, said the accused had snatched the police personnel’s weapons and opened fire, compelling the force to retaliate. The Cyberabad police commission­er VC Sajjannar said on Friday “law had done its duty”.

The encounter triggered a debate over the killing of the accused, with many celebratin­g police action and others raising concerns over the police not allowing justice to run its course.

The f o ur a c c us e d were arrested on November 29, a day after the woman’s charred body was found under a culvert, 25km from Hyderabad.

Addressing the event, Union law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad also urged the CJI and other senior judges to ensure there is a mechanism to monitor quick disposal of rape cases, saying that the “women of the country are under pain and distress, and are crying for justice”.

Prasad added that there are 704 fast-track courts for heinous offences and other crimes, and the central government is in the process of setting up 1,123 dedicated courts for POCSO [Protection of Children from Sexual Offences] and rape offences.

“In the law relating to women violence, we have already laid down capital punishment and other severe punishment, including completion of trial in two months time,” he said.

On the country’s massive backlog of cases pending in courts, Justice Bobde said the judiciary must remain committed to making justice accessible to people by strengthen­ing the existing structures and evolving new means for affordable, quick and satisfacto­ry settlement of disputes. He also advocated for making pre-litigation mediation compulsory, so it could help avoid litigation altogether.

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