Global Movie

John Abraham: I believe in creating trends, not following them

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Films focusing on the golden moments of India's defence history are currently in vogue but John Abraham, whose RAW ( Romeo Akbar Walter) is set against the backdrop of 1971 war with Pakistan, says following a certain trend to make money is a big no- no for him.

The 46- year- old model- turned- actor has been a part of true- life- inspired defence stories like Madras Cafe, Parmanu... and now RAW. John says he has always found facts to be more interestin­g than fiction. "I feel even if you don't dramatise things at times, facts make the story very entertaini­ng. They are more interestin­g than fiction,"

Citing the example of Vicky Donor and Madras Cafe, John said these films set the path for stories such as Shubh Mangal Saavdhan, Badhaai Ho and Uri: The Surgical Strike. "I never look at a trend because the minute one looks at the trend and starts following it and it goes out of fashion, they are in trouble. So, I make what I believe in. Everything is cyclical. There is a phase when South Indian remakes are in trend, and sometimes comedies, realistic films or films on the country work well.

"As far as I am concerned, the idea is not to be opportunis­tic with a certain trend, but to do what you believe in. I believe in the country, I believe in the way the country functions," he added. RAW, directed by Robbie Grewal, is based on true incidents and show how India's intelligen­ce agencies, especially RAW, played a crucial part in the conflict. John, who plays a RAW agent in the film, said it is important to be responsibl­e when dealing with stories revolving around the armed forces.

John Abraham, whose

RAW ( Romeo Akbar Walter)" is set against the backdrop of 1971 war with Pakistan, says following a certain trend to make money is a big no- no for him

"One needs to be very responsibl­e when you are making a film which is predominan­tly factual, is on the country and involves the armed forces. And one has to research well.

"In the case of ' RAW', my director's father worked in the military intelligen­ce for four years. So the research and sources we got to go to, to back our informatio­n up, is validated. I am sure no one can turn around in our film and say, ' this didn't happen'. We are confident about our research and the informatio­n we are giving in our film."

The actor, however, said the aim is always to move people emotionall­y with the story, even if it is rooted in reality.

"It is important to make films entertaini­ng and commercial­ly viable. I am not making a film to educate people on 1971 War. I am making a film that speaks about human relationsh­ips. I want to move people emotionall­y in someway or the other and I want to make an edge- of- the- seat thriller," he added.

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