Abhishek Bachchan is certainly one of the most famous actors of the present times but his journey has been full of ups and downs.
Though born into the illustrious Bachchan family, Abhishek Bachchan’s entry into films was far from a smooth ride. His debut in J.P. Dutta’s 2000 film Refugee was as humbling as it was eye-opening and he has never shied away from acknowledging how uncertain he felt during those early days. Despite the legacy of his parents Amitabh and Jaya Bachchan, Abhishek entered the industry with no illusions about instant success.
Reflecting on the shoot of Refugee, Abhishek once candidly admitted to feeling overwhelmed, especially during a pivotal scene involving actor Kulbhushan Kharbanda. He recalled how, one day before the day of the shoot, scriptwriter OP Dutta had come to narrate the lines but Abhishek, under the impression that his only task was to deliver the line “Name? Refugee” in response to a simple question, had dismissed the preparation.
Distracted and relaxed, he joked around with co-star Kareena Kapoor (fondly referred to as Bebo) and paid little attention to the actual dialogue briefing.
That complacency did not last long. On set, in front of a massive village crowd numbering between 5,000 to 10,000 people, many of whom had gathered solely to see Amitabh Bachchan’s son act for the first time, Abhishek quickly realised he was in over his head.
After delivering the assumed single line, he looked around for director J.P. Dutta to call ‘cut’ but nothing came. Trying to improvise, he began filling a bowl with water on camera, still expecting some direction. Yet Dutta stayed silent, neither approving the take nor offering further guidance. The silence, Abhishek confessed, was unnerving. He assumed each ‘cut’ that followed meant he had failed again and braced himself for criticism after every attempt.
By the time they reached the 16th take, the emotional toll had set in. That’s when J.P. Dutta approached him directly to ask what was going wrong. Abhishek admitted that the presence of so many spectators was rattling his nerves. In an extraordinary show of patience and empathy, the director cleared the entire set of onlookers and assured the young actor that he would take as long as needed to help him deliver the performance. It was only then that Abhishek realised the scene was not as simple as he had thought, he had nearly two pages of dialogue, not just the one line he had memorised. That misstep was a turning point in his understanding of the craft and the seriousness of the work.
J.P. Dutta, however, has remained firm in his defense of Abhishek’s performance in Refugee, even if the actor himself later viewed it with critical eyes. The film itself, a romantic drama set along the fraught border regions of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, revolved around a mysterious man who helps people cross borders illegally. It marked not only Abhishek’s debut but also Kareena Kapoor’s, and featured a highly praised soundtrack by Anu Malik that found wide appeal.
For Abhishek Bachchan, Refugee was not just the launch of a film career but a sobering reminder that lineage could not substitute for preparation and that respect for the process and those guiding it was non-negotiable.
The experience remains a foundational story in his journey from being “Amitabh Bachchan’s son” to carving out an identity of his own in Hindi cinema.
The post Abhishek Bachchan Took 17 Retakes In His First Shot For Refugee & He Also Made A Big Mistake appeared first on RVCJ Media.
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