Zinda (film)
Zinda | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Sanjay Gupta |
Produced by | Sanjay Gupta |
Screenplay by |
Sanjay Gupta Suresh Nair |
Based on |
Oldboy (partly) by Park Chan-wook[1] Old Boy by Garon Tsuchiya and Nobuaki Minegishi |
Starring |
Sanjay Dutt John Abraham Lara Dutta Celina Jaitly |
Music by |
Background Score: Sanjoy Chowdhury Songs: Vishal-Shekhar Nikhil Chinapa Dj Nawed Kinky Ronald Strings |
Cinematography | Sanjay F. Gupta |
Edited by | Bunty Nagi |
Release dates | 12 January 2006 |
Running time | 116 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Zinda (translation: Alive) is a 2006 Bollywood film, starring Sanjay Dutt, John Abraham, and Lara Dutta. Zinda was directed by Sanjay Gupta and written by Gupta and Suresh Nair. Vishal-Shekhar composed the film's thematic music, with background music composed by Sanjoy Chowdhury. Pakistani band Strings sung one of the film songs which became quite popular. It was released in India on 12 January 2006.
Zinda has been identified as an unauthorised remake of the South Korean film Oldboy.[1][2][3] Show East, the producers of Oldboy, who had already sold the remake rights to Dreamworks in 2004, initially expressed legal concerns but no legal action was taken as the studio had shut down.[4][5][6]
Synopsis
Software engineer Balajeet "Bala" Roy (Sanjay Dutt), is happily married to Nisha Roy (Celina Jaitly), with whom he is having a baby. Bala is suddenly captured by unseen assailants and imprisoned in a cell. He is kept in total isolation for 14 years without knowing who imprisoned him or why. While in captivity, he practices martial arts which he learns from watching T.V., with the intention of using it against the people who captured him. He is finally released, again without explanation, and sets out for revenge.
He befriends a taxi driver named Jenny (Lara Dutta), who helps him track his kidnappers. Bala tracks down the restaurant that had served his food during his entire captivity and follows a delivery moped to his captors. Bala discovers that he was held in a private prison where people can pay to have others incarcerated. Bala tortures the owner Wong Foo (Rajendranath Zutshi) for answers by plucking out his teeth with a claw hammer; he then finds out he was imprisoned for "talking too much", and fights his way out of the building. Bala is injured during the fight, but a mysterious hooded man saves him and takes him to a taxi. The hooded man turns out to be Rohit Chopra (John Abraham). Soon Wong Foo kidnaps Jenny and tortures her. He threatens to remove Bala's teeth with his own clawhammer, but is interrupted by Rohit. Bala takes refuge with Jenny, and they have sex. Bala is informed that his daughter is alive. Bala's friend Joy (Mahesh Manjrekar) is killed, and Bala learns his kidnapper which is none other than Rohit.
Rohit reveals his reason of kidnapping Bala: they went to high school together, where Bala had lusted after Rohit's elder sister Reema. After Reema rejected him, Bala spreads a false rumour that she was a whore. She became the laughing stock of their school, and committed suicide by setting herself on fire. Rohit blamed Bala for her death, and engineered his imprisonment as revenge. Rohit tells Bala that he killed Nisha, and sent his daughter, who is now 14, to a brothel. Bala beats Rohit up and knocks him off of a balcony, but grabs his hand and pleads with him to tell him where his daughter is. Defiantly, Rohit lets go of Bala's hand and falls to his death. Bala then kills Rohit's goons and Wong Foo. In the end, Bala learns that his daughter is safe; Rohit had lied to him about selling her to a brothel to torment him. He finds her sitting on a river bank, and goes to meet her.
Cast
- Sanjay Dutt as Balajeet "Bala" Roy
- John Abraham as Rohit Chopra
- Lara Dutta as Jenny Singh
- Celina Jaitly as Nisha Roy
- Mahesh Manjrekar as Joy Fernandes
- Rajendranath Zutshi as Woo Fong (as Raj Zutshi)
- Gaurav Chanana
Reception
Critical reception
The film received mixed reviews from critics, although John Abraham and Sanjay Dutt were singled out for praise.
Bollywood Mantra praised the film saying, "Zinda is a film that appears to be darkest movie ever by Sanjay Gupta. A hard hitting flick shot in Bangkok, it tells you a story never told before on Indian screen. And to make Sanjay Gupta's imagination come alive, who else but Sanjay Dutt is roped in to play the lead role. One of the most challenging roles ever by the deadly Dutt, it is sure to haunt you long after the screening is over".[7]
Narbir Gosal of PlanetBollywood.com gave the film a rating of 7.5/10, praising the performances by Sanjay Dutt and John Abraham, while criticising the fact that much of the dialogue and story was copied from Oldboy.
Futuremovies.com gave the film 6/10 and said, "Technically and style-wise Zinda is flawless", and praised Dutt's performance, saying "it is probably the pinnacle of his career".[8]
Subhash K Jha gave it 2.5/5 and stated that "the film belongs to Sanjay Dutt.... If the adventure-action genre in Hindi cinema needed a wake-up call, this is it".[9]
Nikhil Kumar of Apunkachoice.com gave the film 0.5/5 stars, saying "Sanjay Gupta's movie Zinda works primarily because of its gripping, although unoriginal, story and a noteworthy acting performance by its frontman Sanjay Dutt".[10]
Soundtrack
The songs were composed by duo Vishal-Shekhar and released by T-Series.[11]
- "Ye Hai Meri Kahani" – Strings
- "Zinda Hoon Main" – Shibani Kashyap
- "Har Saans" – Krishna Beura
- "Kya Main Zinda Hoon" – Shibani Kashyap
- "Maula" – Vinod Rathod
- "Zinda Hoon Main Y" – Shibani Kashyap
- "Chal Rahi Hai Saanse" – Kailash Kher
- "Har Saans (Black Mamba Mix)" – Krishna Beura
Similarities with Oldboy
At a November 2005 press conference, representatives of Show East, the production company that released Oldboy, expressed concern Zinda was similar to their film, and said they were investigating the similarities. They noted that at the time, they did not have the final version of Zinda available to compare Oldboy with. They stated that if they found there was "strong similarity between the two [films]", they would be contacting their lawyers."[6]
The Hindu reviewer Sudhish Kamath and Planet Bollywood reviewer Narbir Gosal both note in their reviews of Zinda that they found the two films to be very similar in terms of plot, as well as in the depiction of specific scenes.[12][13][14]
References
- 1 2 "Vengeance is a Dish Best Served Korean: 'Oldboy' vs. 'Zinda'".
- ↑ Dudrah, Rajinder and Desai, Jigna. 2008. The Bollywood Reader: The Essential Bollywood. Oxford University Press. pp. 6.
- ↑ http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-times/Food-to-lingo-India-goes-on-a-K-trip/articleshow/55641575.cms
- ↑ "Spielberg Still Has Oldboy Plans Despite Korean Suit".
- ↑ "Zinda Review".
- 1 2 표절의혹 '올드보이', 제작사 법적대응 고려 [Plagiarism Doubts, 'OldBoy' Production Company Considers Legal Confrontation] (in Korean). STAR News. 16 November 2005. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- ↑ "Zinda Movie Review |". Bollywoodmantra.com. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
- ↑ "Zinda Film Review (Movie) Sanjay Dutt, John Abraham, Lara Dutta, Celina Jaitly, Mahesh Manjrekar". Futuremovies.co.uk. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
- ↑ "Zinda : Movie Review". Rediff movies. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
- ↑ "Zinda Movie Review – English Movie". Apunkachoice.com. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
- ↑ Kamath, Sudhish (20 January 2006). "Copycat filmmaker lacks creativity". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- ↑ Gosal, Narbir. "Film Review – Zindu". Planet Bollywood, INDOlink. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- ↑ "Video showing similarity between the two films".
External links
- Zinda at the Internet Movie Database