Talking
about the changes he has made in the film for the Venice film
fest, Mehra said: "I filmed the sequence of Abhishek's character's
ashes being immersed in the river. The film now begins with his
voiceover announcing he's dead now. So it's now a dead man's story.
Everything falls into place now. We also understand why Abhishek
played the role so quietly, sensitively. It was such a beautiful
piece of grammar. I don't know why I abandoned it for a happy
ending."
Mehra says that the exciting part of this festival
journey is that the version of "Delhi 6" they saw in
Venice was radically different from what audiences saw when the
film released.
"I sent Venice a new version of 'Delhi 6'
quite different from the one we saw here. My original script was
different. I went and shot another version quite different from
the one people saw. I had to do this. Otherwise I wouldn't have
died in peace."
The director is on cloud nine right now.
"This is quite exhilarating. The Venice
film festival is considered as posh as Cannes and Berlin. So it's
great fun. I got the e-mail informing me of 'Delhi 6' being selected
at the Venice Film Festival Thursday night. They loved the film.
It will be screened on either September 2 or 3," he said.
Mehra had been forced to incorporate a happy
ending for the sake of the distributors. He admits he erred with
the substitute ending for "Delhi 6". Now he wants Indian
audiences to see "Delhi 6" with the changed beginning
and end.
"It's the director's cut, like Francis Coppola's
'Apocalypse Now', which didn't make sense the first time. Later
it went on to make history after the changes. We shouldn't have
been in a hurry to release a film which tries a new grammar and
idiom. But the whole experience has been eye-opener. To make the
changes in vision and then get selected for such an honour, is
such a blessing," he said.
The director, who hit the jackpot with "Rang
De Basanti", has been missing from the action after "Delhi
6".
"I just went into a shell, writing. I've
three subjects now and any of them could be my next film. Yes,
I do want to do 'Mirza Sahibaan' with Sonam Kapoor and Abhishek
Bachchan. The two are like my piece of the art. It's crazy what
we share. I can't put it in words," he said.
Mehra and his wife N. Bharati, who edits his
films, have just returned from a camping holiday from Leh and
Ladakh.
"It was our first holiday since we started
'Delhi 6'. We left after we shot the new version. I've grown wiser
now. I'm happy I've gone for the sad ending in 'Delhi 6'. This
is a creative correction that has made me sleep easier,"
said the director.
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