Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Indian actor Fahadh Faasil.
Last updated on November 17, 2024.
I am not affected or carried away by success or failure.
As an actor, you create a character from your understanding of what you have heard and your observations. Eventually, every film is an extension of the images that I have seen or what I have heard or read somewhere.
What I look for in a project is whether the storyline excites me.
People often ask whether marriage has changed me. I didn't marry because I had to change.
When I am with my friends, I am comfortable.
I want my films to do the talking. I feel if people have to understand me better, I should do more good films. I just want them to know me through my films.
My films may not have a great opening, but I am not bothered about it. Whatever the numbers be, I want those viewers who come for my films to be excited about watching the movie.
I give my best to each role that I do.
I feel that entertainment happens when fact and fiction is balanced.
I want the audience to watch my films, and that is what I value more than any awards.
I like to laugh and to make people laugh.
Mistakes happen, and then you try to overcome those. I like that process.
Let me make something clear: I can't do anything in particular to make others laugh. I do what is necessary for a character. The body language of the character may make others laugh.
I have always maintained that the audience should take a call on this. Its up to them to decide whether they want to see a pirated version or not. They should understand the effort and amount of hard work that go into a film.
People expect star kids to be perfect - horse-riding, fighting.
The less people know about you, the more you understand how beautiful life is. It's good when you exist only on screen. I don't want them to take me home. I love to have my privacy.
Failure is part and parcel of the process of experimenting with roles and films.
It doesn't matter to me how I look on screen. What matters to me is how I connect with the audience.
The characters I portray are an extension of what I've seen, heard, or read, and so what you see in my films are how I understand life.
When I listen to a basic thought, I try to visualise the cinema in it. Sometimes it is dark, sometimes boyish, sometimes amateurish. It is a trial and error method. But the bottom line is that I want to entertain the audience.
People know me through my characters. I don't think they have any idea about the individual that I am. They know I am a director's son, and I am married to an actress.