Varma says the activities of underworld with regard to Bollywood were mostly limited to making calls to either scare celebrities or help their friends.
"It's a misconception that there's a nexus between underworld and Bollywood. Underworld never put money, which again is a misconception. If underworld also has to put money, why is it underworld? It defeats the purpose," Varma told reporters last evening.
"Most of the times, either they use it for publicity, they used to get high in scaring who we think are our stars and big filmmakers. But the underworld at that time was in the mood of being in the news. They were very publicity crazy at that time."
"By 2004, most of the gangsters were killed and they lost a lot of power. Disbanding the encounter squad was a signal that underworld as a force has been completely reduced."
The director, known for making several gangster-dramas like "Satya", "Company" and "D", says he has never been at the receiving end of the underworld because of his films.
"If I am still alive that means I am not at the receiving end. Why would the underworld have any problem with anyone making a film."
Asked whether it is hard not to glorify someone, especially when one is making a film on gangsters, Varma says, "Gabbar Singh is the most loved character, but I don't know if a single person got inspired to become a dacoit in Chambal valley after seeing 'Sholay'.
"Neither did we ever hear of two families, who were fighting with each other became a joint family after watching "Hum Aapke Hai Kaun". Cinema is about heightening emotions."
"Social media is just noise, to take it seriously is wrong. Eventually, it's a democracy and everyone has a right to speak. Social media allows you to shout. But whether someone wants to take it seriously or block it, they have a choice.
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