Zoya Akhtar on Storytelling, Fear, and Why The Archies Had to Feel Like a Warm Hug

Zoya Akhtar talks about The Archies, her creative process, and why the best films come from honesty and emotional truth.
Zoya Akhtar on Storytelling, Fear, and Why The Archies Had to Feel Like a Warm Hug
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Summary

Zoya Akhtar Biography (Quick Facts)

  • Born: 1972

  • Profession: Film director, writer

  • Famous movies: Gully Boy, Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, Dil Dhadakne Do

  • Latest project: The Archies (2023), Kho Gaye Hum Kahan (2023)

  • Upcoming projects: Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara 2 (script completed), Dahaad 2 (producing)

  • Production company: Tiger Baby Films

Zoya Akhtar on directing The Archies

Having just watched The Archies (2023), a movie that almost looks like a 1960s fairytale, I realised that I was basically living in one as I made my way to a New York City midtown hotel to meet Zoya Akhtar to talk about her new film. As I took the 25-minute walk during the infamous NYC fall season, I reflected that this was a day I never saw coming and didn't even know that I could dream about.

This was a woman who had directed so many Hindi movie greats, spanning the bitingly-witty Luck by Chance (2009), the millennial anthem Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara (2011), the family favourite Dil Dhadakne Do (2015), and the fireworks-worthy Gully Boy (2019). She'd also directed the eminently popular TV series Made in Heaven (2019– ), whose second season was released this year.

Zoya's fifth directorial film, The Archies, debuted on Netflix on 9 November 2023, supported by a retro-themed marketing campaign that went viral on social media. Many praised its cheerful and colourful interpretation of the iconic American comics.

"I love New York. The city always treats me well," Akhtar told me as we sat together in the restaurant lobby. Not to fall into the habitual need to comment on how women public figures looked, but she seemed energetic and refreshed even after having just arrived in the city.

She tells me how she came to New York years ago to do a diploma in film production, and claimed it was the best year of her life. She even edited Gully Boy there in 2018.

It made sense to me, then, why her films always had a sense of adventure and journey embedded into them. Akhtar shared that she had a very specific childhood, with artist parents who went through a divorce, and that she'd travelled the world from a very young age.

She paints an eloquent picture of the kind of background that led to her becoming a die-hard fan of The Archies since she was young:

"I grew up in an India that wasn't liberalised. The few things that we got from America when we were growing up in the 80s were certain Hollywood films, and The Archies comics. They were a mainstay for everybody."

When asked about how she felt adapting a beloved IP that had such a huge global fan base, she confides, "I like being excited. I also like being a little scared of how I'm going to approach something." She explains that she always gets nervous in the beginning, but is never nervous when she is actually making a film.

"When I have to push an idea and sell it, I'm the most confident person in the world," she adds. When Netflix came to her with the project, they had asked her to approach it from a 'wholesome' angle, especially since the US had already created a darker, contemporary version through Riverdale.

"This is why India responded to the tone," she explains, "because it had community, family, [and] friendship… it was innocent."

For those who have watched The Archies by now, you will agree with me that the film is absolutely gorgeous. The softer tones are reminiscent of a childhood where everything was pure and exciting. It looks like a storybook that has come to life.

"Everything that came back to me about the comics was the warm feeling it gave you. I thought, why don't we create something that feels like a loving hug?" From there, she worked out the specifics of the film through research.

She chose to set it in the 1960s, focusing on a community rarely explored in films — the Anglo-Indian community, which was largely Christian, allowing her to retain the original character names. What surprised her most was learning that many families had migrated to England, yet still remained deeply connected to India.

"They insisted, 'we're Indian, we can't just leave India behind!'" she recalls. "As for the aesthetics of the film, we used photographs of that period, and a mix of storybook aesthetics and comic-book framing."

I turn the conversation to her writing process in this and other films. "I try to sum up in one phrase what each film is about," she explains. "For example, for Luck by Chance, it was self-esteem. For Gully Boy, it was class, for Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, it was carpe diem. Archies was about idealism, and everything lent itself to that – everything is pretty, the values are correct."

Sharing the writing credits for this film's story with Reema Kagti, Zoya emphasises how important it is to have writers who share a value system but bring different backgrounds to the table. "I'm an urban kid, and I grew up in a house full of artists, with liberal parents and great schools and colleges," she reveals.

"Reema grew up in the Northeast of India, on a farm where not everything was accessible, and her family structure was very different. We both come from different worlds, and it makes the world we write all the richer for it."

At this point in our conversation, a South Asian waiter interrupted us to tell her that he'd sent a special gift to her room as a token of appreciation. Zoya, unfazed, graciously thanked him and seamlessly jumped back into our conversation. I was astounded.

It dawned on me that I was talking to one of the most prolific storytellers in Hindi cinema, and she was giving me her full and undivided attention. Even across the world from our respective homes in Thailand and India, we were still Indophiles at heart. And clearly, cinephiles.

I asked her whether a project like this came at the right time in her career. "It came at a time when everything [in film and TV] is so complicated. For example, we loved making Made in Heaven (2019– ) and Dahaad (2023), but they are adult narratives."

"This is the first time we're doing something for kids. And it's very simple; which makes it scary." She explained that with this type of narrative, there aren't the same high stakes or drama to grab audiences as easily, which was the challenge.

"I needed something like this; a time when life was simple and it can be easy. When time can move by slowly."

It also helped that the newcomer actors she worked with on the film exuded so much energy and enthusiasm that it made her feel as if she were reliving her own debut film experience.

The actors include Shah Rukh Khan's daughter Suhana Khan, the late Sridevi's daughter Khushi Kapoor, Amitabh Bachchan's grandson Agastya Nanda, along with Vedang Raina, Mihir Ahuja, Aditi Dot, and Yuvraj Menda.

"I realised that you can work so much that you forget how lucky you are sometimes," she reflects. "It was the first film for all of them, and I remembered when that was my scene."

"When I first wanted to be a director, I discovered that when I was directing, everything was amazing. The cast was contagious and infectious. I want to hold on to that feeling that I'm lucky to do something I love."

When I ask for final advice for aspiring filmmakers, she responds with conviction: "Write your truth. Everyone tells me that I only do 'feel good sht' and I tell them, 'I like feel-good sht!'"

"Write what you want to read; make what you want to watch. Ultimately, filmmakers might keep going back to the same theme, but the battles will be different. When you write your truth, the story, plot, and characterisations will resonate, and the rest is just juice."

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