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Jallaad

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Jallaad
Poster
Directed byT. L. V. Prasad
Written byAnirudh Tiwari (dialogues)
Story byManivannan
Based onAmaidhi Padai by Manivannan
Produced byRajiv Babbar
StarringMithun Chakraborty
Moushumi Chatterjee
Rambha
Madhoo
CinematographyNavkant
Edited byD. N. Malik
Music byAnand–Milind
Sameer (Lyrics)
Production
company
Aabha Films
Release date
15 September 1995
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Jallaad (transl.Executioner) is a 1995 Indian Hindi-language action film, directed by T. L. V. Prasad, released on 15 September 1995. The film stars Mithun Chakraborty in a dual role as father and son in opposing characters – the son has a positive role, whereas the father has the main villain role.[1][2][3] The movie has won him several awards in the Best Actor in a Negative Role category.[4] The film was the remake of the Tamil film Amaithi Padai, starring Satyaraj. It was Rambha's Bollywood debut.

Plot

An honest diligent police inspector named Kranti Kumar lives with his grandparents. On one of his missions, he is sent to the South where he falls in love with a village girl named Koyal who lives with her parents and little sister, Munni. Koyal reciprocates his love. Delighted at Kranti Kumar, Koyal's parents also accept their love and decide to announce their wedding.

Suddenly during their engagement, a mysterious man named Gopinath asks Kranti Kumar about his lifestyle. Gopinath then reveals that he is a bastard son of a corrupt politician Amavas and mocks Kranti Kumar for not knowing about his parents. An enraged Kranti Kumar beats Gopinath until his grandfather reveals the truth.

Amavas was a poor, but arrogant beggar who became acquainted with Kamalkant, a corrupt politician. Soon Amavas becomes Kamal's right hand man and a young village girl named Gayatri Devi falls for him to whom he reciprocates, but he drugs and rapes her one day. Kamal orders Amavas to stand in politics as an independent candidate because Kamal has not been given a ticket from his party. Amavas changes his name to Vijay Bahadur Kunwar in order to gain status and power much to the shock of Kamal and starts campaigning. Through Kamal's crafty machinations, Amavas wins the election, but forgets Kamal's help and forces Kamal to become his crony. After some days, Gayatri Devi gets pregnant and reveals the good news to Amavas. But Amavas cheats and disowns her and her baby. A furious Gayatri Devi goes to a temple, stands in front of Kali idol and vows that her son will avenge her humiliation and death. She grabs the trident and tries to kill herself. But as a result, she dies giving birth to her son Kranti. She is buried in a graveyard and the grave was made as famous in a village. Meanwhile, Amavas marries another lady, Tara who is a daughter of a rich landlord and steals the latter's palace. Tara, seeing his corruption refuses to bear him children.

When Kranti discovers the truth about his parents, he vows to kill his father to avenge his mother. He investigates two villagers and discovers his mother's grave. There Kranti meets his stepmother, Tara. After seeing Kranti's face, Tara learns that he is the son of Amavas. Kranti accepts her as his second mother and they vow to bring down Amavas.

One day Kranti sees Amavas. Some goons tries to attack Amavas, but Kranti fires on the goons and save his father and Amavas thanks him for saving his life. The same night, Kranti goes to Amavas's palace and reveals his identity to his father. When Amavas see Kranti's face, he realizes he is his own son. Kranti tells his father he will not spare him for his mother's death, a threat Amavas brushes off.

Over the years, Amavas has become a notorious dirty politician who doesn't serve the people. He continues to enjoy power and prestige. Discovering that Tara and Kranti are plotting his downfall, Amavas orders his slave Bhola to kill his second wife. Bhola is hesitant, but hardens his heart to follow his master's order. When Bhola comes to kill Tara, she tries to escape. She calls to her son Kranti, but Bhola stabs her. Kranti arrives there, but it was too late as Tara dies in Kranti's arms. The next day, Tara's dead body was kept at the funeral and knowing that his father was the cause, Kranti charges at Amavas and beats him mercilessly. As a result, Kranti is arrested and jailed.

For his final diabolical plan, Amavas orders Bhola to bring Koyal to his chamber. Kamal, who by this time is fed up of being Amavas' crony and wants to turn a new leaf, protests and tries to protect Koyal, but he is murdered by Bhola. Amavas' henchmen also kidnap Koyal's little sister. Upon the advice of a corrupt priest who tells Amavas that he is going to die soon, Amavas decides to forcibly marry Koyal through a demonic ritual. When Kranti discovers the news, he fights with the police and escapes from jail. He eliminates all of Amavas's henchmen and saves Koyal and her little sister Munni. After brutally beating his father, Kranti has Amavas at his mercy. He takes a trident and impales his father the same way his mother killed herself. Unrepentant to the end and blessing himself with flowers, Amavas's final words before he dies are "Amavas Zindabad".

After Amavas's death, Kranti Kumar surrenders to the police and he is sentenced for three years in jail. After he is released, he marries Koyal and they live happily ever after.

Cast

Cast Role(s) Note
Mithun Chakraborty Amavas a.k.a. Vijay Bahadur Kunwar / Police Inspector Kranti Kumar Amavas is a corrupt minister who dwells for power and Kranti wants to stop him at any cost
Moushumi Chatterjee Tara Amavas' wife
Madhoo Gayatri Kranti's mother
Rambha Koyal Kranti's fiancee
Kader Khan K.K. (Kamlakanth) A corrupt politician
Shakti Kapoor Shakti Jackson/Gabbar special appearance
Avtar Gill Gopinath Koyal's father/special appearance
Puneet Issar Bhola Amavas' slave
Prem Chopra -
Tej Sapru Police Inspector special appearance
Yunus Parvez
Goga Kapoor Aghori Baba special appearance
Tiku Talsania Police Inspector special appearance
Gurbachan Singh gang
Sonu Walia Sonu Walia Item in song

Soundtrack

Jallaad included 6 songs – all songs composed by Anand–Milind with lyrics penned by Sameer. The songs topped the charts when released.[citation needed]

# Title Singer(s)
1 "Aankhon Mein Kya Hai" Vinod Rathod, Sapna Mukherjee
2 "Chinai Chun Chun" Udit Narayan, Sadhana Sargam
3 "Bichhua Bole" Alka Yagnik
4 "Tumhe Hum Bahut Pyar" Hariharan, Sadhana Sargam
5 "Haath Na Lagaana" Abhijeet Bhattacharya, Poornima
6 "Jai Jai Jai Kali" Chorus

Awards

Category Recipient(s) for Result
Filmfare Award for Best Performance in a Negative Role Mithun Chakraborty Best Actor as Villain Won
Screen Award for Best Actor in a Negative Role Mithun Chakraborty Best Actor as Villain

References

  1. ^ "Mithun Chakraborty: A look at the disco dancer's career on his birthday". 16 June 2022.
  2. ^ "Remember Judwaa actress Rambha? Here's what the 46-year-old is up to".
  3. ^ "Jallaad Movie: Showtimes, Review, Trailer, Posters, News & Videos | eTimes", The Times of India, retrieved 3 August 2021
  4. ^ "मिथुन की इस मूवी के 25 साल, इसके लिए उन्हें मिला था 'बेस्ट विलेन' का फिल्मफेयर अवॉर्ड". Zee News Hindi (in Hindi). Retrieved 3 August 2021.