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Rediff.com  » Movies » 'Life is more complicated than rocket science'

'Life is more complicated than rocket science'

By SUBHASH K JHA
July 01, 2022 10:50 IST
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'This film is about this hero of the nation who faced humiliation and damnation.'

IMAGE: R Madhavan plays former ISRO scientist Dr S Nambi Narayanan in Rocketry: The Nambi Effect, a film he also directed.

Ranganathan Madhavan's labour of love Rocketry: The Nambi Effect is out in theatres, and he wants it to reach even the remotest corners of the world.

Madhavan tells Subhash K Jha, "We've shown a very small part of his torture and interrogation. In reality, this brave and honest man struggled for eight years to get justice. If we showed everything that he went through, the film would have become too dark and morbid."

How did you get Shah Rukh Khan to do a film after three years?

And that too for a guest appearance!

It wasn't difficult at all.

Shah Rukh is a gem of a guy.

When he heard who and what the film was about, he agreed to come on board immediately.

Shah Rukh and I go back a long way.

We come from similar non-film backgrounds. He also started on television like me.

Then you both became superstars?

I don't know about me, but Shah Rukh is definitely a superstar.

He plays a very important part in Rocketry. He conducts the interview with Nambi sir where the truth about his life is revealed.

Suriya plays Shah Rukh's role in the Tamil version of the film.

IMAGE: Madhavan with wife Sarita and Shah Rukh Khan. Photograph: Kind courtesy R Madhavan/Instagram

Did such an interview actually happen in Nambi Narayanan's life?

Of course! It was conducted on a Kerala television channel by a local journalist.

This interview was a turning point in Nambi sir's fight for justice.

We've shown a very small part of his torture and interrogation. In reality, this brave and honest man struggled for eight years to get justice.

If we showed everything that he went through, the film would have become too dark and morbid.

We wanted to make sure that Nambi sir's story reached the remotest corners of the world.

I was very apprehensive about one thing.

IMAGE: Madhavan in Rocketry: The Nambi Effect.

What is that?

That people will see me, Madhavan, on screen.

I wanted my presence to be totally obliterated so that people see only Nambi sir on screen.

This isn't a film about me.

It is about this hero of the nation, who faced humiliation and damnation.

Gaddar, desh drohi... all these things are so easy to label someone with.

When you make irresponsible accusations, you destroy the entire family.

This is what we wanted to show.

And you have shown it with conviction and sensitivity?

I had to! I had no choice.

When I took on the responsibility of bringing Nambi sir's story to the screen, I wasn't sure what I was getting into.

All I knew was that it is a responsibility I had taken on and I had to make sure that full justice was done to the story of a man, who struggled for eight years to get justice.

IMAGE: Madhavan with his son Vedaant. Photograph: Kind courtesy R Madhavan/Instagram

Which is the best compliment you have received so far for Rocketry?

My son Vedaant is not very demonstrative about his feelings.

When he saw the film, he said, 'Dad, can I get my friends to see it?'

He wants kids of his generation to know about Nambi sir.

To me, that is the film's biggest achievement.

How close has this film brought you to Nambi Narayanan?

Very close. He gets along well with my parents.

We are family friends.

But it's not as if we are in each other's homes all the time or constantly speaking to one another on the phone.

He knows I am there for him any time he needs me.

That won't change even after the film has come and gone.

IMAGE: Madhavan with Dr S Nambi Narayanan at the screening of Rocketry: The Nambi Effect. Photograph: Pradeep Bandekar.

What do you feel about the massive flow of bio-pics in movie theatres?

We should celebrate lives that are worth celebrating.

There are so many real heroes in our country, men and women who have given their lives to the service of the nation.

I chose to tell Nambi Sir's story because it seemed the right thing to do.

There are so many other heroes in our country whose stories are waiting to be told.

Is it true that you have decided not to direct any more films after Rocketry?

I had to direct this project, I had no other option.

It was a responsibility thrust on me by destiny.

To my relief, I was able to put on screen what I wanted to.

However, my job profile would describe me as an actor, not a director.

What is your greatest takeaway from the experience of directing Rocketry?

That I was able to spend time with Nambi Sir.

If he had not agreed to support this project, I don't think I'd have made the film.

I have learnt so much from him about rocket science and life.

I can very confidently tell you that life is more complicated than rocket science.

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SUBHASH K JHA