A Quote by Ekta Kapoor

I am not going to become a critical-acclaim-junkie at all. — © Ekta Kapoor
I am not going to become a critical-acclaim-junkie at all.
There are so many things to think about when you make an album. Like, who am I trying to impress? Am I going to get respect, critical acclaim? Or am I going to sell lots of records?
I get commercial acclaim because of critical acclaim and it is a chain reaction.
Everyone wants to be liked, so of course you want critical acclaim. After that, box office acclaim isn't bad. More than anything I think you have to try and make something you're proud of.
I became a war hero before going on to critical acclaim as a professional victim.
All I am looking for is a fine combination of critical and commercial acclaim. Whether conventional or unconventional - does not matter.
I'm really not a TV junkie... OK, I kind of am a TV junkie, but I'm much more of a movie junkie - my junk food is romantic comedies I've seen a million times.
I was not going to kick back and wait for the unknown. I was going to dive in and become a full-time healing junkie.
We took 'BFF' around to try and take it somewhere else because we were really proud of it, and it had gotten all that critical acclaim, and Twitter fans were going crazy about it.
Critics... They're like traffic cops. They say what they have to say, then leave, and another guy moves in ,and he has his say - and it's often just the opposite. The result is either critical acclaim or critical murder, and neither has any bearing on my music or direction.
I'm a boxing junkie, a serial-killer junkie, and a classical guitar junkie. All of these guys are great, poetic references.
I don't take films to prove my talent and receive critical acclaim or awards.
Without critical acclaim, you are just a successful commercial director, and nothing more.
Whether the work that I do shall succeed or achieve critical acclaim is for the audience to decide.
I'm always like, 'Well, let's not rest on a critical acclaim or on a incredible review or on a great reception.'
Critics can get you critical acclaim - nothing more than that. Success or failure depends on the public.
Fact is, I won popularity with my first film itself. Since I got acclaim very early in my career, people weren't that critical of me.
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