Sunny Deol criticises Subhash over Right Yaa Wrong
News
oi-Raymond Ronamai
By Raymond Ronamai
Sunny
Deol
is
very
upset
with
the
way
Subhash
Ghai
and
his
production
house,
Mukta
Arts
have
marketed
Right
Yaa
Wrong.
Says
Sunny,
“It
was
always
a
good
film.
Mukta
Arts
has
not
been
fair
to
it.
They"ve
publicized
it
like
a
small
producer
would
have.
For
a
large
production
house,
they
really
didn"t
seem
to
know
what
to
do
with
the
film.
It
was
all
talk
talk
talk…
There
were
so
many
meetings
and
so
many
plans.
But
nothing
happened.
I"m
fed
up
of
all
this
empty
talk.
Now
I
only
want
to
work
on
projects
with
a
clear
plan
of
action."
Sunny
feels
Ghai
was
not
interested
in
the
film.
“He
didn"t
believe
in
Right
Yaa
Wrong.
And
he
was
surrounded
by
advisers
who
were
constantly
trying
to
bisect
and
dissect
the
film.
Filmmaking
may
be
a
team
effort.
But
you
can"t
have
a
team
of
people
always
providing
inputs
and
advice.
That
only
causes
chaos
and
confusion.
The
film
has
to
finally
go
by
one
man"s
vision.
And
that
man
is
the
director."
According
to
Sunny
Paaji,
apparently
Ghai
didn"t
allow
the
director
Neerraj
Pathak
to
do
his
work.
He
further
accuses
Ghai
of
releasing
the
film
at
the
wrong
time,
saying
that
releasing
a
subject
like
this
alongside
the
IPL
was
not
a
wise
move.
Sighs
Sunny,
“It"s
a
changed
industry.
Nothing
works
the
way
it
used
to.
A
few
films
click,
and
that"s
it.
I"m
not
interested
in
any
kind
of
politics.
Everyone
is
into
their
own
kind
of
cinema,
not
necessarily
sensible
cinema."
Subhash
Ghai
reacts:
“Mukta
Arts
is
the
worldright
controllers
and
distributors
of
Right
Yaa
Wrong.
We
weren"t
able
to
sell
the
film
anywhere.
There
were
no
buyers.
The
set-up
was
not
saleable.
Yet,
we
tried
our
best
as
our
job
was
to
recover
money
for
the
film"s
making
and,
therefore,
we
were
the
most
insecure
people
in
the
project.
Sunny
Saab"s
reactions
have
to
do
with
the
way
the
film
has
been
received,
and
that
is
something
no
one
can
predict.
If
he
had
concerns,
why
didn"t
he
say
all
these
things
before
release?
Anyway,
he"s
a
good
boy.
But
he"s
innocent
about
the
changing
marketing
strategy
of
cinema.
Sunny
needs
to
get
real."