‘Wanted to Slap Myself’: Akshay Kumar Reveals His Absolute Biggest Career Regret

For decades, Akshay Kumar has been celebrated as one of the most versatile, disciplined, and prolific actors in Indian cinema. From delivering laugh-out-loud comic timing in Hera Pheri to anchoring intense social dramas like Padman and Baby, Kumar has proven he can handle almost any genre thrown his way.
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However, his career did not start with this flexible reputation. In the 1990s, Kumar was universally recognized by a singular title: the Khiladi. Blessed with legitimate martial arts training, incredible physical agility, and a fearless willingness to perform life-threatening stunts without body doubles, he quickly became Bollywood's premier action commodity. But while the box office numbers poured in, Kumar reveals that a profound sense of creative suffocation was building behind the scenes.

A Decade of Creative Stagnation

Looking back at his extensive filmography, Kumar openly confessed that his single biggest professional regret is allowing himself to remain trapped inside that action-star mold for far too long. He estimated that he spent over a consecutive decade signing projects based entirely on how many fight sequences, car chases, or building jumps they offered.