Arshad
Warsi
loves
to
entertain
people
with
light-hearted
films,
but
he
is
not
game
for
sex
comedies
and
prefers
to
be
part
of
"intelligent" and
"smart
humour".
In
fact,
he
is
still
remembered
for
his
role
as
Circuit
in
the
Munnabhai
series
and
his
next
Jolly
LLB
is
a
fun
film
too
-
and
a
clean
one.
"I
don't
like
sex
comedies
or
over
the
top
comedies.
I
like
intelligent
and
smart
humour," Arshad
told
IANS
in
a
group
interview.
"It
is
very
easy
to
write
sex
comedies,
it's
crap.
Even
over
the
top
banana
peal
comedy,
it's
typical...I
don't
like
it," said
the
actor
who
made
it
big
with
Tere
Mere
Sapne.
The
1996
release
saw
him
in
a
funny,
yet
decent
role.
"I
prefer
to
do
cleaner
films.
I
was
offered
all
these
Kyaa
Kool
Hai
Hum
and
all,
but
I
refused...it's
great
that
it
works,
happy
that
people
made
money.
But
I
don't
want
my
kid
to
think,
'What
is
my
dad
doing?'"
Giving
reference
to
classic
comedies
like
Angoor
and
Chashme
Baddoor,
the
actor
said
such
films
require
skill
to
write.
"What's
difficult
to
write
is
an
Angoor,
or
a
Chashme
Buddoor.
You
are
not
using
anything
else
to
make
it
funny...you
have
to
rely
on
your
intelligence," said
the
actor
who
tried
serious
genre
with
critically
acclaimed
films
Seher
and
Kabul
Express.
But
Arshad
admits
that
often
actors
are
forced
to
do
something
even
when
you
don't
approve
of
it
because
it
works.
"Actors
are
the
most
insecure
fragile
people
and
everyone
is
hungry
for
a
hit," said
Arshad,
who
has
his
own
sets
of
regrets
but
doesn't
want
to
talk
about
them.
"I
do
have
many
regrets.
I
don't
want
to
talk
about
them.
All
of
us
have
regrets.
We
have
all
done
things
which
we
wished
we
hadn't.
It's
just
that
if
I
was
in
a
position
to
make
choices,
I
would
never
do
those
things.
So
now
I
say
no
most
of
the
times,"
he
said.
His
next,
Subhash
Kapoor-directed
Jolly
LLB,
is
a
social
satire
on
the
legal
system
of
the
country
and
he
plays
a
small-town
struggling
lawyer.
The
44-year-old
considers
himself
lucky
to
be
part
of
a
clean
film
like
that.
Boman
Irani
and
Amrita
Rao
are
there
in
the
film
too
and
Arshad
is
confident
that
families
can
watch
the
film
without
getting
embarrassed.
"The
movie
has
clean
comedy,
not
one
double-meaning
line
is
there.
It
is
humorous
and
you
will
not
be
embarrassed
to
watch
it
with
your
parents
or
anyone," he
said.
"I
am
happy
doing
less
work
than
thinking
every
day
on
the
set
about
what
am
I
doing?
I'd
rather
not
do
that."
"When
I
do
a
film,
I
enjoy
myself.
Jolly
LLB
will
do
well.
When
your
intentions
are
right,
the
result
will
be
right.
And
Jolly
has
that,"
he
added.