Deewaar (2004 film)

Deewaar
Directed by Milan Luthria
Produced by Gaurang Doshi
Written by Milan Luthria (dialogue)
Screenplay by Shridhar Raghavan
Gaurang Doshi
Milan Luthria
Story by S. Gopala Reddy
Milan Luthria
Starring Amitabh Bachchan
Sanjay Dutt
Akshaye Khanna
Amrita Rao
Aditya Srivastava
Music by Aadesh Shrivastav
Cinematography Nirmal Jani
Edited by Hozefa Lokhandwala
Distributed by V. R. Pictures
Release dates
  • 25 June 2004 (2004-06-25)
Running time
161 mins
Country India
Language Hindi
Box office 375 million (US$5.6 million)

Deewaar - Let's Bring Our Heroes Home is a 2004 Bollywood, war film directed by Milan Luthria, produced by Gaurang Doshi and written by S. Gopala Reddy. The film is an adaptation of escape of Indian Army's prisoners of war during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, and also describes the father-son relationship.The film under performed at the box office and was given an average verdict at the box office.[1]

Plot

Major Ranvir Kaul (Amitabh Bachchan) is a prisoner of war who was captured along with over 50 soldiers by Pakistani soldiers in 1971 during the war between India and Pakistan.

33 years later (in 2004) Major Kaul's son Gaurav (Akshaye Khanna) decides to go on a rescue mission to Pakistan and bring back his father who he has not seen since he was a child. Gourav came to know that his father and other prisoners of war are confined in an alienited jail. The jaior Sohail khan ( Kay Kay Menon) is ruthless and always try to finish his all prisoners. Khan (Sanjay Dutt) who had successfully escaped from the same prison saved by Gourav. Consequently Khan is helping him on his mission. They steal the underground map of the jail from ISI headquarter and plan to get the prisoners out. They finally succeed and get the prisoners into India, killing all the Pakistani officers including the jailor.

Cast

Music

Music for the film was composed by Aadesh Shrivastav. The lyrics were written by Nusrat Badr.

References

  1. Mark Kermode. "Film of the week: Deewaar | From the Observer | The Observer". Guardian. Retrieved 2014-08-05.

External links

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