Indian cinema is becoming more real: Preity Zinta
New Delhi, (IANS) Actor Preity Zinta believes Indian cinema has
changed for the better with Bollywood dream merchants becoming
more experimental and films offering a higher quotient of reality to
ring in box office collections.
“The demographics of Indian cinema have changed. Youngsters in the
industry have loads of potential and they want to experiment. Even the
audience is ready to take a chance. Human beings are great and then
there is variety,” Preity told IANS.
“When there is Kiran Bedi in real life then why not in reel life? Apart
from just looking glamorous in the film, heroines are doing
unconventional roles. Even heroes are playing characters with grey
shades contrary to enacting the clichéd good-boy role,” she added.
The actor, who is brand ambassador of Godfrey Philips Bravery
Awards, was here Saturday, to launch the globally renowned Golden
Ovary Awards.
The award has been brought in the country by the corporate social
responsibility initiative of leading tobacco company Godfrey Philips
India in association with the Guild Of Women Achievers, an
international network of women committed to helping women
maximise their potential.
So what is bravery for Preity?
“Courage is contagious. It spreads from one person to the other and
engulfs society and humanity. When we salute one woman from a
remote village in India, an entire village of women stands up and holds
its head high.
“Bravery is not just physical… showing compassion, supporting others
and contributing towards bettering the world where we live in is also
an act of courage.
“And Indian women are extremely strong and resilient… even
physically. I have met a 17-year old girl who saved nine healthy men
from drowning, a mother who fought with a leopard to save her child,
to name a few.”
Preity herself won the Godfrey Philips Bravery Award in 2002 for
being the only witness in court who did not retract earlier statements in
a case against film producer Bharat Shah.
