Well-known London-based director James Erskine, who has directed Sachin: A Billion Dreams, believes sporting heroes should be portrayed in 360 degrees. “I’m not sure I’m in a position to talk about the Indian audience, but I think films should chart highs and lows and not be afraid of that. After all, what do the highs mean without the lows?” Erskine tells Outlook. Tony D’Souza, who directed Azhar, refutes the charge that Indian biopics are only paeans to sporting heroes. He argues that they have shown the “other side” of the athlete too. “I think what we do is what we get the information on. If I comment on my film, I think I have shown exactly what I wanted to show; there’s nothing that I didn’t want to show,” he says. Omprakash Mehra says it’s up to the director to take or leave out certain parts of a person’s life for his purpose. “A feature film is a work of fiction, drama and parts you borrow from real life. It’s entirely up to the filmmaker, the way he wants to tell the story. There’s no obligation as such. For instance, in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, I wanted to tell the story of a lost childhood; I didn’t want to tell the story of where Milkha Singh was born, where he went to school, how many children he had. That’s the work of a documentary,” he says. But he does admit that Indians find it difficult to face reality. “As a nation, we don’t have the capacity to digest the truth, and the filmmakers don’t have the guts to tell it,” he says.