
Mera ek yeh bahu hi consicious decision tha kyuki main chahta tha ki main khud creative satisfaction ke liye kuch aur karu (it was a very conscious decision from my end as I wanted to do something different for my own, creative satisfaction). Opening up on how the decision was indeed well planned, but it hasn't necessarily distanced any of his fans, Emraan Hashmi said, “I think it's film specific.
#Adhuri kahaani hamari se driver#
Also Read - BL Recommends: Can't get enough of Squid Game – check out Start-Up, Taxi Driver and other riveting K-dramas to binge-watch this weekend So, during an exclusive interview with BollywideLife, we decided to ask the star how conscious was the decision and if he feels it has affected his stardom in any way or alienated a section of his fanbase. Post Raaz 3 though, we saw Emraan Hashmi make a conscious shift toward more serious, or as some people like to put it, classier films, with Shanghai, Ek Thi Daayan, Ghanchakkar, Humari Adhuri Kahani, Tigers, Why Cheat India, The Body and Chehre.
#Adhuri kahaani hamari se series#
Also Read - #BLRecommends: Loving The Five Juanas? – check out The Handmaid's Tale, Big Little Lies, Churails and more web series where women get together to kick a** And, truth be told, as good an actor he's always been, most of Emraan Hashmi's stardom was built on two aspect – kissing on screen (at a time it was far from common without OTT platforms) and musical chartbusters to rival that of any era of Bollywood. Emraan Hashmi had built a rabid fan-following pretty speedily among the masses ever since 2004's Muder (released a year after his debut film, Footpath) – a fanbase that was soon cemented with other popular films like Zeher, Kalyug, Gangster, Awarapan, Jannat, Raaz - The Mystery Continues (Raaz 2), Once Upon a Time in Mumbaai, Murder 2, The Dirty Picture, Jannat 2 and Raaz 3.
