New Delhi: With three back to back films on the troika of troubling contemporary issues -- religion, caste and gender -- director Anubhav Sinha, who seems to have hit a purple patch, says he is an angry man and will continue to vent his ire through his cinema.
Fresh from the success of his latest film Thappad, a nuanced look at domestic violence and male entitlement, Sinha said this is his "most fertile" period.
"I'm jumping between stories. As soon as I finish one, I start my next. I want to address everything... I'm still an angry man. I'll keep venting my anger through my films," the director told PTI in an interview.
Patriarchy, in his view, "is in our blood, in our bones".
"It has been for centuries and we don't even realise that we have it," Sinha said.
Before Thappad, which released on February 28, Sinha made Article 15 on the caste divide in 2019 and Mulk on religious polarisation in 2018.
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"Perhaps this is the most fertile time for me. I keep finding good stories so I don't see a reason not to work. I'm a workaholic and there is no other engagement in my life. I'm meeting good writers, some are one or two films old, some are new. Things are falling into place organically," he said.
The 54-year-old, who began his career in 2001 with the romantic drama "Tum Bin" and went on to make commercial potboilers such as Cash, Dus and Ra.One before changing gears to more meaningful cinema, said he works on two scripts simultaneously.
That is why he is able to come up with at least one film a year. So, while he was making Article 15 with co-writer Gaurav Solanki, he was also working on the script of Thappad with Mrunmayee Lagoo.
"Similarly, while Mrunmayee and I were busy with 'Thappad', two other writers were writing my next two," he said.
"I spend time with my writers, meet them at 8 in the morning to discuss what we have written. I am always working on two scripts. It takes more time between two films when you don't have a ready script," he added.
Sinha credits the women in his team for Thappad, hailed as a landmark film by many critics. The Taapsee Pannu-starrer is about a homemaker whose life falls apart when her corporate executive husband slaps her in a party.
According to Sinha, the women in his crew ensured he didn't make mistakes while telling the story of "just a slap".
"After the #MeToo movement, I told my team to hire as many women as possible. So there are always a lot of women in my team. I talk to them and they read the script and come up with their own suggestions.