Filmmaking was inevitable for me: 'Searching' director Aneesh Chaganty

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Aug 22 2018 | 2:10 PM IST

Indian-American filmmaker Aneesh Chaganty, whose debut "Searching" created quite a buzz at Sundance Film Festival, says it was challenging yet interesting to base the thriller in the cyber space.

Technology plays a key role in the mystery, starring "Star Trek" actor John Cho and "Will & Grace" star Debra Messing. Cho plays a man coming to terms with his wife's death when he is faced with another adversity. His daughter has disappeared and all he has to fall back on is her social media life.

"I did not want it to be gimmicky. It is easy for the story to become boring as everything is unfolding on the computer screens but we were always changing things. We had placed self-imposed visual constraints. There were very tight parameters while shooting it," Chaganty, who worked in Google before turning to cinema, told PTI in an interview.

The film, which won the 2018 Alfred P Sloan Feature Film Prize at Sundance, is all set to be released in India by Sony Pictures on August 31.

It is also one of those rare Hollywood films with an Asian actor in the lead. Both Cho and Messing have had an illustrious career, and Chaganty said being a newcomer on the sets was initially nerve wrecking.

"I was 25 years old when we began the film. It was difficult to work with them initially because good actors really know how to process the information. A big challenge for me was to get over the self-consciousness of it.

"There was this constant worry 'Am I doing something wrong or messing up everything?' For a long time, it was the much bigger worry than what I was doing as a director. I got over it eventually."
"I have grown up on a steady diet of films - both Hollywood and Hindi movies. My mom really loves movies and growing up, I realised I wanted to be a filmmaker. I have been making short films since I was a little kid. It was inevitable for me to become a filmmaker."
"I thought a lot about whether there should be an Indian-American family in the film but at the end of the day, I did not recognise any of the Indian-American families that I grew around, fitting the story. The objective, however, was always to have an Asian-American family at the heart of it because it is quite rare for a Hollywood film to cast a family that does not look the same."

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First Published: Aug 22 2018 | 2:10 PM IST

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