"Let's do it," Lawrence, the world's highest paid actress, said in an interview to PTI here when asked if she and Pratt have any plans to visit India.
"I would love to. It's really vast and I would love to experience it," Lawrence said.
Pratt, who stars with Lawrence in Columbia Pictures' sci-fi action-thriller "Passengers", too sounded excited on the prospect of visiting India.
"I would love to go to India. I think that's our next vacation. I want to go and check it out. It's such a huge, huge nation, so many people, such a beautiful place," he said in the interview.
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"I feel like I have gotten glimpses into India but I haven't been able to get there. So I would like to go."
The actor said he hopes his visit to India will be for vacation and not for work.
"If we came there to promote (a movie), that will be one thing but when you are on work you never get to experience any of the culture. So probably it will be vacation," he added.
"Passengers", which released in the US today and will hit Indian theatres on January 6 in English, Hindi, Tamil and Telugu, is about two strangers Jim and Aurora, who are on a 120-year journey to another planet on atechnologically- advanced"cruise-liner" style space ship when their hibernation pods wake them 90 years too early.
The movie also stars Welsh actor Michael Sheen, who plays "Arthur", a robotic bartender on board the ship.
"Passengers" employs cutting-edge technology to produce stunning special effects as it chronicles the lives of Lawrence and Pratt on the spaceship.
One of the most stunning visuals come when the gravity on the ship fails and Jim andAurora find themselves weightless. Aurora is in a swimming pool when the gravity fails and she is trapped in the huge ball of water as it starts surging upwards. (Reopens LST 14)
Pratt said the way technology is being used to make and see movies is both "exciting and challenging".
"In terms of making the movies, the technologies that are now out that are really mind blowing. Every movie I do, it seems like there is a new filming apparatus... That are creating the most dynamic physical shots that you could have never accomplished before" with simpler technologies.