Baazigar
Baazigar | |
---|---|
Directed by | Abbas-Mustan |
Written by | Robin Bhatt Akash Khurana Javed Siddiqui |
Produced by | Ganesh Jain |
Starring | Shah Rukh Khan Kajol Siddharth Ray Shilpa Shetty Raakhee |
Cinematography | Thomas A. Xavier |
Music by | Anu Malik |
Distributed by | Eros Labs |
Release date | 12 November 1993 |
Running time | 182 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Box office | est.₹74.5 million[1] |
Baazigar (Template:Lang-en) is a 1993 Indian crime thriller film directed by Abbas–Mustan starring Shah Rukh Khan and Kajol in the lead roles. It is a contemporary thriller about a young man who stops at nothing to get what he wants. This was Shah Rukh Khan's breakthrough role as the sole lead and Kajol's first commercial success.[2] Actress Shilpa Shetty was supposed to debut with Gaata Rahe Mera Dil, however,it remained unreleased and this was her debut movie.[3] Baazigar was the first film in which Shah Rukh Khan played the role of an anti-hero[4] and the first which earned Khan a Filmfare Award for Best Actor.[5] Initially Salman Khan was the choice to play the lead.[6][7]
Baazigar was a major commercial success at its release[8][2] and the first film of the famous Shahrukh Khan-Kajol pair.[9]
It was remade in Tamil as Samrat with Ramki; in Telugu as Vetagaadu with Rajasekhar; and in Kannada as Nagarahavu with Upendra.
The film brought actors Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol, Shilpa Shetty and composer Anu Malik to the limelight. It is a remake of 1991's A Kiss Before Dying.[10]
Plot
A boy named Ajay asks a doctor to come see his mother Shobha (Rakhee), who is unconscious. Ajay promises Shobha that he will get revenge on the people, who are responsible for making them cry. The deaths of Ajay's father (Anant Mahadevan) and baby sister have made Shobha fall unconscious.
Years later, Ajay (Shah Rukh Khan) meets Madan Chopra's (Dalip Tahil) daughter Seema (Shilpa Shetty). Ajay cozies up to Seema, and she falls in love with him. Meanwhile, Ajay pretends to be Vicky Malhotra to create a good impression in the minds of Chopra and his younger daughter Priya (Kajol). Ajay keeps his affair with Seema a secret, under the impression that Seema too doesn't let anybody know she is in love. When Chopra decides to get Seema married, she decides to elope with Ajay. Ajay takes advantage of the opportunity and tricks her into writing a suicide letter.
Later, on premise of getting married secretly, Ajay calls Seema to the office for marriages in Bombay. He takes her to the terrace and suddenly pushes her down, using her suicide note to close the case as suicide. Chopra hastily has the case closed to prevent any further embarrassment. Ajay uses Seema's death to gets close to Priya and Chopra. Priya, however, suspects that her sister didn't commit suicide. With help of her college friend and police inspector Karan Saxena, she investigates the matter secretly.
Ravi, a friend of Seema, who had a crush on her, tells Priya about Seema's secret lover. Ravi finds a photo of Seema and Ajay together at a birthday party but is killed by Ajay. Ajay forces Ravi to sign a suicide note, making Priya and Karan believe that Ravi must have been Seema's lover and murderer. Ajay began a double game whilst keeping both the parties in dark. When Ajay puts contact lenses in his eyes to use his fake ID Vicky again, it's revealed that Madan is the person responsible for making Ajay and Shobha cry.
The next day when Ajay sees Madan's chair at Madan's company, a flashback is shown.
When Ajay's father Vishwanath Sharma, a reputed businessman, discovers that his manager Madan is embezzling money under his nose, Sharma has Madan thrown in jail. After Madan completes his jail term, he re-approaches Sharma and asks for forgiveness. Vishwanath rebukes him, but his wife Shobha takes pity on Chopra's daughters and pleads to her husband. Chopra is reappointed in the company. However, Chopra has come back to exact revenge on his former boss. Slowly, but surely, Chopra regains the confidence of Sharma. One day, when Sharma has to go for a business tour, he hands over power of attorney to Chopra so he can run the company in his absence. Chopra, who has been waiting for such chance, usurps Sharma's company and becomes its de facto owner. Sharma learns of this treachery, by which time his family is ejected from their home after Chopra takes a loan out in their name. More tragedy strikes the Sharma household when his newborn daughter dies of fever and Sharma himself dies of a heart attack while trying to buy medicines for her. Devastated by the turn of events, Shobha goes insane, while Ajay decided to avenge the wrongdoings by making Chopra pay.
Later, Priya and Vicky coincidentally meet Seema's college friend, Anjali at a jewelry store. Anjali thinks that she recognizes Vicky. When she finds the photo as well, she calls the Sharma household during Vicky's and Priya's engagement party. Vicky intercepts the call, impersonates Chopra, and arrives at her place. He strangles her, stuffs her body in a suitcase, and throws it in the river. A man and his dog find the body soon after. Priya and Karan realize that the murderer is still alive. Meanwhile, history repeats itself, with Chopra handing over the power of attorney to "Vicky". Ajay decides to hasten up his plans on learning that Priya and Karan are bent on finding the killer.
Ajay's plan hits a glitch when he and Priya run into the real Vicky Malhotra, Ajay's friend whose identity he had taken. Priya becomes suspicious and decides to contact this Vicky. After returning from his business trip, Chopra is shocked to find that the company is run by a Sharma group. Ajay reveals the truth to Chopra and kicks him out of the company after humiliating him.
Meanwhile, Priya learns of Ajay's true identity from Vicky and rushes to Ajay's home in Panvel. She is shocked to see a poster of Ajay and finds a marriage locket with photos of him with her sister. Ajay comes home, where she confronts him with his misdeeds. He tells her the whole story, and she is shocked by what her father did to Ajay's family. Although Ajay killed innocent Seema, Priya has sympathy for Ajay. Chopra arrives at Vicky's house with his henchmen to kill Ajay and exact revenge. Ajay goes outside to see some cars coming to his house and is shot by Chopra. After seeing Ajay being beaten by Chopra and hearing Chopra's name being repeated, Shobha regains her sanity and runs to her son's defense. Ajay starts bashing Chopra's goons and overpowers Chopra. Despite the circumstances, Karan and Priya sympathize with Ajay.
In a standoff with Chopra, Ajay spares his life. Chopra impales Ajay with a long iron bar and laughs about his victory. Ajay begins to laugh maniacally as well and rams the bar into Chopra's stomach, with both plummeting from a high wall, killing Chopra and mortally wounding Ajay.
Ajay makes it back to his mother who finally recognizes her son. Ajay promises her that he's gotten revenge for their family misfortunes and reacquired everything that was meant to be theirs — now wanting only to rest peacefully in her embrace. Priya and Karan watch despondently as Ajay dies in his mother's arms at peace.
Cast
- Shah Rukh Khan as Ajay Sharma/Vicky Malhotra
- Kajol as Priya Chopra
- Shilpa Shetty as Seema Chopra, Priya's sister
- Raakhee in a special appearance as Ajay's mother
- Dalip Tahil as Madan Chopra, Priya and Seema's father
- Siddharth Ray as Inspector Karan Saxena
- Johnny Lever as Babu Lal, the head servant
- Anant Mahadevan as Vishvanath Sharma
- Resham Tipnis as Anjali Sinha, Seema's friend
- Dinesh Hingoo as Bajodia Seth
- Manmauji Taalia as the servant
- Adi Irani as real Vicky Malhotra
- Master Sumeet as Young Ajay
- Sharad Sankla as Charlie (a guy in party)
- Daboo Malik as Ramesh
- Raju Srivastav as a guy in party with Charlie
- Harpal as Motu the cook
- Amrut Patel as Seema's driver
Soundtrack
The music was composed by Anu Malik and won him the Filmfare Award for Best Music Director.[11] The song "Yeh Kaali Kaali Aankhein" bagged singer Kumar Sanu his fourth consecutive Filmfare Award for Best Male Playback Singer after Aashiqui, Saajan and Deewana.[12] Other singers featured in the album are Asha Bhosle, Pankaj Udhas, Alka Yagnik, Vinod Rathod and Sonali Bajpai. The soundtrack was released by Venus Music.[13] Dr. Alban's song "It's My life" was also featured.
Untitled | |
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Song | Singer | Picturised on | Lyricist |
---|---|---|---|
"Baazigar O Baazigar" | Kumar Sanu & Alka Yagnik | Shahrukh Khan & Kajol | Nawab Arzoo |
"Yeh Kaali Kaali Aankhein" | Kumar Sanu & Anu Malik | Shahrukh Khan & Kajol | Dev Kohli |
"Kitabein Bahut Si" | Asha Bhosle & Vinod Rathod | Shahrukh Khan & Shilpa Shetty | Zafar Gorakhpuri |
"Chhupana Bhi Nahi Aata" | Vinod Rathod | Siddharth & Kajol | Rani Malik |
"Chhupana Bhi Nahi Aata" | Pankaj Udhas | In soundtrack, excluded in the film | Rani Malik |
"Samajh Kar Chand Jis Ko" | Alka Yagnik & Vinod Rathod | In soundtrack, excluded in the film | Zameer Kazmi |
"Ae Mere Humsafar" | Alka Yagnik & Vinod Rathod | Shahrukh Khan & Shilpa Shetty | Gauhar Kanpuri |
"Tere Chehre Pe" | Kumar Sanu & Sonali Bajpai | In soundtrack, excluded in the film | Rani Malik |
Box office
Baazigar was a commercial success and the fourth highest grossing Hindi film of 1993.[14]
Awards and nominations
- Won
- Best Actor — Shah Rukh Khan[15]
- Best Music Direction — Anu Malik[11]
- Best Male Playback Singer — Kumar Sanu for "Yeh Kaali Kaali Aankhein"[12]
- Best Screenplay — Robin Bhatt, Javed Siddiqui, Akash Khurana[16]
- Nominated
- Lux New Face — Shilpa Shetty
- Best Supporting Actress — Shilpa Shetty
- Best Performance in a Comic Role — Johnny Lever
- Best Lyricist — Dev Kohli for "Yeh Kaali Kaali Aankhen"
- Best Male Playback Singer — Kumar Sanu for "Baazigar O Baazigar"
- Best Female Playback Singer — Alka Yagnik for "Baazigar O Baazigar"
References
- ^ "Bolly-Holly@20". The Telegraph. Calcutta, India. 17 November 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ a b "Baazigar to Krrish 3: Diwali hits, misses and clashes from Bollywood". Firstpost. 22 October 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ Taliculam, Sharmila (4 April 1997). "Rediff On The Net, Movies: An interview with Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty". Rediff.com. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ "Fan trailer tonight: 5 times Shah Rukh Khan wowed us with his 'dark side'". Daily News & Analysis. 29 February 2016. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ "Shah Rukh Khan Filmfare Awards 1992 - 2009". YouTube. 30 May 2009. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ Ruhani, Faheem (22 August 2013). "25 unknown things about Salman Khan". India Today. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- ^ BusinessofCinema News Network (16 July 2014). "10 Things You Didn't Know About Salman Khan". businessofcinema. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
{{cite news}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - ^ Katiyar, Arun (30 April 1994). "What the stars don't foretell". India Today. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ "From 'Baazigar' to 'Dilwale' - A look at SRK and Kajol's on-screen magic". The Express Tribune. 13 June 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ Iyer, Meena (14 July 2014). "Baazigar: The rise and fall of Shah Rukh, Kajol and Shilpa Shetty". The Times of India. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ a b "I dont want other music directors to catch up with me: Anu Malik". India Today (in en_US). 15 November 1994. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ a b Press Trust of India (13 August 2012). "Melody will return to Bollywood songs: Kumar Sanu". Business Standard. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ Vijayakar, Rajiv (4 November 2015). "Anu Malik and Shah Rukh Khan: Sharing more than birthdays". Bollywoodhungama.com. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ "Box Office 1993". Boxofficeindia.com. Archived from the original on 14 August 2013. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
- ^ "Best Actor in a Leading Role (Male) award winners down the years". filmfare.com. 31 December 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- ^ Chopra, Simran (13 November 2013). "SRK's Baazigar: Things You May Not Know!". Businessofcinema.com. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
External links
- Film scores by Anu Malik
- 1993 films
- 1990s crime thriller films
- 1990s Hindi-language films
- Indian films
- Films directed by Abbas–Mustan
- Films set in Mumbai
- Films based on thriller novels
- Films based on American novels
- Indian romantic thriller films
- Indian crime films
- Indian crime thriller films
- Films about revenge
- Hindi films remade in other languages
- Films based on works by Ira Levin
- Indian thriller films
- Films shot in Mumbai