The world is not a static place. People change, evolve.

Rahul Roy is delusional. He wants 'Aashiqui' to end with him. When it didn't end with me, how can it end with him?

I used to sleep with a little Ganesha under my pillow as a child; he was my favourite deity.

I would rather be stupid than pretend to be intelligent.

India will not function if you do not believe in unity in diversity.

Yes, whatever is born, dies, but I thank life for gifting us a Nelson Mandela. He will sparkle in our consciousness for times to come.

You can't repeat the success of any movie.

The real world is harsh.

It would be a tragedy for democracy if dissent goes away.

My life screams out and says one thing: 'indulgence.' I am a person who would never deny myself anything.

I can understand the individual who is driven by biases. I can sit with him across the table and can talk to him, deal with him. But bias in the man whom we put in the seat of power and who decides to play on it... That man will destroy the very fabric of the nation.

Everyone claims to have found the 'Holy Grail' - the perfect formula that can guarantee a hit in Bollywood. But those who seriously believe in it are deluded.

My career says that my doors will always be open for all. When an Anupam Kher walked in through my door at 28 and got 'Saaransh,' it launched his unimaginably productive career.

I always wanted to make a film on Kalahandi.

'Arth' was born at a stage of my life when I had gone through an emotional wasteland.

Human beings are free to worship anyone or anything.

My father did not live with us. When he came home, he never took off his shoes - he wouldn't be staying. My father had another family: Although my father had two homes, he paid for our education and household expenses.

I am a mere filmmaker. I am not even aligned to any political party. I vote for the Congress party, and I root for the Congress ideology, but I am not subject to the Congress party.

My last film as director, the National Award winning 'Zakhm,' barely managed to break even. So why should I listen to so-called sensibilities of a handful of critics?

At the end of the day, human beings make mistakes.

Men who create power make an indispensable contribution to a nation's greatness. But, men who question power make a contribution just as indispensable.

Without a good story, a franchise won't work.

I have great reverence for women.

My mother found herself in a triangular situation of my father and his legitimate wife. I experienced the emotional trauma of that triangle in my cradle.

A franchise gives a sense of security to everyone - the director, producers, exhibitors, and even the audience feels that they are watching something close to the first part.

Cinema now can't be just about introspection and atma manthan; such topics won't work.

Life isn't all about entertainment.

No power on earth can ever get me back to directing a commercial film.

The whole idea of 'One size fits all' is not going to work in India with a billion people.

There is no denying that entertainment industries are insular, but you can't generalise that statement and apply it to everyone.

The film industry not only in India but also Hollywood is insular. It's inward-looking.

I don't think the choice of launching Sunny Leone as an actor in Hindi cinema was that radical a decision.

While the male wants to conquer the world, the woman has a take on her immediate world that is so sparklingly refreshing that the male cannot even think of it.

Men like Sunil Dutt should not be mourned, only envied for their greatness.

I come from a home where my mother was the only emotional umbrella under which we found all the warmth and comforts and sustenance. My father would come and go, and not as often as we'd want him to.

I have no worthwhile memories of my father, therefore no idea of what a father's role should be.

'Blood Money' was a stand-alone film, but we worked double for it. We realised how difficult it is to sensitise people to anything new, especially when you don't have a star.

Modi talks about Congress Mukt Bharat. I feel this is a fascist ideology.

I don't give a tinker's damn for posterity.

I was perhaps lucky to be born in a single-parent home where my mother, Shirin Mohammed Ali, was the sole figure I revered. My father's absence in my life in my formative years exposed me to only one person, who was my source of learning the lessons of life. So to me, listening to a woman and her worldly view is almost automatic.

With larger-than-life films, you are lifted from your mundane, ordinary life because you empathise with the hero, and people see themselves in him.

I am an absolute atheist.

A true artist is one who, even after doing a lot, he reminds himself that he hasn't done anything.

Questioning authority can hardly be called our national pastime. We even make a philosophy out of fear. Fatalism, destiny, karma... are the favourite cultural holes we hide in when authority flogs us. And what's our tragedy.

'Citylights' is for those people who know a lot but don't feel at all. It's time for them to feel, and this film will make those people, who know so much, feel because feeling is the life blood of human race, which is disappearing.

My mother was a Muslim and dad a Hindu. I got the best upbringing that anyone could. Never did I see any angst in my family owing to that: each practiced their own religion. My existence is the harmony that these two communities can achieve if they try.

I believe that, at times, if some of us are almost too critical of our society, it's because our sensitivity and our concern for justice makes us aware that our nation falls terribly short of its highest potential.

There is a child in every man, and that's why larger-than-life stories which have a fairly tale component will work.

Campaigning for Congress is an issue of conviction, and there is no element of any personal gain in it.

I love working with newcomers.