After Ramayana teaser backlash, Hrithik Roshan tells audiences to ask two big questions instead of just saying 'bad VFX'
Hrithik Roshan addressed the backlash over the Ramayana teaser, explaining that VFX should be judged based on the story and style, not just realism. Sharing his own experiences with cinema, he praised filmmakers for taking creative risks and urged...

A Personal Take on Visual Effects
In an Instagram post, Hrithik admitted that poor VFX can be frustrating. “Yes bad VFX exists. It’s sometimes so bad it’s painful to watch. Especially for me… and especially when it’s a film I’m part of,” he wrote. Sharing a personal anecdote, he recalled how seeing Back to the Future at age 11 in London shaped his fascination with cinema. “I became obsessed. I would sit with my dad’s VHS player studying the frames pause -play pause-play until I broke the player. I ordered a book ‘Industrial Light and Magic: The Art of Special Effects’ from Reader’s Digest with my pocket money…and waited months for it to arrive at the Juhu post office. Happiest day of my life. I can still smell the book as I unwrapped it. Many others followed.”Roshan used this memory to highlight filmmakers who take bold creative risks. “Today some special humans among us, like the makers of films like Kalki, Bahubali, Ramayana (also my dad for Koi Mil Gaya and Krrish of course) are my heroes, they have the guts and vision to do what’s never been done all for the love of cinema so that we the audience get to experience something never watched before. From my point of view they risked all that money, and years and years of effort just so another 11-year-old kid could feel what I felt.”
Understanding VFX Styles
Hrithik stressed that not all VFX aims for photorealism. He explained, “Bad VFX is if the movie promises say ‘photorealism’ but is unable to inhabit it fully. Even a small lapse in physics/gravity can then destroy the entire illusion. Or the promise is of storybook style but they fail in making it beautiful enough or artistic enough or divine enough and so fails to engage. But to say that the storybook style is not looking photorealistic – isn’t fair. Cause it’s not meant to be.”He encouraged audiences to reflect before judging. “AND you can’t criticize the maker just cause he has chosen one style while you prefer another style. That’s not fair. So sometimes when you say ‘bad VFX,’ maybe it’s just a style you didn’t expect? So next time don’t just ask, ‘Is it real?’ First ask, ‘Is it right for the story?’ ‘Is it making me feel what the maker intended?’ Debate it. But debate it with awareness.”
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