Krrish
Krrish | |
---|---|
Directed by | Rakesh Roshan |
Screenplay by | Sachin Bhowmick Rakesh Roshan Akarsh Khurana Honey Irani Robin Bhatt |
Story by | Rakesh Roshan |
Produced by | Rakesh Roshan |
Starring | Hrithik Roshan Priyanka Chopra Naseeruddin Shah Rekha Sharat Saxena Manini Mishra |
Cinematography | Santosh Thundiyil |
Edited by | Amitabh Shukla |
Music by | Score: Salim–Sulaiman Songs: Rajesh Roshan |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Yash Raj Films (India) Adlabs (International)[1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | 175 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹40 crore[2] |
Box office | ₹126.55 crore[2] |
Krrish (Hindi pronunciation: [krɪʃ]) is a 2006 Indian superhero action thriller film directed and produced by Rakesh Roshan. The film stars Hrithik Roshan in a dual role, alongside Priyanka Chopra, Naseeruddin Shah, Rekha, Sharat Saxena and Manini Mishra. It is the second instalment in the Krrish franchise and a sequel to Koi... Mil Gaya. In the film, Krishna Mehra, who has superhuman abilities like his father Rohit Mehra, falls in love with Priya and follows her to Singapore, where he takes on the superhero persona of Krrish and sets out to thwart the plans of the evil scientist Dr. Siddhant Arya, who is creating a supercomputer which shows the future.
Krrish was conceived to be a film of global significance and a trendsetter in Indian cinema, with VFX on par with those from Hollywood. To that end, the effects team was aided by Marc Kolbe and Craig Mumma and the action scenes were choreographed by Tony Ching. The music was composed by Rajesh Roshan, while the background score was composed by Salim–Sulaiman. Filming was done to a large extent in Singapore as well as India.
Krrish was released worldwide on 23 June 2006 at a budget of ₹40 crore and on over 1000 prints both near-record amounts for an Indian film at the time.[3] The film received positive reviews from critics and received a record opening week at the box office. A blockbuster, Krrish grossed a worldwide total of ₹126 crore, becoming the second highest-grossing Indian film of 2006.[4] The film received 8 nominations at the 52nd Filmfare Awards, including Best Film, Best Director (Rakesh), Best Actor (Hrithik) and Best Supporting Actress (Rekha) and won 3 awards, including Best Special Effects. At the 8th IIFA Awards, the film received 9 nominations, and won 3 awards, including Best Actor (Hrithik). It also won the National Film Award for Best Special Effects.
The third film in the series, Krrish 3 was released in 2013 whereas, the fourth installment is set to be released in 2026.
Plot
[edit]This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (August 2024) |
Krishna Mehra, a five-year-old orphaned son of the deceased scientist Dr. Rohit Mehra, lives in the small town of Kasauli with his grandmother Sonia. Krishna undergoes an intelligence quotient test by his school principal Father Robericks, who suspects that Krishna has biologically inherited Rohit's superhuman abilities due to Krishna answering all the questions flawlessly. Shocked at learning this, Sonia takes the young Krishna to a remote mountain village in North India to conceal his unique abilities, not wanting to lose Krishna the same way she lost Rohit and her daughter-in-law Nisha Mehra.
Two decades later, Krishna, a youngster, meets vacationing girls Priya and Honey, who are taken camping near his home by Krishna's friend Bahadur. After Krishna saves Priya from a hang glider accident, the two become friends and grow close just before Priya and Honey depart for their home in Singapore. Before leaving, Priya and Honey have witnessed first-hand some of the special abilities that Krishna exhibits, like talking to animals and superhuman strength. After returning to Singapore, Priya and Honey are fired by their boss for taking a non-permitted 5-day extension of vacation.
In an attempt to keep their jobs, Honey suggests inviting Krishna to Singapore and making a television program about him. Priya, aware of Krishna's love for her, invites him to join her in Singapore. However, Sonia protests this by stating that the people there will only wish to exploit his abilities and explains to Krishna that his father Rohit was invited to Singapore and hired by a scientist Dr. Siddhant Arya to help create a computer to see the future in order to prevent wars and help prepare against natural disasters. On the night of Krishna's birth, Rohit contacted his mother to inform her that his superpowers were being misused and reportedly died in a laboratory accident that night, but his corpse was not recovered. Nisha soon dies shortly after as she was unable to bear the shock. After learning this, Krishna promises Sonia that he will never reveal his powers and she permits him to go to Singapore, aware of his feelings towards Priya.
Krishna arrives in Singapore and during the production of the television program, Krishna keeps his word, causing Priya and Honey to get fired again with the program revealing nothing exceptional about him. Later, Krishna meets a stunt performer, Kristian Li, who is attempting to raise funds to pay for his handicapped young sister's leg surgery. Kristian invites Krishna and Priya to the Great Bombay Circus, but during the performance, a firework explodes and ignites the tent, which is swiftly evacuated. Several children remain trapped in the blaze and Krishna is faced with the dilemma of saving the children without revealing his abilities. Krishna applies a broken black clown's mask lying on the floor and wears his jacket on inside-out, creating the persona of Krrish. After a few days, Kristian witnesses Krrish fighting some goons and removing his mask, where he gets shocked to learn that his friend Krishna is Krrish. As Krrish is being offered a reward for his deeds, Krishna asks Kristian to assume his identity so that he can pay for his sister's surgery.
Meanwhile, Priya and Honey learns that Krishna is Krrish after they see the footage from the video camera that was in Priya's hand. They decide to release the footage on TV to enable Krishna to become a world-famous celebrity. During their discussions, Krishna arrives and overhears the girls talking about how Priya had been lying to him and will create a big sensation by revealing his identity to the world. Just before Priya confesses to Honey that in this drama she has genuinely fallen in love with Krishna, Krishna leaves, dejected. After being confronted by Krishna at his hotel about what she said, Priya realises her mistake and sets out to stop her boss from revealing Krrish's identity. Priya rushes to the speech event of Dr. Arya, which her boss has been attending. In the process, Priya meets Vikram Sinha, the senior security officer of Dr. Arya, who has been searching for Krishna and his grandmother for the past 20 years. With the help of Sinha, Priya recovers the footage from her boss. Sinha meets Krishna and reveals that Rohit is actually alive. Sinha explains that he and Rohit were close friends and reveals that after completing the machine, Rohit and Sinha tested it and were shocked to see Dr. Arya holding Rohit at gunpoint. Rohit realized that Dr. Arya was going to kill him and later use the machine for his own selfish needs. Rohit was able to destroy the computer, before being taken as a prisoner by Dr. Arya, who spread the fake news that Rohit died in a laboratory accident.
Meanwhile, Dr. Arya has rebuilt the computer after 20 years and tests the computer to reveal his future, where he is shocked to see Krrish killing him. In an attempt to change his future, Dr. Arya quickly visits Kristian's house and shoots Kristian dead, believing him to be Krrish. After learning about Kristian's death, Krrish uses his superhuman speed to pursue Dr. Arya to his remote island, where he has imprisoned Rohit. When Dr. Arya looks into the future again, he sees that the visual has not changed and is shocked to see Krrish still alive and on his island. When Krrish enters the compound, there is a vicious fight with Dr. Arya's thugs,xwhom Krrish eventually defeats, but Dr. Arya shoots Sinha dead and holds Priya and Rohit at gunpoint. Krrish saves Priya and Rohit and injures Dr. Arya fatally. With his last breath, Dr. Arya learns about Krrish's identity. After revealing to Rohit that Krishna is his son, Krishna and Priya take Rohit with them back to India, reuniting him with Sonia. Rohit learns that Nisha had died after he disappeared, where mourns her along with Sonia, Krishna and Priya. Rohit uses the supercomputer created by his late father to summon his alien friend, Jadoo, whose spaceship can be seen from a distance.
Cast
[edit]Main cast
[edit]- Hrithik Roshan in a dual role as:
- Dr. Rohit Mehra, a scientist, Krishna's father
- Krishna Mehra / Krrish, Priya's love interest, Rohit's son and Sonia's grandson
- Priyanka Chopra as Priya, Krishna's love interest, Honey's friend
- Rekha as Sonia Mehra, Krishna's grandmother and Rohit's mother
- Naseeruddin Shah as Dr. Siddhant Arya, a scientist
- Sharat Saxena as Vikram Sinha, Dr. Arya's senior security officer
- Manini Mishra as Honey Arora; Priya's friend
- Puneet Issar as Komal Singh; Priya's camp leader
- Akash Khurana as Father Robericks, a Catholic school principal
- Hemant Pandey as Bahadur, Krishna's friend
Supporting cast
[edit]- Ahmad Khan as Dr. Mathur
- Bin Xia as Kristian Li
- Edgar Noordanus
- Mithilesh Chaturvedi
- Zain Khan as Chintu, Krishna's friend
- Fardeen Hussaini as Krishna's friend
- Mickey Dhamijani as Krishna's friend
- Yu Xuan as Kristian's sister
Special appearances
[edit]- Archana Puran Singh as Nayantara, Priya and Honey's boss
- Kiran Juneja as Priya's mother
- Preity Zinta as Nisha Mehra, Krishna's mother and Rohit's wife
- Rakesh Roshan as Dr. Sanjay Mehra, Krishna's grandfather and Rohit's father (archive footage)
Production
[edit]Development
[edit]In November 2004, the Roshans confirmed they would produce a sequel to Koi... Mil Gaya (2003).[5][6] They announced that actors Hrithik Roshan and Rekha would return for the sequel, but that Preity Zinta would be replaced by Priyanka Chopra.[6] Chopra also confirmed the same, adding, "The story will start where Koi... Mil Gaya ended."[6] Before Chopra, Amrita Rao was cast as the female lead, and she and Hrithik starred in a photoshoot. However, the results of the photoshoot left Rakesh Roshan dissatisfied, and thus Rao was removed from the project.[7] Rakesh Roshan hoped that the film would be remembered as the first to prove that the Indian film industry is equal to Hollywood.[8] He decided to push the story forward by focusing on the son of the previous films's protagonist, who would inherit his father's special abilities.[5] The story combined elements of Indian mythology (the main character's name Krishna alludes to the Hindu Lord Krishna),[9] Chinese martial arts and Hollywood films to set itself up as a film of global significance.[10]
Pre-production
[edit]Rakesh Roshan wanted Krrish to be a trendsetter in Indian cinema, with visual effects on par with Hollywood films.[11] He hired Hollywood special effects experts Marc Kolbe and Craig Mumma, who had both previously worked on such films as Independence Day, Godzilla and Sky Captain, to help create the visual effects for the film.[12][13][14] Roshan also hired Hong Kong action director Tony Ching after admiring his work in Hero. Before production began, Hrithik Roshan went to China to train with Ching for the cable work that would be needed to make his character "fly".[15] A storyboard of the film was prepared and sent to Ching to help him develop the action sequences.[16] Additional production credits include: Farah Khan – choreographer, Samir Chanda and Sham Kaushal – art directors, Baylon Fonesca and Nakul Kamte – sound, Nahush Pise – makeup artist, Sham Kaushal – assistant action director.[17]
Filming
[edit]Krrish was the first Indian film to be shot in Singapore under the Singapore Tourism Board's Film-in-Singapore subsidy scheme, and over 60% of the film was shot there.[18] Shooting was accomplished on location over a span of 2 months, from September to November 2005.[19] Locations featured included the Singapore Zoo, the Gateway building, and the Singapore National Library.[20] Another major filming location was Robinson Road, where heavy rains caused production delays.[21] The Singapore police were on location to block roads and protect the filming equipment,[21] such as when the film's action scenes required two 250-foot high industrial cranes.[16] Author Audrey Yue noted that the film shoot benefited Singapore by leading to domestic and Indian film-induced tourism.[18]
Filming also took place in Manali and Film City in Mumbai.[22] During filming of a flying stunt, one of the wires that was tied to Hrithik Roshan broke, causing him to fall 50 feet, though he landed safely on a shop's canopy.[23] Hrithik described the incident as a "freak accident", stating, "I was skydiving to my death till I fell on a six-feet-long canopy of a shop that was out because of the slight drizzle. The canopy had iron rods. But I missed those rods too. What do I say? I guess the right word to describe the situation would be jadoo (magic)."[23] Roshan also suffered other injuries during the film's production. He tore the hamstring in his right leg during a circus scene, singed his hair while running through fire in another action scene, and broke his thumb and toe during strenuous training for the wirework.[24]
Post-production
[edit]Indian firm Prasad EFX assigned a team of more than 100 VFX specialists to work with Marc Kolbe and Craig Mumma to create the visual effects for the film.[12][13][14] Included were sophisticated 3D modelling and computer animation, including whole body scans, 3D replicas of vehicles, fire sequences, complicated wire removals and compositing work.[12] They prepared over 1,200 VFX shots, accounting for approximately 90 minutes of screen time.[11][25] Describing the effects, Rakesh Roshan stated, "If you liked the visual effects in Koi... Mil Gaya, you will find them far better in Krrish. I do not think audiences have seen anything like this in Hindi films."[26][27]
Music
[edit]Krrish | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 28 April 2006 | |||
Recorded | 2005 | |||
Genre | Film soundtrack | |||
Label | T-Series | |||
Producer | Rajesh Roshan | |||
Rajesh Roshan chronology | ||||
|
The film's soundtrack, composed by Rajesh Roshan, was released on 28 April 2006 by T-Series.[28] Lyricists included Ibraheem Ashk, Nasir Faraaz, and Vijay Akela. Salim–Sulaiman provided the background score. It became the seventh best-selling Bollywood soundtrack of the year.[29]
- Hindi
No. | Title | Lyrics | Singers | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Pyaar Ki Ek Kahaani" | Ibraheem Ashk | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:28 |
2. | "Koi Tumsa Nahin" | Nasir Faraaz | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:15 |
3. | "Chori Chori Chupke Chupke" | Nasir Faraaz | Udit Narayan, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:28 |
4. | "Dil Na Diya" | Vijay Akela | Kunal Ganjawala | 5:54 |
5. | "Main Hoon Woh Aasmaan" | Nasir Faraaz | Rafaqat Ali Khan, Alka Yagnik | 6:40 |
6. | "Big Band Mix" | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:01 | |
7. | "Mystic Love Mix" | Rafaqat Ali Khan, Alka Yagnik | 5:12 | |
Total length: | 42:58 |
- Tamil[30]
No. | Title | Lyrics | Singers | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Then Vadikkum" | Piraisoodan | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:28 |
2. | "Un Pol Yaarum" | Piraisoodan | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:15 |
3. | "Sokki Sokki Summa" | Piraisoodan | Udit Narayan, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:28 |
4. | "Dil Illaiya" | Piraisoodan | Kunal Ganjawala | 5:54 |
5. | "Naane Un Vaaname" | Piraisoodan | Gopal Rao, Alka Yagnik | 6:40 |
6. | "Big Band Mix" | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:01 | |
7. | "Mystic Love Mix" | Gopal Rao, Alka Yagnik | 5:12 | |
Total length: | 42:58 |
Reception
[edit]Critical reviews of the soundtrack were generally favourable, though some in the media called it a disappointment.[8] Joginder Tuteja of Bollywood Hungama gave the album a rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, saying that it was "another good outing for Bollywood music lovers." He especially praised the songs "Chori Chori", "Koi Tumsa Nahi" and "Pyaar Ki Ek Kahaani."[31] Sukanya Verma of Rediff gave a favourable review for the soundtrack's "catchy" songs. However, she felt that while the songs meshed with the film, "none of them bear the staying power of Rajesh Roshan's earlier soundtracks."[32] Dr. Mandar V. Bichu of Gulf News said that it did not live up to the pre-release expectations.[33]
Marketing
[edit]As a part of the marketing, Merchandise was offered for sale prior to the film's release to maximize profits. These included action figures, masks, and other toys.[34][35]
A Krrish game was made in 2006 by Indiagames after the release of Krrish.[36]
Release
[edit]Theatrical
[edit]The final budget of Krrish came to ₹40 crore,[3] which at that time was considered a big-budget film by Hindi film standards.[5][37] The film was released on 23 June 2006 with 1,000 prints.[38] Krrish was simultaneously released along with dubbed versions in Tamil and Telugu languages.[39] It was the first Indian film to receive payments in advance for product placement, music, and international distribution rights.[40]
Home media
[edit]The film's DVD was released in Region 1 on 18 August 2006, by Adlabs.[41] On 21 August 2006, it was released for all regions by Filmkraft.[42] Adlabs also released a Blu-ray version.[43]
Film festivals
[edit]It was also notably screened under the "Informative Screening (Feature)" film category at the 2014 Pyongyang International Film Festival in North Korea.[44]
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]Krrish had a good opening week,[45] and tickets were reportedly selling for many times the original cost at some locations.[46] Total gross collections were an Indian record of ₹41.6 crore (₹29.7 crore nett) for its opening week.[47] Krrish became the fourth-highest-grossing film of 2006, earning over ₹69 crore nett in India alone, and was classified as a "Blockbuster" by Box Office India.[48] It also grossed ₹31.68 crore in the overseas market, where it was declared a "hit".[49] The final worldwide total gross was ₹126 crore.[4][50] One week after Krrish was released, another superhero film, Superman Returns was released in India. Rakesh Roshan stated, "I was a little skeptical that Superman might hurt me, but fortunately it didn't." In fact, Krrish fared better at the box office in India than Superman Returns did.[38]
Critical response
[edit]On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 88% of 8 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7/10.[51]
India
[edit]Krrish received positive reviews from critics in India.[52] Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama believed that the film surpassed expectations, but felt that there were issues with pacing in first hour. Overall, he deemed Krrish to be "a terrifically exciting and compelling experience", and awarded the film 4.5 of 5 stars.[53] Nikhat Kazmi noted in The Times of India that while the superhero and action sequences were appealing, there were not enough of them. He was also not excited by the romantic parts, comparing them to a sightseeing tour, first in India and then in Singapore. He said that overall, this film lacks the fun of its predecessor.[54] On the other hand, Raja Sen said that Krrish was infinitely better than KMG, though ultimately it was all about Hrithik Roshan. Sen and Sukanya Verma, writing for Rediff, both gave the film 3 out of 5 stars, and both said that it was a good film for children. Sen summarised, "So, is it a good superhero movie? No, but it's well-intentioned. It's a full-on kiddie movie, and while a lot of us might be scornful of Krrish, it's heartening to see fantasy officially entering mainstream Bollywood."[55] Verma agreed with other critics that it took too long for the action to get started, and said that a lot of attention was spent showing off Roshan's muscles. He summarised, "Krrish neither has the sleek aura nor the deep-rooted ideology of superheroes. What it does have is a super-spirited performance from Hrithik Roshan, which is likely to appeal to children. And that's worth a three-star cheer."[56] Saibal Chatterjee wrote in the Hindustan Times that Krrish is a hackneyed, formulaic masala film, with special effects added on top, and hoped that this would not be the future of Bollywood.[57] Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN condemned the screenplay and thought that the only thing that made the film watchable was the acting of Hrithik Roshan. He gave the film only 2 out of 5 stars, saying "Krrish is only an average film that could have been so much better if the makers had concentrated as hard on its story as they did on its action and stunts."[58]
Overseas
[edit]Overseas reviews were positive.[59] Richard James Havis of The Hollywood Reporter stated, "This Bollywood epic crunches together romance, comedy, extraterrestrials, martial arts, dancing and action to tell an entertaining story about a reluctant Indian superhero" but said it may be "far too crazed for foreign viewers".[59] David Chute of LA Weekly deemed it a "hearty pulp cinema that really sticks to your ribs".[60] Likewise, Laura Kern of The New York Times said it was a blend of carefree romance, show-stopping action and sci-fi.[61] Ronnie Scheib of Variety said that it was an "enjoyable, daffily improbable escapist romp". He praised the action sequences as ingeniously choreographed, but very family-friendly.[62] Though Jaspreet Pandohar of BBC was critical of the script for being "low on originality", he praised Hrithik Roshan's performance and the action scenes.[63] Dr. P.V. Vaidyanathan, in a review for BBC Shropshire, said that the film's excellent special effects were as good as the best from Hollywood, praised Hrithik's acting, but called the music mundane.[64]
Accolades
[edit]Krrish was one of India's possible nominations for the 2007 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film, but the country ultimately chose Rang De Basanti as its pick.[65] Despite this, Krrish won numerous awards, including 3 Filmfare Awards—Best Special Effects, Best Action and Best Background Score—and was nominated for Best Film, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress and Best Villain at the 52nd Filmfare Awards.[66][67] At the 2007 IIFA Awards, Krrish won Best Actor,[68][69] Best Action, and Best Special Effects. Rakesh Roshan won the Creative Person of the Year title at the same ceremony. Additionally, the film was nominated in the following categories at the ceremony: Best Director, Best Music and Best Story.[70][71][72]
Hrithik Roshan won other acting awards that year, including the Star Screen Award Best Actor,[73] Zee Cine Award for Best Actor – Male,[74] BFJA – Best Actor Award (Hindi)[75] and GIFA Best Actor.[76] The film's special effects won the National Film Award for Best Special Effects.[77] The film also took Best Picture honours at the Matri Shree Media Awards.[78]
In a showing of the film's popularity with children, Krrish swept the major film categories at the Pogo Amazing Kids Awards, which are voted on by children across India. Winners were: Hrithik Roshan (Most Amazing Actor — Male), Priyanka Chopra (Most Amazing Actor — Female), Krrish (Most Amazing Film), Special Effects in Krrish (Most Amazing Moment in a film).[79]
Won
- Best Background Score – Salim–Sulaiman
- Best Special Effects – EFX
- Best Action – Tony Ching & Siu-Tung
Nominated
- Best Film – Rakesh Roshan
- Best Director – Rakesh Roshan
- Best Actor – Hrithik Roshan
- Best Supporting Actress – Rekha
- Best Villain – Naseeruddin Shah
- Best Sound Design – Jeetendra Choudhary, Baylon Fonsecai & Nakul KamrE
Sequel
[edit]After the success of Krrish, Rakesh Roshan announced that he would be making a sequel, tentatively titled Krrish 3. He confirmed that Hrithik Roshan and Priyanka Chopra would reprise their roles,[80] and that the antagonists would be played by Vivek Oberoi and Kangana Ranaut.[81]
See also
[edit]References
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{{cite news}}
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Further reading
[edit]- Chopra, Anupama (11 June 2006). "In Krrish, Bollywood Gets a Superhero of Its Own". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 3 February 2016. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
- Bhardwaj, Priyanka (19 May 2006). "Foreign shoots spread Bollywood's reach". Asia Times. Archived from the original on 1 June 2006.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - Singer, Matt (10 July 2009). "Reinventing the Superhero for Bollywood". IFC. Archived from the original on 17 January 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
- Akhtar, Shabina (23 October 2011). "From superstars to supermen". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2 November 2011. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
External links
[edit]- 2006 films
- Krrish
- 2000s Hindi-language films
- 2000s Indian films
- 2000s superhero films
- 2006 science fiction action films
- Circus films
- Fiction about brain–computer interface
- Film superheroes
- Films about alien visitations
- Films about camping
- Films about computing
- Films about journalists
- Films about orphans
- Films about precognition
- Films adapted for other media
- Films adapted into comics
- Films adapted into television shows
- Films directed by Rakesh Roshan
- Films distributed by Yash Raj Films
- Films scored by Rajesh Roshan
- Films set in Himachal Pradesh
- Films set in Singapore
- Films shot in Singapore
- Films that won the Best Special Effects National Film Award
- Films with screenplays by Akash Khurana
- Films with screenplays by Robin Bhatt
- Films with screenplays by Sachin Bhowmick
- India–North Korea relations
- Indian action adventure films
- Indian romantic action films
- Indian romantic musical films
- Indian science fiction action films
- Indian science fiction adventure films
- Indian science fiction romance films
- Indian sequel films
- Indian superhero films
- Mad scientist films
- Science fiction musical films