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Home > Entertainment News > Bollywood News > Article > Kookie Gulati on The Big Bull Ajay Devgn suggested Abhishek Bachchan for role

Kookie Gulati on The Big Bull: Ajay Devgn suggested Abhishek Bachchan for role

Updated on: 26 March,2021 08:23 AM IST  |  Mumbai
Mohar Basu | mohar.basu@mid-day.com

From producer Ajay Devgn not playing the lead to having to tackle comparisons with Scam 1992, The Big Bull director Kookie Gulati talks about his passion project.

Kookie Gulati on The Big Bull: Ajay Devgn suggested Abhishek Bachchan for role

Abhishek Bachchan in The Big Bull.

When Kookie Gulati was working at Dalal Street in the early ’90s, young recruits would run to catch a glimpse of Harshad Mehta, their version of a superstar. With The Big Bull a fortnight away from release, the director says that the Abhishek Bachchan-starrer is a heavily fictionalised tale of the stockbroker who took the Bombay Stock Exchange by storm. “I leave it to the audience to [form their opinions] on the character. I have highlighted that he had grey areas, but he had good intentions that were corrupted by the situation,” he begins.


Ajay Devgn


Gulati credits producer Ajay Devgn for casting Bachchan in the titular role, which he believes is a masterstroke. “The character journeys from the grass-root level to become [a billionaire] with swag. The actor would have to lend intensity to the performance. Ajay sir suggested Abhishek’s name for the role, and I jumped at it.” Why didn’t Devgn lead the cast, considering he was producing the movie? “The character was younger. Plus, he would’ve taken three years to start shooting [given his date diary]. But for Ajay sir, it was about getting the right actor for the part. He believes that an actor shouldn’t be cast just because of his stardom; he has to justify the role. Here, I had a star producer who encouraged me to be honest to the story.”


Kookie Gulati
Kookie Gulati

Some may view the film as India’s version of The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), but Gulati says the stories couldn’t be farther away from one another. “The world, lifestyle and aspirations are so different. My character will never want to buy a yacht. For him, dining at Taj’s most expensive restaurant is a high point.” Closer home, viewers have been drawing comparisons with Hansal Mehta’s Scam 1992 that dropped online last year. Mehta recently dismissed these comparisons, tweeting that multiple tales can be told on the same subject. Gulati shares the filmmaker’s sentiment as he says, “People will see the difference between their series and our movie. The gaze is completely different. It was gracious of Hansal Mehta to tweet that, and shower us with love. We are all here to tell personal stories, and encouraging one another is important.”

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