Arun Mandola television journey has been a good one, so far. The actor has been a part of shows such as Vighnharta Ganesha and Sankatmochan Mahabali Hanuman. He now wants to also explore other mediums like OTT and films, along with TV.
Arun Mandola has long hair and feels that he can play versatile roles with this look, be it the lead, a gangster or a cop. However, he opines that the industry does not share his thought process.
Arun, in fact, always wanted to play a cop. Talking about his favourite Bollywood cops, he says, “The best cop role in Hindi cinema for me is Rani Mukherji’s character in Mardaani and Mardaani 2. Basically the audience has the mindset to see any actor in the uniform but when you do something out-of-the-box that makes a powerful impact, Rani Ma’am justified her role and how. Her approach was different, she did not follow the same acting pattern of being strict and aggressive. Apart from Rani Ma’am I also love Nawazuddin Siddiqui sir’s performance in Kahaani.”
Cops have always been special in Bollywood from Deewaar to Shakti to Sooryavanshi, there have been an interesting range of films around them. People love such films too.
Agreeing, he adds, “Whoever plays cop roles in Bollywood they have their own style and every actor works on their craft according to his/her caliber to play the part. There is drastic change in Bollywood cops these days because the audience has become smart and won’t accept anything over the top. They want real and relatable characters.”
TV also has good cop roles but only in crime shows and in a handful of fictions like Ghum Hai Kisi Ke Pyaar Mein, among others. Recently I have seen a Cop based show promo on Hotstar Disney of Ashiqana let see.
“I still feel that good cop characters are few on TV. I haven’t seen any good detective shows on TV for the longest time. Also, we have fewer options such as Savdhaan India or Crime Patrol or Crime Alert or Crime Dangal. So I think we need more shows like Byomkesh Bakshi and Ghum Hai Kisi Ke Pyaar Mein. We are still stuck in the same old kitchen-sink dramas,” he ends.