Your next -- Real Steel -- is yet another sci-fi futuristic film. Has this kind of become your pet genre?
Not really. It just happened that I was approached with the script and I liked it.
While it is a futuristic film set in 2020, it is a future that is seemingly accessible to us. I am also a big sports fan, so the robot boxing idea really fascinated me.
Do you miss doing lighter roles?
Not really, because I am not away from them. I have done lighter stuff in the past and will be doing in the future as well.
How much of what we see on screen in movies like X-Men and Real Steel is real and how much is technology-generated?
X-Men is real to a very large extent besides the super futuristic stuff. Real Steel is as real as it can get.
Special robots of around 2000 pounds and 8 feet tall were designed for the film. In fact, Steven Spielberg was himself involved in the designing of the robots.
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The experience was good. I visited Jaipur with my wife Deborra and I simply loved the place. I received so much warmth and love from the Indian people.
What do you think about India as a market for your movies?
I think it's a huge market; it has certainly has grown bigger over the years.
I would like to believe that most of the X-Men films have done quite well in India and has a following as well.
Also, the success of films like Slumdog Millionaire and Avatar only proves that it indeed is a huge market.
Any Indian actor you'd like to work with?
I would like to work with Shah Rukh Khan. I have seen My Name is Khan and I loved it.