Aamir
Khan
Was
Hurt
That
'Thugs
Of
Hindostan'
Went
Wrong
The
actor
told
Hindustan
Times,
"I've
always
felt
responsible
for
my
work,
but
for
the
last
18-19
years,
I
didn't
have
a
film
that
didn't
do
well,
so
that's
why
people
might
have
felt
I
was
doing
this
for
the
first
time.
And
especially
because
it
was
a
much-awaited
film;
people
had
high
expectations,
so
I
was
very
sorry,
hurt
and
upset
that
we
went
wrong."
This
Is
Why
The
Actor
Apologized
For
The
Film
The
'Dangal'
star
further
added,
"I
felt
emotionally
that
I
should
address
it
and
apologise
to
people
for
not
living
up
to
the
expectations."
Aamir
On
Learning
From
Box
Office
Failures
"The
maximum
you
learn
is
from
your
unsuccessful
films.
Failure
teaches
you
the
most.
I've
learnt
many
lessons
but
I'm
not
sure
if
I
should
share
those
publicly;
that's
something
I
should
discuss
with
my
team."
Does
Big-budget
Films
Starring
Big
Names
No
Longer
Guarantee
Success?
To
this,
the
actor
said,
"We
all
try
our
best,
but
sometimes
things
don't
work.
It's
a
learning
process.
I
feel
a
film
doing
well
or
not
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
budget.
No
audience
comes
to
watch
a
film
saying
‘achha
iska
budget
kitna
hai?'
Whether
you've
made
a
film
in
₹5
crore
or
100
core,
audience
ko
farak
nahi
padta,
they
don't
check
your
balance
sheet,
they
watch
your
film.
If
they
like
it,
the
film
does
well.
So,
it
can
be
a
small-budget
or
a
big-budget
film
or
any
kind
of
cinema."
Aamir
Khan
On
Whether
He
Feels
Insecure
When
He
Sees
Other
Actors
Doing
Multiple
Films
In
A
Year?
"When
I
see
my
colleagues
doing
good
work,
it
makes
me
happy.
Ayushmann
(Khurrana,
actor)
is
doing
such
amazing
work
that
I
want
to
see
his
films
as
an
audience.
Each
one
of
us
is
unique,
so
no
need
to
be
threatened
by
anyone
for
anything,"
the
actor
told
the
daily.