Kangana Ranaut Says People Who Read Queen’s Script Thought It Was The Lamest They Had Ever Seen
In a recent interview, Kangana Ranaut recalled that Queen, one of her best movies till date, was thought to be a lame script at the time of its production.
Kangana
Ranaut
is
making
big
strides
in
Bollywood
when
it
comes
to
choosing
female
centered
scripts
for
movies,
and
delivering
them
well.
No
wonder
she
has
three
national
awards
in
her
kitty.
Right
from
Queen,
to
Tanu
Weds
Manu,
Simran,
and
most
recently,
Manikarnika:
The
Queen
of
Jhansi,
the
actress
has
carved
a
niche
for
herself
in
the
Hindi
film
industry.
In
a
recent
interview,
Kangana
recalled
that
Queen,
one
of
her
best
movies
till
date,
was
thought
to
be
lame
a
script
at
the
time
of
its
production.
According
to
Pinkvilla,
Kangana
was
quoted
to
have
said
in
a
Signature
Masterclass
on
Viu
interview,
"Whoever
read
Queen's
script
before
they
said
it
was
the
most-lame
script
they'd
ever
seen."
The
actress
further
shared
details
of
the
light
hearted
process
of
filming
Queen.
"Queen
was
a
big
party
for
everyone.
The
director
was
a
very
big
producer.
He
didn't
want
anyone
to
stress
over
it
and
wanted
everyone
to
have
fun.
The
process
was
very
unusual
and
very
different
from
any
other
set
I've
been
on.
It
turned
out
to
be
very
good,
but
it
could've
gone
the
other
way
as
well
and
the
director
was
prepared
for
it.
It
was
a
small
budget
film
and
nothing
was
at
stake
from
his
end,
and
even
I
had
nothing
to
lose
as
I
had
no
career
left,"
she
said.
Kangana
turned
director
for
the
first
time
with
Manikarnika:
The
Queen
of
Jhansi.
While
many
have
hailed
her
performance
both
as
actor
and
director,
some
of
the
big
names
in
the
industry
have
not
commented
or
praised
Kangana
for
the
film,
which
has
irked
the
actress.
Kangana
recently
called
out
Alia
Bhatt,
Karan
Johar,
Aamir
Khan
and
many
others.
The
actress
recently
confirmed
that
her
next
directorial
venture
will
be
a
biopic
on
her
own
life.
She
revealed
to
Mumbai
Mirror,
"Yes,
it
is
true,
my
own
story
is
the
subject
of
my
next
directorial.
But
it
is
not
a
propaganda
film
with
characters
who
are
starkly
black
and
white,
rather
it
is
a
sincere,
heartfelt
account
of
my
journey
so
far
with
plenty
of
lighter
moments.
I'm
emboldened
by
the
love
of
the
people
around
me,
who
have
never
judged
me
but
accepted
me
for
who
I
am."