Vijay mentions that they shot most of the film in Mumbai. The actor seems to be heavily impressed by the artistry and speed of technicians at the lower rung of film crew in Mumbai.
"They are very efficient and economical with time and resources. So, a film which would have taken 200 days to shoot was wrapped up in around 140 days", he says with a certain gleam in his eyes.
The efficiency spreads to the upper echelons and the air-conditioned cabins of a film's team too, in Vijay's opinion.
"The marketing and the promotional logistics are also super-efficient here," he says, pointing out another difference between the two industries.
For his part in the film, the actor needed to look really muscular or as he puts it, he "wanted to look like a beast". So, he approached the body type of his character by mixing high intensity weight training with fight training.
"Yeah, it's not so good an approach to a desired physicality as weight training adds a lot of stiffness to the body contrary to the demands of the flexible body of an MMA fighter, '' he says as he looks back.
"But, one has to work around things in a certain frame of time. The marching of deadlines is what showbiz is all about, isn't it"? the actor questions back.
"To overcome the muscle stiffness I then forced myself to do spin kicks because that would help the body retain a certain flexibility.
He even got injured once during the training. "You gotta pay something to achieve something", he says as he smiles back at his pain thereby giving a faint reminiscence of what Muhammad Ali once said, "I hated every minute of training, but I said, 'Don't quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion'". The air in the room suddenly dons a blanket of heaviness after the mentions of the two boxing legends.
Vijay glides through another point - that of the evolution of the Indian film industry in a bigger scheme.
"I think the Indian film industry is moving in the right direction. If we want to be a powerful industry, we need to unite the country through content bridges. One of our biggest strengths is our population, and the market potential that it entails."
"The reason Amazon, Apple and Google are setting up such big facilities and investing in good infrastructure is that the Indian consumer market is a holy grail", the actor shares.
Rendering a financial shade to his answer, he continues, "If we can make films that work across the languages of Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Marathi and other, imagine how much that would strengthen the industry and also the economy in certain ways", he talks proudly of the film industry which contributes a lot to the taxation structure and government revenue of the country."
"We are on the right path as the Indian film industry, '' he concludes as he takes a break from the interviews that are about to follow.
'Liger' directed by Puri Jagannadh is set to release in cinemas on August 25, 2022.