Aatank Hi Aatank
Aatank Hi Aatank | |
---|---|
Directed by | Dilip Shankar |
Written by | Dilip shankar |
Based on | The Godfather by Mario Puzo |
Produced by | Xavier Marquis (Presenter) Mangal |
Starring | Rajinikanth Aamir Khan Juhi Chawla |
Cinematography | Ashok Gunjal |
Edited by | Dilip Shankar |
Music by | Bappi Lahiri |
Production company | Suyash Films Pvt.Ltd |
Distributed by | Goldmines Media |
Release date |
|
Running time | 155 minutes[1] |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹2.5 crores ($770,000) |
Box office | ₹4.2 crores ($1.3 million) |
Aatank Hi Aatank (transl. Terror Everywhere) is a 1995 Indian Hindi-language action crime film written, edited and directed by Dilip Shankar. Highly inspired by The Godfather, it stars Rajinikanth, Aamir Khan, Juhi Chawla and Archana Joglekar.[2]
Released on 4 August 1995, the film was a box office failure.[3][4] In 2000, the film was dubbed into Tamil as Aandavan, with additional scenes reshot with Ponvannan, Vadivukkarasi and Chinni Jayanth lent his voice for Rajinikanth.[5] Khan eventually regretted doing the film and disliked his own performance.[6]
Plot
[edit]Shiv Charan Sharma, a farmer, moves to the city to make a life with his son Rohan, daughter Radha Seth and his wife. He meets Munna, an orphan. Shiv and Munna work hard in the underbelly of the city outside the law and go on to lead a syndicate of gangsters. Years pass by, and Shiv Charan Sharma is shown to have become an untouchable gang lord. Aslam Pathan and Billa Singh Thakur, rival crime bosses, try to kill Shiv in hopes of overtaking his territory and get rid of the opposition he was proving to be in their plans to increase drug traffic within the city.
Munna, meanwhile, falls in love with Razia, who is the daughter of Aslam Pathan. She elopes with Munna and gets married. Aslam Pathan attempts to get back at the father of the groom, by sending Gogia Advani to Shiv Charan Sharma with a drug proposition as he thinks that Shiv's acceptance of Gogia's offer would create dissent amongst the crime circles. Shiv Charan Sharma refuses, but Munna seems interested.
Shiv Charan Sharma gets shot by goons hired by Pathan and Thakur. They think that Munna will follow up on the drug deal if the father is out of the picture. However, the father survives. At this point, Rohan enters the picture with his girlfriend, Neha. He has kept away from the family business until this point. Rohan then avenges his father's shooting by taking out Gogia Advani with Munna's help. Following the shooting, Rohan is on the run, where he meets Ganga, whom he falls for too. Four years later, Rohan becomes the crime boss. In the end, Sharad Joshi takes a contract from Aslam Pathan and Billa Singh Thakur to kill Shiv, Charan Sharma, and Munna. It is to be seen how Rohan protects his brother and his father.
Cast
[edit]- Rajinikanth as Munna
- Aamir Khan as Rohan Singh Thakur
- Juhi Chawla as Neha
- Om Puri as Sharad Joshi
- Dalip Tahil as Robert
- Raza Murad as Aslam Pathan
- Goga Kapoor as Billa Singh Thakur
- Ishrat Ali as Shivcharan Sharma
- Rita Bhaduri as Mrs. Shivcharan Sharma
- Suhas Joshi as Mrs. Aslam Pathan
- Archana Joglekar as Razia Pathan
- Chandrashekhar Dubey as Durga Prasad Tiwari
- Kabir Bedi as Police Inspector (Special appearance)
- Pooja Bedi as Ganga (Special appearance)
- Radha Seth as Anju
- Firoz Irani as Masood Patel
- Vikas Anand as Mahesh
- Girja Shankar as Raka
- Bharat Kapoor as Gogia Adwani
- Joginder as Police Commissioner
- Amrit Pal as Zamindar
- Ram Mohan as Thakur
- Sameer Khakhar
Songs
[edit]- "O Meri Jane Jigar" - Kumar Sanu
- "Mohabbat Mitt Nahin Sakti" - Kavita Krishnamurthy
- "Aakha Hai Bombai" - Aparna Jha, Udit Narayan, Mohammed Aziz, Babla Mehta
- "Ek Dujhe Pe Marne Wale Nahi Kisi Se Darne Wale" - Alka Yagnik, Bappi Lahiri
- "Gunda Rap" - Bali Brahmbhatt, Arpita Raaj
- "Tere Siva Kaun Hai Mera" - Sadhana Sargam
References
[edit]- ^ "Aatank Hi Aatank". British Board of Film Classification.
- ^ "rediff.com: Aamir: Then & Now". specials.rediff.com.
- ^ "Aatank Hi Aatank - Movie". Box Office India.
- ^ Joginder Tuteja (13 November 2018). "Aamir Khan's Top 10 Flops". Rediff.com.
- ^ "Aandavan (2000) - Deva". Archived from the original on 4 September 2014 – via mio.to.
- ^ "Aamir Khan: I felt like I shouldn't have done 'Aatank Hi Aatank'". Misskyra.com. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
External links
[edit]- 1995 films
- Films scored by Bappi Lahiri
- 1990s Hindi-language films
- 1990s Indian films
- Works based on The Godfather
- Hindi-language crime films
- Indian crime action films
- Indian action drama films
- Indian gangster films
- 1990s crime action films
- 1995 action drama films
- Indian crime films
- Indian crime drama films
- Indian family films
- Films about brothers
- Films about father–son relationships
- Films about organised crime in India
- Films based on American crime novels
- Films set in Mumbai
- Films shot in Mumbai
- Fictional portrayals of the Maharashtra Police
- Indian remakes of American films
- Films based on adaptations
- Hindi remakes of English films