India, Feb. 13 -- Actor Shahid Kapoor has played brooding men before, but as O'Romeo releases today, he appears surprisingly at ease. Calm, measured, almost detached from the chaos his character brings to screen. Excerpts... In spirit, I would say yes to the latter! But from a professional POV, no. I don't think any artist can give themselves to something unless they connect with it. When the connection is not there, there is always something missing in the product. In O'Romeo, of course it's the titular part; I play Ustraa. And with Vishal Bhardwaj, it's always a world that he creates. Ustraa's attitude is that of Romeo. If, as creative people, you don't connect, it is wrong for you to do the film. If you won't be honest, it is unfair for everybody else. I very much connected with this film. I had one preset in my head before I met him, and I was very clear that at this stage in my career, I don't want to do a film that is too experimental or a film meant for a smaller, intellectual audience and not for a wider audience, who have a simpler mindset and whose approach to filmmaking is that they go to theatres to get entertained. There's the cinema you love and the cinema that people love. The whole endeavour has been for years to find a Ganga-Jamuna moment between them, to meet a middle ground. This film is an attempt at achieving that; it's meant for an intelligent audience but also very much like a typical, mass audience. turn to 02...