Karam (film)
Karam | |
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Directed by | Sanjay F. Gupta |
Screenplay by | Suparn Verma |
Story by | Suparn Verma |
Produced by | Pammi Baweja |
Starring | John Abraham Priyanka Chopra Bharat Dabholkar |
Edited by | Marzin Tavaria |
Music by | Vishal-Shekhar Pankaj Awasthi |
Distributed by | Baweja Movies |
Release date |
|
Running time | 117 minutes[1] |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Karam (transl. Deed/Karma) is a 2005 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film[2][3][4] directed by cinematographer Sanjay F. Gupta in his directorial debut. Starring John Abraham, Priyanka Chopra and Bharat Dabholkar, the film follows John, a professional assassin who ends up unintentionally killing an innocent family during a mission and becomes traumatized, eventually tendering his resignation. This does not go down well with his boss who kidnaps John's wife and holds her hostage. In order to win back her freedom, John must complete one last job: killing some of the city's top men within a limited period of time. The film co-stars Vishwajeet Pradhan, Shiney Ahuja, Murli Sharma, Rajesh Khera and Aanjjan Srivastav.
Having directed several music videos, Sanjay F. Gupta decided to direct the film after being impressed with Suparn Verma's script. Confirming that it was not inspired by any Hong Kong film, Gupta decided to do his own take on it despite feeling the script wasn't novel. Feeling John Abraham suited the role from the beginning, Gupta cast him as the lead alongside Priyanka Chopra, and named the protagonist after Abraham.[5] Producer Harry Baweja revealed the film was based on a true story and shot entirely in Mumbai.[2]
Karam was released theatrically on 11 March 2005, opening to unfavorable reviews from critics and audiences.[5] It was a commercial failure both domestically and in the overseas.[6][7] In 2011 during an interview for his film Force, John Abraham revealed a number of people came up and told him Karam was their favorite film.[8]
Plot
The film begins with Shalini (Priyanka Chopra) narrating how much she loved John (John Abraham) despite of knowing he was a contract killer and how things might have been different had he not picked up a gun. The film goes into flashback mode and John is shown to be an assassin working for a mobster named Captain (Bharat Dabholkar). Accompanied by two friends Kaif (Murali Sharma) and Bull (Rajesh Khera), he is assigned a hit, which he carries out, but also ends up killing an entire family, who arrives untimely to the house from where the hit was planned. Apart from the adults, one of their daughters gets shot unintentionally by John. He gets traumatized and despite his friends telling him to move on, he becomes guilt-ridden and explains everything to Shalini, with whom he plans to escape away. The city's toughest cop, Wagh (Shiney Ahuja), starts investigating the murder and in the process, comes close to the surviving daughter of the deceased family.
Meanwhile, Captain is attacked by the rival don, Yunus (Vishwajeet Pradhan), and as a result decides to teach the city a lesson by killing the city's top industrialist, top film producer, the cop backing Yunus and Yunus himself; so that everyone else falls in line and no one dreams of becoming another Yunus. He decides that John must carry out this plan of his. To achieve this, he takes Shalini hostage. John is given 36 hours to kill the five targets on the hitlist. John re-unites with his friends but struggles to carry out the hits initially due to still being traumatized. He, however, manages to kill the targets one by one, while his wife tries to escape in order to stop him from killing. Kaif, however, gets killed by Wagh after John manages to kill a few more targets. Shalini slashes her wrist and is admitted to a hospital, where she realizes she's pregnant and manages to escape. She manages to contact John, who arrives to pick her up, only to find himself trapped when she gets taken hostage once again. Realizing that he has been double-crossed, John shoots Bull in front of Captain, who reminds him of the remaining time he has.
John meets Wagh and asks for his help in exchange for providing all evidence against Captain, to which Wagh agrees. Along with sub-inspector Naik, he arrives on spot and after a gunfight, manages to free Shalini. John, on the other hand, meets Yunus and his friend, DCP Patil (Aanjjan Srivastav). He blackmails Patil into bringing him Shalini, which he does. However, John kills both Yunus and Patil, escaping with Shalini. A chase ensues, resulting in a rough fight between John and Captain. John manages to kill Captain and his team, but when one of his surviving members tries to shoot, John shoots him and himself gets shot unintentionally by Naik, the same way John mistakenly shot the young girl. He breathes his last near Shalini, who gets shattered by his death.
The film ends with the story returning to the present time, where Shalini is happily playing with two kids: her son and the daughter of the family John killed, whom she adopted.
Cast
- John Abraham as John
- Priyanka Chopra as Shalini (John's wife)
- Bharat Dabholkar as Captain
- Vishwajeet Pradhan as Yunus
- Shiney Ahuja as ACP Wagh
- Murli Sharma as Kaif
- Rajesh Khera as Bull
- Aanjjan Srivastav as DCP Patil
- Nitin Arora
- Bikramjeet Kanwarpal
Soundtrack
Karam | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 12 February 2005 | |||
Genre | Feature film soundtrack | |||
Label | T-Series | |||
Producer | Vishal-Shekhar | |||
Vishal-Shekhar chronology | ||||
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The music was composed by Vishal-Shekhar and Pankaj Awasthi. The lyrics were penned by Vishal Dadlani, Irshad Kamil, Dev Kohli, Pankaj Awasthi, Amit Mishra and Harshdeep.[9]
Track listing
No. | Title | Music | Singer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Ishq Nachaya Kare" | Vishal-Shekhar | Sunidhi Chauhan | |
2. | "Koi Aisa Alam" | Vishal-Shekhar | Sonu Nigam, Mahalakshmi Iyer | |
3. | "Le Jaa" | Vishal-Shekhar | Harshdeep, Vishal Dadlani | |
4. | "Tera Hi Karam" | Pankaj Awasthi | Pankaj Awasthi | |
5. | "Tinka Tinka" | Vishal-Shekhar | Alisha Chinai | |
6. | "Ishq Nachaya Kare" (Instrumental) | Vishal-Shekhar | ||
7. | "Tinka Tinka" (Instrumental) | Vishal-Shekhar |
References
- ^ "KARAM". British Board of Film Classification.
- ^ a b "On the sets of Priyanka Chopra's Karam!". Rediff.com.
The film, despite being an action thriller, has got a number of emotional scenes.
- ^ "Karam (2005) - Sanjay F. Gupta". AllMovie.
- ^ "Karam (2005)". FilmAffinity.
- ^ a b "Priyanka's finger was chopped off: Sanjay F. Gupta". SantaBanta.com. Retrieved 14 March 2005.
- ^ "Exploring the box office journey of Priyanka Chopra – Part 2". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
- ^ "Business Takes A Dip!". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 16 March 2005.
- ^ ""I'd like to see John Abraham do a lot of action movies" – John Abraham". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 24 November 2011.
You won't believe but many people have come up to me and said that Karam was their favourite film. How strange is that?
- ^ Tuteja, Joginder (14 February 2005). "Karam: Music Review". IndiaFm. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
External links
- 2005 films
- 2000s Hindi-language films
- 2005 action thriller films
- Indian films
- Indian action thriller films
- Heroic bloodshed films
- Gun fu films
- Indian films based on actual events
- Action films based on actual events
- Thriller films based on actual events
- Films scored by Vishal–Shekhar
- Indian films with live action and animation
- Films about contract killing in India