FLASHBACK | 20 October, 2023
(From our issue dated 24th October, 1998)

HERO HINDUSTANI

R.G. Films (India)’s Hero Hindustani is a comedy fare with some emotions thrown in too. A millionaire Indian, settled in London, compels his grand-daughter to go to India and get married to the (Indian) boy selected by him. The grand-daughter loves somebody else in London and, with the aim of fooling her grandfather, agrees to follow his instructions but on the condition that she will go to India unannounced and marry the selected boy only if found suitable. In India, she meets a tourist guide who is young, smart, talkative and intelligent. She takes him along to London and bluffs to her grandfather that he is her Indian husband. The guide is least interested in marriage, but he slowly and surely wins the heart of the old man. Not only that, he also wins over the girl herself who used to hitherto hate him.

The film has several light moments but while some of them are enjoyable, others are oft-repeated and, therefore, lack freshness and novelty. The story, which reminds of Manchali, looks somewhat farcical but is not completely hilarious to offset its farcical character. There are some emotions but, except in one scene, they don’t really touch the heart. Dialogues are quite nice.

Arshad Warsi does well. Namrata Shirodkar is fair and makes a real impact in a dramatic scene towards the end. Paresh Rawal performs ably. Kader Khan, Shakti Kapoor and Asrani lend a few enjoyable moments. Parmeet Sethi, Reena Kapoor, Sanam Patel, Bharat Kapoor, Shehzaad Khan and the rest of the artistes are alright.

Aziz Sajawal’s direction is reasonably good but he could have added more punch to the drama and made it into a hilarious entertainer. Music is appealing although the absence of a hit number is sorely felt, more so because the film has no popular lead stars. All the same, the title song, ‘Deewana deewana’, ‘Aisi waisi baat nahin’ and ‘Chand nazar aa gaya’ are hummable. Song picturisations are eye-pleasing. Action is functional. Camerawork (Najeeb Khan) is of a good standard. Editing should have been better. Production and other technical values are nice.

On the whole, Hero Hindustani is a fair entertainer but will suffer mainly because of its lead artistes who don’t have any star-status. Its chances in circuits like East Punjab, Bengal, Bihar and Rajasthan are bleak, and in Maharashtra, fair.

Released on 20-10-’98 at Metro (matinee) and 3 other cinemas and on 23-10-’98 at 11 more cinemas of Bombay by Shreeji Enterprises thru Shringar Films. Publicity: very good. Opening: quite good. …….Also released all over. 1st 3 days Ahmedabad 84,266/-, Rajkot (matinee) 18,758/-, Solapur 63,062/-, Varanasi 24,925/-, Allahabad 51,500/-, Lucknow (2 days) 90,218/-, Nagpur (3 days) 91,639/- from 4 cinemas, Akola 48,200/-, Raipur (2 days) 43,365, Jabalpur (2 days) 48,688/-, Amravati (2 days) 55,728/-, Jodhpur 77,000/-, Bikaner 66,057/-, Hyderabad 4,21,235/- from 4 cinemas.

LATEST POSITION

Diwali this year has been joyous for the film industry as both the major releases of last week, BADE MIYAN CHOTE MIYAN and KUCH KUCH HOTA HAI, have done extraordinary business in the holiday week. In Bombay city-suburbs, it is after ages that two films have recorded 100% collections in the first week.

Bade Miyan Chote Miyan has recorded mind-boggling collections amidst mixed reports. Quite a heavy drop was noticed mid-week onwards in West Bengal and Rajasthan. Also dropped on 8th day in C.I. It is super-strong in Bombay. 1st week Bombay 61,08,012 (100%) from 14 cinemas (9 on F.H.), Amar-Chembur 4,15,425; Ahmedabad 14,40,826 from 6 cinemas, Baroda 100%, Rajkot 3,15,700 from 2 cinemas, Jamnagar 1,79,231 from 2 cinemas (1 in matinee, 1 unrecd.), Bhuj 1,46,848; Sangli 100%, Kolhapur 2,61,909, Solapur 4,16,958 from 2 cinemas; Hubli 1,84,599 from 2 cinemas (1 in noon), Belgaum 1,12,799 (100%); Delhi 66,39,906 (88.46%) from 15 cinemas (3 on F.H.); Kanpur 2,96,415 (1 unrecd.), Lucknow (26 shows) 4,43,547 (1 unrecd.), Varanasi 2,16,775, Allahabad 2,74,000, Meerut 2,63,760 (100%), Bareilly (6 days) 1,83,461 (73.77%); Rohtak 70,821; Calcutta 34,59,904 from 24 cinemas; Nagpur 10,63,969 from 6 cinemas, Jabalpur (3 days) 1,97,214, Amravati (3 days) 1,36,032, Akola (3 days) 1,44,873, Raipur (3 days) 2,77,497 from 2 cinemas, Durg (3 days) 1,16,451, Jalgaon (3 days) 1,57,444 from 2 cinemas, Bhusawal (2 days) 100%, Wardha (3 days) 53,029, Chandrapur (4 days) 1,44,900, Yavatmal (3 days) 91,200, Khandwa (3 days) 1,06,438 from 2 cinemas; Indore 4,73,970 (60.82%) from 3 cinemas (3 on F.H.), Bhopal 6,42,700 from 3 cinemas; Jaipur 15,09,871 from 6 cinemas; Hyderabad 41,86,713 from 16 cinemas (3 in noon); Bangalore share about 15,00,000 from 8 cinemas; Vijayawada 2,95,330.

Kuch Kuch Hota Hai has collected outstanding and the appreciation is outstanding. 1st week Bombay 60,60,084 (100%) from 12 cinemas (5 on F.H.); Ahmedabad 15,60,208 from 5 cinemas, Baroda 2,24,855 (100%), Valsad 3,49,644 (94.40%), Padra 3,01,176, Rajkot 1,70,680 (1 unrecd.), Jamnagar 1,91,768 from 2 cinemas (1 in matinee), Adipur 1,49,830, Anjar 92,500; Kolhapur 100%, Solapur 2,25,595 (100%); Hubli 3,43,403 (100%), Belgaum 1,27,890 (100%); Delhi 49,64,896 (93.10%) from 9 cinemas, Ghaziabad 2,78,249, total 57,81,757 from 11 cinemas; Kanpur 6,80,591 from 2 cinemas, Lucknow (30 shows) 5,58,120 (100%), Varanasi 3,69,908, Allahabad 2,28,100, Bareilly (6 days) 1,82,612 (75.10%), Hardwar 1,52,000; Rohtak 47,941; Calcutta  27,02,771 from 12 cinemas (others were on F.H.); Nagpur 8,19,640 from 3 cinemas, Amravati 2,80,036, Akola 1,95,000 (100%), Raipur (6 days) 1,71,512, Jalgaon (6 days) 1,76,045, Gondia (30 shows) 1,26,475, Chandrapur (29 shows) 2,15,930; Indore 6,29,498 (75.96%) from 3 cinemas (1 on F.H.), Bhopal (3 days) 1,95,701; Jaipur 11,93,358 from 3 cinemas, Ajmer (29 shows) 1,58,766, Bikaner 2,42,938, did wonderful in Kota; Hyderabad 41,91,493 from 15 cinemas (2 in noon), share 23,64,572; Bangalore 1st week share about 18 lakh (excellent); fantastic in Overseas — 1st week’s figures are all-time records in London and USA.

……….

AJIT BIDS ADIEU

One of the most popular villains of Hindi cinema, Ajit, passed away on 21st October at a private nursing home in Hyderabad. He was 76. Earlier last week, he had been admitted to the nursing home following a heart attack. He was buried on the morning of 22nd at the Jamali Kunta burial ground near Golkonda Fort in the city.

Ajit’s real name was Hamid Ali Khan. Born in 1922 in Hyderabad, he ran away from home in the early forties to try his luck in Hindi films. After a long struggle, he received a big break when he starred as a hero in Dholak in 1951. The film’s flopping at the box-office only lengthened Ajit’s struggling period until K. Asif’s Mughal-E-Azam released in 1960. His portrayal of Durjan Sinh, the loyal Rajput ally of Prince Salim, in the film won him instant recognition. Ajit began getting roles regularly thereafter.

In the mid-sixties, Ajit switched to another area of acting which, in no time, became his speciality. He played his first role as a villain in Suraj in 1966 and soon, developed a style of his own through successive films. His trademark dialogue delivery together with his natty sense of dressing and polished performances almost immediately catapulted him to the numero uno position among the villains in Hindi films. Together with his favourite sidekicks, ‘Mona Darling’ and ‘Raabert’, Ajit made a permanent place in the hearts of millions by proclaiming ‘Saari duniya mujhe Loin ke naam se jaanti hai!’ in Kalicharan. In fact, Mona Darrrling, Raabert (Robert) and Loin (Lion) continue to spawn off many a joke even today.

In a career spanning over four decades, Ajit acted in more than 200 films. Among his best remembered films are Shikari, Maa Ke Ansoo, Naya Daur (where he played a parallel lead with Dilip Kumar), Raja Aur Rank, Heer Ranjha, Jeevan Mrityu, Dharma, Jugnu, Kahani Kismat Ki, Yaadon Ki Baaraat, Zanjeer, Kalicharan, Mr. Natwarlal, Ram Balram and Razia Sultan.

Ajit quit acting in the early eighties following a by-pass surgery in the US. He later made a comeback with Police Officer in 1992 and subsequently, he acted in Jigar too. Later, he played some insignificant roles in a few other films. His last film was Dev Anand’s Gangster.

PRODUCTION NEWS

Raj Kanwar’s Film In Mauritius

An 11-day shooting spell of Inderjit Films Combine’s Prod. No. 2 will commence in Mauritius from Oct. 28. Two songs will be picturised featuring Mahima Chaudhry and Chandrachur Singh. The film also stars Sanjay Dutt, Shakti Kapoor and Raj Babbar. It is being produced and directed by Raj Kanwar from a screenplay by Robin Bhatt and Akash Khurana. Dialogues: Jainendra Jain. Choreographer: B.H. Tharun Kumar. Music director Rajesh Roshan has recorded all the seven songs penned by Sameer.

DO YOU KNOW?

* DDLJ has collected 55.72 lakh in 100 weeks’ run in matinee shows at Maratha Mandir, Bombay. The average collection of the 100 weeks is 74.48% of the capacity. It is now running in 101st week (154th combined week).

* Naaz cinema of Bombay, which had been boycotted by Hindi film distributors, has restarted screening Hindi films now. It ran GAMBLER (r.r.) last week and is currently screening DUSHMAN (r.r.).

* To cash in on the success of PYAAR TO HONA HI THA, Bombay distributors Mahalakshmi Film Distributors, will revive the Ajay Devgan starrer, HAQEEQAT, from 30th October in Bombay city & suburbs, with 15 prints. The concern has decided to use the chain of cinemas which it had booked for its PARDESI BABU (now postponed).

* Three hundred ladies were allowed free in every show on the opening day of SOON LADKI SASARCHI (Marathi; TF) at Shree Natwar, Jalgaon.

* TITANIC will be the first Hollywood film to celebrate silver jubilee (next week) at Rajshree, Baroda.

3-E
Education-Entertainment-Enlightenment

The Worst Maintained Cinemas

In the Film Information opinion poll  conducted by us last week (results printed in our Silver jubilee-cum-Diwali bumper issue), distributors reacted differently to our poser about the worst maintained cinemas in Bombay. While some refused to comment, there were a few who said, the list was long, very long. A couple of them opined that 75% of the cinemas were badly maintained. A summary of the replies of the various distributors confirmed that the worst maintained cinemas of Bombay are: Naaz, Dreamland, Shalimar, Super, Imperial, Hindmata, Star, Nandi, Sangam, Sangeeta, Uday, Odeon, Mehul, Pratap, Moti, Alankar, Royal, Nishat, New Roshan, Gulshan, Alfred…..

Quotable Quotes on CENSORSHIP….

“Censorship should be totally abolished. Cricketer Mohinder Amarnath once said that the Indian Cricket Board selectors were a pack of jokers. I would like to say that the censor board consists of a pack of jokers. They have given my Jaihind a ‘UA’ certificate while giving the trailer an ‘A’. Now, what could be a bigger joke than this?”

– Manoj Kumar

“Khatam kar do censors ko! Sab katke haath mein de dete hain aur maal khaate hain industry ka!”

– Farooq Sayed

“In my opinion, no cuts should be ordered in a film certified for adults. The audience today are mature enough to appreciate bold scenes.”

– Mukesh Bhatt

ON THE CURRENT STATE OF FILMS….

“Producers and directors have lost their status. When I entered the film industry, people used to say ‘Yeh Mehboob Khan ki film hai, yeh Raj Kapoor ki film hai, yeh K. Asif ki film hai’. Today, the audiences say, ‘Yeh Shah Rukh ki film hai, yeh Salman ki film hai’. It is not a healthy sign.”

– Manoj Kumar

“Today, stars lack basic morals. They have no business ethics or commitment towards their producers. This is one of the most serious problems with our industry.”

– Devendra T. Shah
(Bombay distributor)

“All steps are futile in a country like India.”

– Manoj Khivasara (Bombay distributor)
(When asked what could be done to tackle the menace of cable piracy in India.)

“Hire mafia or Shiv Sena to tackle the problem.”

– Ramesh Sippy (Bombay distributor)
(When asked what would be the most effective step against cable menace.)

“Stink!”

– Shyam Shroff (Bombay distributor & financier)
(When asked what his main complaint against cinemas was.)

“The one in which we all distributors are situated.”

– Ashok Ahuja (Bombay distributor)
(When asked to name the worst cinema in Bombay.)

Kajol Charisma

Kajol has undoubtedly emerged as the queen of the box-office in the past year or so. As many as four out of her five films released since Diwali ’97 have proven trumps at the turnstiles. Her tremendous rise to the top-notch spot in the past year began with Indra Kumar’s Ishq, followed by Pyaar Kiya To Darna Kya, Pyaar To Hona Hi Tha and now, Karan Johar’s Kuch Kuch Hota Hai. Only one of her films, Dushman, didn’t do well in this period, and even then, she walked away with a lot of critical acclaim for her performance in that film. No wonder then that the Film Information Opinion Poll ’98 showed as many as 66% of Bombay distributors voting in her favour when asked who the best heroine vis-à-vis her price was today. Considering the fact that KKHH hadn’t even released when we conducted the poll, the number should be much higher now, since KKHH seems all set to break many existing records at the box-office.

Incidentally, the Shah Rukh – Kajol combination is fast becoming one of the most successful star-pairs of Indian cinema. They have so far appeared together in four films, each of which has been a super-success. The films, as we all know, are Baazigar, Karan Arjun, Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge and now, Kuch Kuch Hota Hai.