|  | 
      
        | 
            
            
            
          
           |   
          
          
          
          New Delhi, March 25 (IANS) VJ-turned-actor Ayushmann Khurrana   has chosen to be different. With "Vicky Donor", an uncoventional film on sperm   donation, he is glad that his debut project deals with a common issue seldom   talked about in the country.
 |  "This film will not only entertain you, it will enlighten you about sperm   donation. It is very common in our country, but it's just that people don't talk   about it," Ayushmann told IANS.
 "It is 2012 and it is high time we talked   about the issue. We have taken the task of making people aware of it, but in a   very light-hearted manner.
 
 "Sperm donation is a social cause, it doesn't   save life, it gives life, it is a completely different zone altogether. This   film tackles the issue in a very mature way," he added.
 
 The 27-year-old   will be seen in the role of Vicky, a good-for-nothing guy, who goes on to become   a professional sperm donor.
 
 Actor John Abraham's first production   venture, "Vicky Donor" is directed by Shoojit Sircar. The film, releasing April   20, also features Yami Gautam.
 
 While many choose a romantic or a masala   film as their launchpad, Ayushmann wanted his debut to be unique.
 
 "I   waited for four years for this film. I wanted to do a fresh and out-of-the-box   film. I wanted to do a film with a credible director and Shoojit Sircar is one   of them. Being directed by someone who has worked with the likes of Amitabh   Bachchan, you feel you are in a safe zone," he said.
 
 Ayushmann won the   second season of MTV's adventure reality show "Roadies". But after that, he   returned to hometown Chandigarh and involved himself with theatre.
 
 "I was   always into theatre and performing arts. I think I was a born performer. I was   part of 'Roadies', but after the show, my parents didn't allow me to go to   Mumbai and I also think I was not prepared at that time," said   Ayushmann.
 
 He went on to become a popular host on television. Apart from   MTV shows, he has hosted "India's Got Talent" and "Just Dance".
 
 "I came   back to Chandigarh, did theatre for five years and radio for two years. I feel   the combination prepared me for showbiz. Then I came back to Mumbai," he   added.
 
 Ayushmann is also glad he has entered the film industry at a   promising time when the audience is opening up to concept-driven films as well   as newcomers.
 
 "I think the 1980s was the time when VCRs came and people   hardly went to watch movies in the theatres. Then in the 1990s, Aamir Khan, Shah   Rukh Khan and Salman Khan became stars.
 
 "I believe it is after the year   2000, there has been ample scope for movies which are subject-driven. This is   the age of renaissance for the Indian cinema," he said.
 
 "I think it is a   very welcome change, newcomers are getting opportunities and lot of   concept-driven films are being made. It is hard to fool the   audience.
 
 "Most of the population in India is young. When they go out,   they want to spend on a film, which brings something on the table, something   that is slightly intelligent and unique. Since India is growing, cinema is also   growing," he added.
 
 comments... |  
   |