Moneycontrol
HomeEntertainmentMoviesVarun Grover on Kiss: ‘Censorship is a good challenge, I find my ways around it with a new language’
Trending Topics

Varun Grover on Kiss: ‘Censorship is a good challenge, I find my ways around it with a new language’

In an exclusive interview, multi-hyphenate filmmaker and standup Varun Grover and lyricist-singer turned actor Swanand Kirkire talk about their short film 'Kiss', which released on Mubi this month, how creative control rests with directors more than writers, and the crisis in Bollywood.

June 05, 2025 / 16:45 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Varun Grover (left); stills from his short film 'Kiss'; Swanand Kirkire.

In a classic press-release blunder Varun Grover was wrongly credited as a producer on Neeraj Ghaywan’s Cannes-premiered sophomore feature Homebound. Ghaywan’s Masaan had premiered at Cannes too, in 2015. Perhaps, that explains the gaffe in perception. Grover, however, wrote the dialogues for Homebound. “I was busy shooting my own feature film (All India Rank, 2023) at that time when Neeraj was writing the story (Homebound). When he was ready with the script, I was busy editing my film. I did a draft of the dialogue, that’s why I’m credited as the dialogue writer,” he says. And, in his customary shtick, Grover adds with a straight face, “if the film (Homebound) makes Rs 100 crore, I should get Rs 10 crore.” That sense of wry humour has helped him survive, not just as a creative in the industry but as a stand-up comic in censorial times.

His directorial debut, short film Kiss (2022), produced by Newton Cinema, released on the streaming platform Mubi this month. The cast includes noted singer-lyricist Swanand Kirkire, with whom Grover’s collaboration dates back to Masaan, when Kirkire lend his voice to Grover’s words Tu kisi rail si guzarti hai/Main kisi pull sa thartharata hoon. What does he enjoy more: acting, writing or singing? Kikire says, “Whatever happens without a problem (laughs). I’m really enjoying acting right now; I didn’t earlier.”

Story continues below Advertisement

Kiss probes artistic freedom at odds with censorship. At a single-screen cinema, that can project a 35mm film, young director Sam (Adarsh Gourav) shows a particular scene from his film, about a boy meeting his future older self, to two middle-aged men from the CBFC: Ramesh Chauhan (Shubhrajyoti Barat) and Salil Aabid (Swanand Kirkire), for them to decide on the length of the said scene. But there’s a catch, the watches of all three men reflect different time stamps. Kiss has tries to blend a bit of sci-fi (time travel) with nostalgia for old-world cinema. Grover packs in childhood trauma, censorship, hypocrisy or moral crisis and self-reflection with the lost world of communal viewing of films in theatres and that evoking different responses owing to different experiences and principles the audiences hold. Time acts as the metric, for individual endurance level, as well as a metonym for the changing times. Grover aims to put a human face to such big brothers and Scissorhands who greenlight artistic creations. In hindsight, the director feels his debut is a bit wordy, “probably 30 percent of the lines could have been chopped off” but that’s the thing with first films, they act as learning springboards.

Edited excerpts from an exclusive interview with multi-hyphenate artists Varun Grover and Swanand Kirkire: