"I have stopped worrying about the ramification or what others say. You have to basically become deaf because today opinions are available everywhere. You wake up to opinions, sleep and you're reading opinions," Johar said.
The filmmaker was speaking at the book launch of sarod maestro Ustad Amjad Ali Khan here last evening.
Johar, 44, said he chooses to focus on his work than ponder over the consequences.
"People have a lot of time in the world to give you their opinion, it's what you choose to take in or not to. I have decided, you can call it a good mid-life crisis, I am 44 and I don't listen to people anymore," he added.
"When I began my career, I didn't take many risks because the first two films I directed and my father produced, the whole idea there was to seek commerce in art. My intention was to make sure Dharma productions could stand tall and gain the economic strength which we hadn't before.
"It is only in the last decade and ironically after I lost my father, I grew wings. His constant emotional surveillance may not have allowed me to take few chances in cinema," he said.
"I made a film about homosexuality in 'Bombay Talkies' which said how it is sometimes hidden because of societal pressure, I did take that chance because that was the kind of film I was making. Today, I feel there is a lot more freedom I exercise when it comes to my work," he said.
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