Rang De Basanti

Rang De Basanti

2006 "A Generation Awakens"
Rang De Basanti
Rang De Basanti

Rang De Basanti

8.1 | 2h37m | PG-13 | en | Drama

After a group of friends graduate from Delhi University, they listlessly haunt their old campus, until a British filmmaker casts them in a film she's making about freedom fighters under British rule. Although the group is largely apolitical, the tragic death of a friend owing to local government corruption awakens their patriotism. Inspired by the freedom fighters they represent in the film, the friends collectively decide to avenge the killing.

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8.1 | 2h37m | PG-13 | en | Drama , Comedy , History | More Info
Released: January. 26,2006 | Released Producted By: UTV Motion Pictures , Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra Pictures Country: India Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

After a group of friends graduate from Delhi University, they listlessly haunt their old campus, until a British filmmaker casts them in a film she's making about freedom fighters under British rule. Although the group is largely apolitical, the tragic death of a friend owing to local government corruption awakens their patriotism. Inspired by the freedom fighters they represent in the film, the friends collectively decide to avenge the killing.

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Cast

Aamir Khan , Siddharth , Kunal Kapoor

Director

Samir Chanda

Producted By

UTV Motion Pictures , Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra Pictures

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Reviews

pushkar_prakash RDB is a good movie, full of what the multiplex going crowd wants. What is in bad taste is that its a copy of a fantastic movie Ankush (Nana Patekar). The performance of the Ankush cast is just mind blowing, you'll have to see it to believe it. The storyline of Ankush is solid and hard hitting. In comparison, RDB is full of formula drama of bollywood. People who have never seen Ankush (and some who have even see it) think RDB is a great movie and not at all a copy of Ankush. The problem with copy cat movies like RDB is that, it kills creativity. Thanks to movies like Newton & Titli , there is still hope in bollywood.
gauravsgahlyan I do not usually write movie reviews, but RDB is a rare gem that needs to be appreciated. I have watched it 5-6 times, and it still makes me laugh out loud and cry every time. Aamir is brilliant as usual, but Siddharth's performance deserve a special mention. AR Rahman created a perfect score for this movie, and even at a near 3 hour run-time, the movie never feels stretched thanks to his music, and obviously, the gripping storyline. A must watch!
Vaibhav Khulbe (khulbevaibhav) The opening of the picture clearly present the way of living of Indian youth and their attitude towards their nation. Not only does it represent the youth mindset but also how a politician, a common man and several other people see each other. But the fictional turn which takes place after the death of their friend is something which someone would find fascinating about this movie. It also reminds the Indians about the sacrifices made by their freedom fighters by putting the friends in a situation where they find no option but to follow the path of rebels. The story line is perfectly flawless and the acting is awesome as well. Had there been no romantic part in the sequence, the movie is overall a must watch. Not just that, every time you watch it, irrespective of your nationality, you do develop an attitude to love your country. And that is what makes it to be a part of the top 250 must watch movies. I have now started finding better movies through www.flickstree.com. It not only suggest great movies to watch, it also tells where you can watch the movies online.. Highly recommended
aserdcerebral "One leg in the past, one leg in the future, this is why we're pissing on the present." So observes a character in Rang De Basanti. Of course, this is predicated on the assumption that it's men doing all the damage. In a Patriarchal country like the beautiful India, it's more than an implication. There's a cognitive dissonance, a man-made conflict of interests. It's a closed system with two interacting elements; the patriotic and the pecuniary.The film tells its story, one of mistakably dimming relevance, in a very calculated and inviting fashion. The fight for independence from the British, as a historical documentary being made on a zero(denied)-budget by an ambitious British post-adolescent woman, that needs re-enactments, which shall be done by the boisterously youthful protagonists. (They jump drunkenly off bridges where the original young revolutionaries jumped on moving trains.) This dissonance spills out of the narrative and into the film making craft itself; about 75% of the cuts in the film are truly cinematic, impressively invisible, and serve emotion and storytelling, the rest are so hip-hoppy you think Honey Singh is going to burst into the frame. The Dance Numbers are derivatively progressive.A subplot of external conflict, with a clique of militant dogmatists who are offended deeply (and paid heftily to take deep offence) by the 'Western-wannabeism' of the protagonists is inflated and paraded for us to notice, then buried for virtually the rest of the film.A key character crosses over from their side (a big key too, considering he's the one getting the money), gets a role in the documentary, and then only serves as a pair of fists and knees in a plot-hinging fight scene. After that, he's just a diffident extra in the documentary. Anyone paying attention to the story at this point will tell you he has more conflict, both internal and external, than all the other characters aggregated.That wouldn't leave running time for Aamir Khan's comic relief though, would it? But is this a story that needs relief, from what? The premise itself is a tricky compromise enough. I don't know whether it's the New Bollywood way of tickling the audience's ribs, but there's a whole lot of standing-up-and-stomping-around going on, it gets on your nerves, then bites down and gnaws on them.Still, the film is very dramatically effective, and there are enough 'realistic' performances from the core cast to sour-down and hair-up the cutesy syrupy moments. Consider, how the director sets up an in-joke about a television that reacts better to a well-timed slap than a turn of the knob. Without repeating the joke too many times, he hurtles the movie forward swiftly and smartly, and right before the intermission, supplies a Soap Opera proposal we don't want to see. The sly disconnect with which he uses the punchline of the T.V. joke to cut down silly romanticism with grim foreclosure is not only tragi-darkly-comic, it understates one of the movies running themes; "Put your life on the line for your country in this new world, you're not a revolutionary, you're Nuts." Safer to make movies and documentaries about stuff. Apropos, did Tropic Thunder steal its premise from this, strip away idealism and purpose?The message seems to be that, inherently oppressive, colonialism (ancestral to anti-nationalism in a way) is an indelible stain that only permeates wider and changes color with time. I heartily agree. However, wherever you stand on this contemplative time curve, you leave a puddle. Blood, tears, or likely, pxss.Overall, the film is an efficiently constructed, cleverly told and expertly presented crucial bit of overarching history, worth the demand of its running time.