Pukar (2000 film)

Pukar
Poster
Directed byRajkumar Santoshi
Written byDialogues:
Rajkumar Santoshi
Anjum Rajabali
K.K. Raina
Screenplay byRajkumar Santoshi
Anjum Rajabali
Story byRajkumar Santoshi
Produced bySurinder Kapoor
Boney Kapoor
Bharat Shah
StarringAnil Kapoor
Madhuri Dixit
Namrata Shirodkar
Danny Denzongpa
Om Puri
CinematographyAshok Mehta
Santosh Sivan
Baba Azmi
Chota K. Naidu
Edited byRajkumar Santoshi
Music byA. R. Rahman
Production
company
Distributed byEros International
Shemaroo Entertainment
Release date
  • 5 February 2000 (2000-02-05)
Running time
165 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget$4.9 million[1]

Pukar (lit.'The Call') is a 2000 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film co-written and directed by Rajkumar Santoshi with cinematography by Ashok Mehta, Santosh Sivan, Baba Azmi and Chota K. Naidu. It stars Anil Kapoor, Madhuri Dixit, Namrata Shirodkar, Danny Denzongpa, Shivaji Satam and Om Puri. The score and soundtrack were composed by A. R. Rahman.

Pukar was released on 5 February 2000 and received critical acclaim, and was Semihit at the box office.[2]

At the 48th National Film Awards, Pukar won 2 National Film Awards – the Nargis Dutt Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration and Best Actor (Kapoor). At the 46th Filmfare Awards, Pukar received 2 nominations – Best Actor (Kapoor) and Best Actress (Dixit).

Plot

A group of armed terrorists led by Abhrush (Danny Denzongpa) have been cornered by the Indian army on a mountain. In order to carry out further operations, the army has blocked all the entries and exits of the mountain. At this time, minister Mishra Govind Namdeo arrives at the mountain and wishes to enter to visit the temple to do a prayer. The guardians initially refuse him entry, citing the imminent danger of the terrorists. But after Mishra insists, the guardians, considering his high position in the government, let him in. Mishra is later attacked and kidnapped by Abhrush's men in the mountain, who demand a safe passage to Pakistan.

The Indian army then sends Para (Special Forces) led by officer Major Jaidev Jai Rajvansh (aka Jai, Anil Kapoor) to secretly enter the mountain rescue minister Mishra and arrest the terrorists. During the operation, the army learns that the information about it has been leaked and Abhrush had known about it, but the team manages to successfully complete the mission, with a few casualties.

Due to the fact that the army has learned they have mole working for Abhrush's organization, Colonel Iqbal Hussain (Om Puri), Jai's superior, gives the information of Abhrush's whereabout high confidentiality: they shift him from one prison to another every week, and the destination and route information is directly sent from their army headquarters to Jai directly, without letting anyone else know. Jai also suspects that Mishra is working for Abhrush, and his kidnapping was a staged plan to make Abhrush escape. But Jai has no evidence to prove it.

Jai is given one week off and returns home to stay with his family. During the off, Jai meets Pooja Mallapa (Namrata Shirodkar), the daughter of retired General Mallapa (K.D Chandran), at an event and they later fall in love with each other. Jai's childhood friend Anjali (Madhuri Dixit) also loves Jai. But Jai's eyes are blinded by the high social class of Pooja's family, thus shows little interest in Anjali. Anjali eventually learns about Jai and Pooja's relationship, and is heartbroken. Mishra's assistant Tiwari (Anjan Srivastav)then approaches Anjail to give her an idea to win Jai back:

He claims to be a businessman asks Anjail to steal a code from Jai's files, which contains contract information of the army, He says that if she does this, the army will lose the contract, which he will get, and Jai will be suspended for a few days due to his mistake, and Pooja's family will break the relationship because they wouldn't allow their daughter to marry a suspended soldier. Anjali agrees, but she doesn't know the code that Tiwari asks her to steal is actually the coded information about Abhrush's custody and transfer route.

Anjail later successfully steals the code and gives it to Tiwari. With the code, Abhrush's men learn about his transfer route, and later ambush the transfer van and rescue Abhrush. Jai is suspended, and due to the evidence planted by Abhrush's men, he is later arrested for treason. Pooja and her family break their tie with him. Jai's family also faces harassment and judgement from others due to his alleged treason. Jai is eventually sentenced to 7 years in jail.

After learning that Tiwari made a mistake by leaving Anjali alive, Abhrush orders his men to kill the both. Meanwhile, overwhelmed by guilt, Anjali confesses everything to Colonel Hussain. Hussain feels angry about her act and Mishra's involvement in terrorism. They go to Tiwari’s house to arrest him, but are attacked by Abhrush's men, who are there to kill Tiwari. Tiwari and Hussain are both shot. Before death, Tiwari reveals that Abhrush is planning to bomb the town hall during the Independence Day celebration.

Hussain and Anjali rushes to jail and tell Jai everything. Hussain tells Jai to stop Abhrush's plan, before dying of the gunshot. Abhrush's men also arrive and attack the guards. During the gun fight, many guards and Abrush's men are killed. Anjali is shot while trying to protect Jai. They then both escape, and Abhrush's men keep chasing.

At their hideout, Jai, seeing injured Anjali is dying, finally recognizes his love for her and proposes to her. Anjali is treated and later wakes up and tells Jai that she stole the code. Abhrush's men arrive and attack them. Jai manages to escape but Anjali is captured. They then decide to keep Anjali alive to lure Jai out.

Jai goes to Mishra's residence and confronts him. He beats Mishra and ties a bomb around his body as a threat. He demands Mishra to take him into the town hall during the Independence Day celebration. Mishra has no choice but to agree.

With Mishra's help, Jai entered the town hall during celebration, he then goes to the backstage to stop Abhrush's plan. Meanwhile, Hussain's superior Major General (Kulbhushan Kharbanda), who is also at the scene and senses something is wrong, also goes to the backstage to check. Jai finds Abhrush's men and bombs. He takes down some of them and defuses some bombs. Fearing unable to defeat Jai, Abhrush uses Anjali has hostage to disarm Jai. Major General arrives at the scene and shoots Abhrush. Together, they kill Abhrush and manage to defuse the main bomb before it goes off. Jai forgives Anjali and confesses his love for her. Major General then appear to the public and tells the crowd what happened. He clears Jai's alleged treason and declares him a hero.

Cast

Soundtrack

Pukar
Soundtrack album by
Released29 November 1999 (India)
RecordedPanchathan Record Inn
GenreFilm soundtrack
LabelVenus
ProducerA. R. Rahman
A. R. Rahman chronology
Taj Mahal
(1999)
Pukar
(1999)
Alai Payuthey
(2000)

The music is given by A. R. Rahman, while the lyrics were written by Majrooh Sultanpuri and Javed Akhtar. The song Kay Sera Sera is based on "Kadhal Niagara" from En Swasa Kaatre. Rahman reused the song "Oh Bosnia" as "Ek Tu Hi Bharosa". The song was composed and performed by Rahman in his Malaysian concert in 1996 that was in aid of Bosnian victims. The piano was played by Rahman himself. "Hai Jaana" has two parts within the film version and soundtrack version. The song "Sunta Hai Mera Khuda" was shot at Arches National Park in Utah, United States. The song " Kismat Se Tum Humko Mile Ho" was shot at Mount Marcus Baker in Alaska, United States.

Track list

No Song Artist(s) Lyrics Length
1 "Kay Sera Sera" Shankar Mahadevan, Kavita Krishnamurthy Javed Akhtar 06:51
2 "Sunta Hai Mera Khuda" Udit Narayan, Kavita Krishnamurthy, Swarnalatha Majrooh Sultanpuri 06:36
3 "Humrahi Jab Ho Mastana" Udit Narayan, Hema Sardesai 04:26
4 "Hai Jaana" (Soundtrack Version) Sujatha Mohan 04:18
5 "Kismat Se Tum" Sonu Nigam, Anuradha Paudwal 06:20
6 "Ek Tu Hi Bharosa" Lata Mangeshkar 06:29
7 "Hai Jaana"(Film Version) Sujatha Mohan

Reception

Sify gave the film three out of five, writing, "Its ultimately the actors who carry the film through. Not that the plot does not work, in fact its engrossing, but it simply fails to carry you through."[3] V Gangadhar of Rediff.com praised the first half but criticed the second half, writing, "The film falls to pieces in the second half. The action scenes are highly contrived. Abrush tries to project a larger-than-life presence by constantly rolling his huge eyes and grunting with vigour. And Santoshi's handling of the military scenes is rather amateurish. Does the army strip a court-martialled officer even of his clothes?"[4]

Awards

Award Category Recipient(s) Result Ref(s)
46th Filmfare Awards Best Actor Anil Kapoor Nominated
Best Actress Madhuri Dixit Nominated
2nd IIFA Awards Best Actor Anil Kapoor Nominated [5]
Best Actress Madhuri Dixit Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Namrata Shirodkar Nominated
48th National Film Awards Nargis Dutt Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration Rajkumar Santoshi Won [6]
Best Actor Anil Kapoor Won
7th Screen Awards Best Actor Anil Kapoor Nominated [7]
Best Actress Madhuri Dixit Nominated
Best Comedian Rohini Hattangadi Nominated
Best Female Playback Singer Kavita Krishnamurthy for "Kay Sera Sera" Nominated
Best Choreography  Prabhu Deva for "Kay Sera Sera" Nominated
Best Publicity Design Himanshu Nanda and Rahul Nanda Won

References

  1. ^ Lall, Bhuvan (18 February 2000). "Hindi budget costs take off". Screen International. p. 10.
  2. ^ "Box office 2000". Archived from the original on 24 December 2006.
  3. ^ "Pukar". Sify. Archived from the original on 29 April 2022.
  4. ^ "Rediff on the NeT, Movies: The Pukar review". Archived from the original on 29 April 2022. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  5. ^ "2nd IIFA Awards 2001 Nominations". MSN. Microsoft. Archived from the original on 26 August 2001. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  6. ^ "48th National Film Awards" (PDF). Directorate of Film Festivals. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 July 2020. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  7. ^ "The 7th Annual Screen–Videocon Awards Nominations and Winners". Screen. 2001. Archived from the original on 19 February 2004. Retrieved 27 July 2022.