They worked with both a local and foreign fight choreographer for the film. “I had so much fun!” he says talking about doing the action sequences. To fight and to dance are pretty much the same things, Ali stresses, as he demonstrates his point by slowly and gracefully moving through a small sequence, counting the numbers of each step as it progresses.
They’ve wrapped up the shoot in Lahore. The second phase of filming is currently taking place in… Poland. “We wanted to have Eastern European architecture in the film — something that hasn’t been seen before,” says Ali. “You put a camera in London and everyone knows its London. I’ve already shot two films in London.”
Does he struggle to adapt between Ali Zafar the singer and the actor? “I think it’s about striking that fine balance,” he responds. There was another script in the works that centred on being a musician but Ali refused to entertain that one. “I don’t want to do that because that will just have me play myself,” he says, “Maybe later. That’s why I also chose Tere Bin Laden as my first film in India, as opposed to another film [I had been offered in] which I would’ve played a musician.”
Eight films (and guest appearances in two others) in, and Ali is tired of playing similar characters. “I’ve had this look of a ‘romantic’ hero or a ‘chocolate’ hero,” he says, seeming slightly embarrassed. “Mein bore ho gaya hun uss image say. Mujhay shave nahin karni [I’m bored of that image. I don’t want to shave]. Teefa is unlike any character that I’ve done before.”
Ali is also producing the film and is quite optimistic about its outcome. “We’ve edited about 50 percent of the film,” he says. “As far as my instincts go, since the beginning of my career, from what I’ve seen, it’s something that people will get to see for the first time in Pakistani cinema — whether it’s action or the way it’s been shot. I can’t wait for people to see it.”
On Bollywood
Ali had been filming for Tere Bin Laden when the 2008 Mumbai Attacks took place. “Luckily, I only had two days of filming left,” he related to me during an interview back then. Quite a few media professionals working in India at that time had to come back to Pakistan. What about him? “The Indian media instantly started thrashing Pakistan but on the ground level nothing changed, things were still pretty normal for me,” he had related.
This fallout was completely different from what happened last year after the Uri attacks. Pressured by a right-wing political party in India, Pakistani actors were ‘banned’ from Bollywood. Caught in the middle of all of this were Fawad and Mahira Khan. Did he feel a sense of déjà vu watching how everything unfolded?
“My own brother Danyal was there,” Ali relates. “He’d been there for two months prepping for a film with Yash Raj. He was being launched by them. He was going to start filming in a week. My film Dear Zindagi was about to come out. Initially when this happened, one didn’t know what to make of it and when it was escalated to that level, I sat back and pondered [over it].”
“I realized that the difference between now and then — because something much bigger had happened before — was the presence and emergence of social media.” Social media tends to escalate things.
“But being an optimist, I always see a silver lining,” he stresses. “Things happen at a certain time for a certain reason. There’s no point thinking and wasting your energy in trying to figure out what happened. I always knew this could happen one day. And as I was saying before was that we need to build our own industry. My film was already in preproduction, I was already thinking Pakistan.”
It runs in the family
Ali Zafar has a younger brother and judging by the photos posted on his Instagram (he has a whopping 102,000 followers already) account, good looks run in the family.
“Danyal is 15 years younger than me,” says Ali. “I’ve almost raised him like a son. He just amazes me and makes me feel very proud with the things he can do, the way he thinks and the man that he’s become.”
Baby bro has also worked on the movie with his older brother. “He studied filmmaking from the New York Film Academy,” relates Ali, “He was with us during the script and writing [process] as well. Someday he’s going to be in front of the camera. He needs to go through the grind, and know what these people [the crew] feel like.”
“In terms of music, the older brother says his younger brother has a completely different take than his. “He’s into blues and jazz,” says Zafar. “He’s got a different tonality entirely. He’s a good actor but music is his first thing.”
Danyal grew up watching Ali become the personality that he is. Does he feel Danyal takes inspiration from him? In the photos at least, the resemblance between the two brothers is uncanny. “He has his own distinct style,” stresses Ali. “People have only seen photos of him, so he does look like me, he can’t change that. But he’s a different individual. So, when ‘that’ Daniyal Zafar comes out. People will see a whole new different side to him. I feel that in many ways, he’s more talented than I am.”
Published in Dawn, ICON, June 25th, 2017