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Rakul and Sara on Chemistry, Security, and the Media Narrative

Saturday, May 9, 2026
5 min read
Rakul and Sara on Chemistry, Security, and the Media Narrative

There’s this bit of scrutiny floating around, you know?

People are raving about the chemistry between Rakul and Sara. But some netizens? They pointed out that Wamiqa seems to be getting left out. Being ignored by the duo.

When pressed for comment, Rakul and Sara actually opened up about this manufactured perception of women actors not getting along.

Sara talked about the team. She called them her ‘family’. She felt that ‘secure’ women just can’t be bothered by that kind of narrative.

“Ultimately,” she said, “it all comes down to how secure you are. As an actor. As a human being.”

They went on to talk about how they got there.

“All three of us are very different people,” Sara explained. “But we are all confident. Secure in our own skin.”

She credited the script writer, Mudassar (Aziz), for making sure there was no space for one character’s costume or dialogue to match another’s. It just works. Everyone knows that.

The set became this space. For all of them. To root for each other.

“When you’re doing a film,” Sara continued, “you should stop looking at ‘my part’ and ‘her part’. It’s ‘our film’.”

She paused. A little reflection there.

“The funnier Rakul is, the better it is for me. The better she shines in a song, the better that is for me. We’re a family.”

Rakul, meanwhile, felt something different. She thinks those female catfights are mostly just media stuff.

“The media created this,” Rakul remarked. “A perception is just a story that repeats itself until it feels like the truth. This has been going on for years.”

She pushed back a bit. “Who has seen all these differences? All these disturbed relationships? Any professional actor knows a film is important. It’s their rozi-roti .”

Rakul added that you have to give your hundred percent to the work. You don't get silly issues with co-actors unless something genuinely wrong is happening. But she still didn't get the whole deal on this specific norm.

“I just don’t get this norm of women not getting along,” Rakul admitted. “I get along with everyone.”

She also brought up social media. That’s where the trouble really started. Everyone just shares whatever they feel without any filters.

“Times are changing,” Rakul said. “We’re in the age of social media. Back in the day, you heard things on set or in magazines. Now, there’s this new chatter every day. Anyone can throw an opinion out there.”

It just felt like a shift. A real mess of things happening behind the scenes, filtered through years of storytelling and now through endless feeds.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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