Every Bollywood director starts a film dreaming that it will rewrite history at the box office. Sometimes that dream comes true, and sometimes it shatters. The industry has produced giants like Manmohan Desai, Yash Chopra, Subhash Ghai, Ramesh Sippy, Mahesh Bhatt, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Karan Johar, Farah Khan and Rohit Shetty — filmmakers who have tasted the sweetness of hits and blockbusters but also swallowed the bitter pill of failure. Roughly 25 years ago, one such well-known director found his career hanging by a thread. Two back-to-back flops had pushed him to the brink of finishing. Yet he took a risk and crafted a film that made its mark not just in India, but across the world.
The 2001 Turning Point
This is the story of celebrated filmmaker Ashutosh Gowariker. The year 2001 turned out to be the biggest turning point of his life. After two consecutive flops, he had quietly resolved that if this next film didn't work, he would walk away from direction for good. Things had reached a point where, on simply hearing the story, even the film's hero and producer were convinced the project would sink. But Gowariker refused to give up — he spent months sharpening the script, and the gamble he took eventually turned into a blockbuster. He has himself spoken about this journey.
The Historic June 15 Clash
On June 15, two films squared off at the box office that are still cited as benchmarks today. On one side was Anil Sharma's 'Gadar: Ek Prem Katha', and on the other, Ashutosh Gowariker's period sports drama 'Lagaan'. Both films managed to create a storm among audiences.
From Actor to Director
In an interview with TrendKia, Gowariker admitted that during the final years of the 1990s he was under enormous pressure. He had begun his career as an actor, appearing in the popular TV show 'Circus' and in films like 'Kabhi Haan Kabhi Naa'. He then stepped behind the camera. In 1993 he made the thriller 'Pehla Nasha', featuring Deepak Tijori, Pooja Bhatt and Raveena Tandon in lead roles. The film even had cameos by Aamir Khan and Shah Rukh Khan, yet it flopped at the box office.
Two Failures and a Question Mark
Two years later, in 1995, he teamed up with Aamir Khan for the action thriller 'Baazi', but that too failed to pull audiences into theatres. After two major setbacks, a question mark hung over his direction. Recalling that phase, he had said, 'I was not in any competition at the time about what other filmmakers were making. I had to prove myself because my previous two films had flopped. This was my third and final chance.'
Making a startling revelation, he added, 'I had decided in my heart that if I did not succeed as a director with Lagaan, I would never direct another film again. So my entire focus was solely on getting the story right.'
Aamir's Doubt and Bhuvan's Victory
Initially, Aamir Khan himself did not agree with the idea. Weaving cricket and patriotism together against the backdrop of a village was a huge risk back then. Aamir reminded his old friend that he had already delivered two flops, and that he needed to be extremely cautious this time. But Gowariker did not back down. He took a full three months to prepare the screenplay, paying attention to every fine detail of 'Lagaan'. When he narrated the story to Aamir again, the actor was stunned. The way he had shaped each character — Bhuvan, Kachra, Lakha — won Aamir's heart.
A 25-Crore Budget and the Birth of Aamir Khan Productions
At the time, no big producer was willing to bet money on a film as unusual as 'Lagaan'. Its budget was around 25 crore rupees, an enormous sum by the standards of that era. Even the legendary writer Javed Akhtar considered the project a big gamble — though it was the same Akhtar who later penned the film's evergreen songs. When no path forward appeared, Aamir Khan decided to produce it himself, and it was with this very film that 'Aamir Khan Productions' was founded.
A Story That Reached the Oscars
The gamble paid off completely. The film overturned all the equations at the box office and raked in a bumper collection of more than 65 crore rupees worldwide. Not only that, in 2002 'Lagaan' earned a nomination in the Best Foreign Language Film category at the Oscars.
Had 'Lagaan' not succeeded, Indian cinema would have been deprived of several of Gowariker's brilliant films. It was only after this success that he went on to make memorable films like 'Swades' with Shah Rukh Khan and 'Jodhaa Akbar', starring Hrithik Roshan and Aishwarya Rai.













