"Rannvijay had auditioned for the role. The one thing
I always look for in any actor is honesty and that is what
I saw in him. I am sure post-'Mod' his rugged, biker boy
and macho image will get a makeover and he will be seen
a soft, shy and sensitive guy. I am sure he will pull off
this new image really well," he said.
Kukunoor admits he wants to work with big names but doesn't
unnecessarily want to fit them in a role where they might
overpower the essence of the character.
"Sometimes there are stories where you don't want
a star to overpower the concept or the idea. When you have
big stars in a movie, they bring along a big baggage of
expectations and an image," he said.
"And hence they overpower the character. But there
are times when you have such strong characters that you
want the audience to understand it rather than the star
taking away the juice with his charismatic image. So, whatever
the script demands, I bring in that element," he added.
Kukunoor can also be considered one of the pioneers of
low-budget cinema when he bowed in with his debut film "Hyderabad
Blues" in 1998. He shot it in flat 17 days with a budget
of Rs.17 lakh.
Over the last few years, small-budget films have done well
at the box-office and the filmmaker believes the audience
is ready for innovation and experimentation.
"The audience has always been welcoming when it comes
to accepting change and innovation. It is great that such
kind of cinema is happening, but again, it is so easy for
the industry to fall back," he said.
"Even today, if you have a fantastic script but don't
have muscle backing from a big production house, things
are still very difficult," he added.
To ensure that small-budget films reap benefits at the
box-office, ticketing prices should be altered, Kukunoor
feels.
"Ticket prices for low budget films have to be changed
because people won't go and shell out so much money on something
which is not their type of commercial cinema," he said.