Krantiveer
Poster
Directed byMehul Kumar
Written byK. K. Singh
Produced byMehul Kumar
StarringNana Patekar
Dimple Kapadia
Atul Agnihotri
Mamta Kulkarni
CinematographyRussi Billimoria
Edited byYusuf Sheikh
Music byAnand–Milind
Production
company
Mehul Movies Pvt Ltd
Release date
  • 22 July 1994 (1994-07-22)
Running time
148 min
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget30 million[1]
Box office206.7 million[1]

Krantiveer (transl.Brave Revolutionary) is a 1994 Indian Hindi-language action crime film directed and produced by Mehul Kumar. The film stars Nana Patekar, Dimple Kapadia, Atul Agnihotri, Mamta Kulkarni in the lead roles. Farida Jalal, Paresh Rawal, Tinu Anand, Danny Denzongpa are in supporting roles. It became the third highest-grossing film of the year,[2] additionally winning three Star Screen Awards, four Filmfare Awards and one National Film Award.

The film was remade in Telugu as Punya Bhoomi Naa Desam (1995) and in Kannada as Parodi (2007). The sequel of Krantiveer was released as Krantiveer: The Revolution (2010). According to Box Office India, It was a blockbuster at the box office.

Plot

Pratap Tilak (Nana Patekar) is the grandson of Bheeshmanarayan Tilak, a freedom fighter. Pratap starts gambling and this leads to a spoiling attack of Bheeshmanarayan as he dies. Pratap's mother Durgadevi (Farida Jalal) enraged by all this, asks him to leave the village and go away. Pratap comes to Mumbai where he saves the life of chawl owner, Laxminath's (Paresh Rawal) son Atul (Atul Agnihotri). Laxminath decides to keep Pratap with him. When they grow up, Atul falls in love with Mamta (Mamta Kulkarni), who is the daughter of a builder named Yograj (Tinnu Anand). Pratap keeps laughing at press reporter Megha Dixit (Dimple Kapadia), who lives in the chawl and keeps on fighting injustice by writing about it in newspapers. Pratap teaches people to become strong and fight for themselves instead of waiting for other people to help them. Chattursingh Chita (Danny Denzongpa) and Yograj plan to build a resort and at the place, they arrange communal riots, mass killings, and burn the houses of people. Laxminath is murdered by Chattursingh Chita. Pratap learns that Megha's parents were murdered by Chattursingh Chita and she was raped by him. He proposes marriage to her. Mamta leaves her father's house and comes to Atul's house. Pratap kills the corrupted ministers, the judge, and the police officer. He is tried and sentenced to death. At the public hanging, he tells the onlookers that they are all cowards and he is willing to die, when a lawyer comes to the scene informing that Pratap has been pardoned by the President. Chattursingh Chita emerges on scene to kill Pratap who picks a rifle and kills Chita by the bayonet. This story is about a brave person who decides to face injustice and is ready to lay his life down for this cause.

Cast

Crew

  • Producer: Mehul Kumar
  • Director: Mehul Kumar
  • Actor : Nana Patekar, Atul Agnihotri, Dimple Kapadia, Mamta Kulkarni
  • Story: Mehul Kumar
  • Dialogues: K.K. Singh
  • Lyrics: Sameer
  • Music: Anand–Milind
  • Choreography: Chinni Prakash, Madhav Kishen
  • Editing: Yusuf Sheikh
  • Costume Design: Shammim

Critical reception

The Indian Express wrote that "Nana Patekar, who can lay claim to being the best actor in Bollywood, is the chief reason to see Krantiveer". The review further noted the "strong supporting cast", including Kapadia and Rawal.[3] Trade journal Film Information wrote that the lead "character, etched out by the writer, and its excellent portrayal by the hero that make the film a differently enjoyable fare."[4]

Awards

National Film Awards:


40th Filmfare Awards:

Won

Nominated

Star Screen Awards:

Music

Krantiveer
Soundtrack album by
Released
17 June 1994 (India)
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelVenus Records and Tapes
ProducerAnand–Milind
Anand–Milind chronology
Eena Meena Deeka
(1994)
Krantiveer
(1994)
Suhaag
(1994)

The soundtrack of the film contains 6 songs. The music is composed by Anand–Milind, with lyrics authored by Sameer.

SongSinger
"Jab Se Hum" (Not in the film) Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik
"Chunri Udi" Kumar Sanu, Poornima
"Phool Kali" Udit Narayan, Sadhana Sargam
"Jhankaron" Udit Narayan, Sapna Awasthi
"Jai Ambe Jagdambe Maa" Praful Dave, Sapna Awasthi, Sudesh Bhosle
"Love Rap" Amit Kumar, Sapna Mukherjee, Sudesh Bhosle, Poornima

References

  1. 1 2 "Krantiveer - Movie - Box Office India". www.boxofficeindia.com.
  2. "BOX OFFICE INDIA". Archived from the original on 2 April 2004.
  3. PR (29 July 1994). "Patriotism and Patekar all the way". The Indian Express. The Express Group. p. 6. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  4. "Krantiveer". Film Information. 22 October 1994. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.