It is striking that in all these films SRK suffers from some form of disability or disadvantage, which means that although he remains good looking, he does not play a powerful male but a victim바카라widowed, rejected, ill, injured and disabled바카라where it is never his fault. He appears as a more 바카라feminised바카라 male, emotional and not seeking바카라indeed, even having lost바카라alpha status. Rather, this pain shows him weeping, melancholic, suffering with threatened loss of status and respect. This pain is beyond his control, but he adds to his pain through his own self-sacrifice as he aims to redeem himself through suffering. SRK바카라s characters do not Âdisplay the noble sentiments of Amitabh Bachchan바카라s star roles, but are inclined towards the more 바카라feminine바카라 tender sentiments and quest for romance. SRK represents a modern Indian emotionality, appealing to his audience as a gentle, suffering person who responds with tears and only occasionally with anger바카라indÂeed, in many films, his emotions are opposed to those of Amitabh. It is perhaps a sign that emotions are valued differently by the new middle classes and the diaspora in their negotiation of new values in India and overseas.