


"Everyone puts in same amount of hard work and love for their films.The actor said that ultimately it's a business that matters at the end of day.Films will overlap and it is unfair on our part to ask anyone to change the date (of film)," Shah Rukh told reporters. Yashji would have wished that the other film should have also done well. "It is unfair to ask anybody to change the release date of the film.Jab Tak Hai Jaan and Ajay Devgn's Son of Sardar will be vying for the Box Office pie this Diwali which falls on November 13.As late filmmaker Yash Chopra's much-awaited film Jab Tak Hai Jaan, starring Shah Rukh Khan in lead, is up for Diwali release, the actor feels it is "unfair" to ask anyone to reschedule their releases.The structure even allows for two romantic interests for Khan, as he originally pines for a character played by Katrina Kaif, a regal beauty typical of Chopra’s other films, as well as a character played by the spunkier, younger Anushka Sharma, whose modernity is frequently commented on in the story. A romance tinged with the metaphysical? Check that one too. Spectacular dance numbers that rival the “Step Up” films? Check. A daring military bomb squad as in “The Hurt Locker”? Check. With retrograde amnesia, explosions, the Discovery Channel and a few catchy songs all part of its story, “Jab Tak Hai Jaan” isn’t just a good movie, it freely pilfers from countless other good movies looking to become some kind of supermovie. The film tells a tale of two star-crossed romances, one of a man (Khan) who must leave behind the woman he loves, the other the story of that same man being pursued by a younger woman 10 years later who forces him to come to terms with the unresolved feelings of his earlier relationship. The film is directed by Yash Chopra, a towering influence in Bollywood filmmaking who died last month, and stars Indian superstar Shah Rukh Khan with music by A.R. Those who scour the fringes of movie houses to wade through countless slacker American indies, dour European art films, sappy Asian historical romances and all the assorted odd flotsam that washes up on screen do so hoping to find something rather like the new Indian film “Jab Tak Hai Jaan.”
