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Ghajini (2008 film)

2008 Indian action thriller film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ghajini (2008 film)
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Ghajini (pronounced [ɡədʒniː]) is a 2008 Indian Hindi-language psychological action thriller film directed by A. R. Murugadoss (in his Hindi film debut) from a screenplay by Murugadoss and Aamir Khan. A remake of Murugadoss' 2005 Tamil film of the same name, it stars Khan, Asin, Jiah Khan and Pradeep Rawat. In the film, Sanjay Singhania (Khan) seeks violent revenge for an attack which killed his fiancée and caused his anterograde amnesia.

Quick facts Directed by, Screenplay by ...

The original film's plot was inspired from Memento and Happy Go Lovely. The first half of the movie was inspired by the 1969 film Sajan. Khan and Murugadoss co-wrote the remake, with Khan suggesting changes to suit the taste of the Hindi cinema audience. Allu Aravind, Madhu Mantena and Tagore Madhu jointly acted as the producers, while the film was distributed by Geetha Arts. A. R. Rahman composed the soundtrack and musical score, while cinematography and editing were handled by Ravi K. Chandran and Anthony. The film marks Asin's Hindi film debut, reprising her role from the original film.

Ghajini was theatrically released on 25 December 2008, coinciding with Christmas, where it became the highest-grossing Indian film of the year and the first Bollywood film to cross the 100 crore mark domestically, creating the 100 Crore Club.[5] Ghajini's paid preview collections were 2.7 crore.[6] It went on to become the highest-grossing Indian film of all time until it was surpassed by 3 Idiots. Aamir's character was featured in a 3D video game titled Ghajini – The Game, which is based on the film.[7]

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Plot

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Sunita, a medical student, is investigating the anterograde amnesia case of Sanjay Singhania, the chairman of Air Voice, a telecommunications company. Sunita does her investigation against her professor Dr. Debkumar Mitra's wishes as Sanjay is under criminal investigation. Sanjay, who loses his memory every 15 minutes, uses a system of photographs, notes, and tattoos on his body to recover his memory and remember his mission of avenging the murder of his fiancée Kalpana Shetty, who was killed by Ghajini Dharmatma, a kingpin and a notable socialite in Mumbai.

Meanwhile, Inspector Arjun Yadav investigates a murder committed by Sanjay. He knocks Sanjay unconscious during a scuffle at his apartment and finds two diaries in his drawer. Arjun reads the first diary and learns that Sanjay, a successful entrepreneur, met Kalpana, a struggling model, after planning to install an advertising billboard above her apartment. When his agents approach Kalpana about it, her boss misinterprets it as a romantic advance and encourages her to accept it. Kalpana decides to pose as Sanjay's girlfriend, seeing as the false story elevates her influence at work. After learning about the false rumor from local tabloids, Sanjay angrily plans to confront Kalpana. On the drive to her workplace, while stuck in traffic, Sanjay witnesses a young woman help a bunch of disabled girls cross a ditch. He is impressed by the kindness and the creativity of the stranger. When he finally reaches the ad company he discovers that Kalpana was in fact the kindhearted stranger he'd seen in traffic. Her happy-go-lucky personality, blissful ignorance of who he actually is, humour and altruism inevitably capture his attention.

He poses as Sachin Chauhan, a newcomer model, and lies to Kalpana about his identity. As he gets to know her by spending time with her, Sanjay falls deeper in love with her and, at the end of the first diary, proposes to her on their way from the New Year's Eve party thrown by her boss. Kalpana, surprised, asks for the night to think it over. Sanjay decides to reveal his true identity if she agrees but to walk away if she doesn't.

As Arjun starts reading the second diary, Sanjay suddenly wakes up, viciously attacks him and ties him up. He later tracks down Ghajini to a college function where Ghajini is the guest of honor. Sanjay takes pictures of Ghajini and decides to kill him. However, Sanjay mistakenly attacks and kills one of Ghajini's goons in the parking lot. Ghajini is perplexed and fails to recollect the incident. He decides to find and kill his enemies one by one, but Sanjay is not among them. In the meantime, Sunita locates the apartment, finds Arjun tied up, beaten and bound, and learns of Sanjay's murder plot. She steals his diaries and frees Arjun. Sanjay appears suddenly and doesn't remember either of them. As Sunita and Arjun escape, Arjun is hit by a bus, and dies instantly. Sunita informs Ghajini that Sanjay is coming after him. Unbeknownst to Sunita, she had inadvertently spoken to Sanjay instead of Ghajini because he had crept into Ghajini's home. Sanjay asks for her address and goes to attack her at her dormitory, where he is arrested and sedated. Ghajini is informed by the police about Sanjay's belongings and poses as Sanjay's friend. Soon, Sanjay's employees and doctor arrive and take him home. Ghajini convinces his men to destroy his pictures and cover his tattoos, leaving him with no memory of the past, instead of killing him.

After Sanjay gets arrested, Sunita remembers the diaries she took from Sanjay's house. She reads the diaries and learns about Kalpana. In the second diary, Kalpana accepts the proposal on the condition that she purchases three Ambassador cars before she gets married; her father owned his own travel company as well as three Ambassador cars, before he got scammed by his brother-in-law. At work the following day, Sanjay is asked by his assistant Shroff whether he had revealed his true identity to Kalpana to which he responds that he prefers his ordinary guy facade and delays telling the truth to Kalpana. He also hands the keys of a brand new flat to his executive assistant, asking him to give it to Kalpana as a gift.

Sanjay's company Air Voice is granted a license that allows calls from India to the UK to be routed through Air Voice. A feat that comes with a prerequisite trip to the UK for ten days. Still keeping up his 'ordinary guy' facade, he tells Kalpana that he has to urgently go to the village to see his ailing mother, and sell a piece of land for her medical treatment. Moments before he departs Kalpana calls him late at night, and gives him 135,000 Rupees for his mother's treatment after selling the car she wanted so much in order to prevent him from losing his inheritance (landed property). This grand, unexpected display of thoughtfulness and considerate altruism leaves Sanjay shocked and sober, cementing his love, conviction and commitment to Kalpana. Sunita discovers this is where Sanjay's diaries end. Perplexed, she goes to find the remaining pieces of the story.

After some research, Sunita eventually learns that Kalpana travelled to Goa for an ad shoot, where she stumbled across and freed a group of girls from a sex and organ trafficking ring racketeered by a ruthless thug known as Ghajini. The story makes the news and triggers a nationwide hunt by the police who start to dismantle the operations. On the train ride back to Mumbai with the girls, Sanjay calls her and she tells him about the experience. Relieved that she is fine, he admits that he admires her kind heartedness and true altruism. He lightly alludes to his secret without giving anything away but promises to come clean once he was back.

Back in Mumbai, Ghajini confronts Kalpana when she discovers two of the girls went missing and then she walks away in disgust after Ghajini confesses to killing the girls and dumping their bodies in the sea because they named him to the police. Later that night, a constable calls Kalpana and informs her that Ghajini has set out to kill her and his henchmen are hiding inside her house. She advised Kalpana not to go home but it's too late as she is already home. That same night, Sanjay arrives from London, flowers in hand, excited to meet his fiancée. He rings the door bell and knocks but the assassins inside the house sent to kill her hide and wait for Sanjay to leave after he finds the house empty. A petrified Kalpana is unable to save herself and Sanjay rushes back to her home after she calls him and finds Kalpana stabbed by the assassins. As he is tending to her, Ghajini hits Sanjay in the head with an iron rod before killing Kalpana with the same rod in front of him and knocks him out with another shot to the head with the rod, which results in a brain injury.

After learning of this shocking truth, Sunita finds Sanjay in the hospital and tells him the truth, reminding him of Kalpana's murder. He flies into a furious and heartbroken rage. Sunita helps him track Ghajini to his local area. Sanjay kills his men but has a memory loss fit while searching for Ghajini, who takes advantage of the situation and stabs Sanjay. He also holds Sunita captive and taunts him with the grisly tale of how he murdered Kalpana. As Ghajini is about to make Sanjay relive the experience by preparing to kill Sunita in the same way, Sanjay recovers the memory of Kalpana and fights back, with an anger fueled strength. He then kills Ghajini with the same iron rod, in the same way, thus avenging Kalpana's murder.

Six months later, Sanjay returns as the chairman of Air Voice and is volunteering at an orphanage named after Kalpana. Sunita gifts him the cement pad with Sanjay and Kalpana's foot impressions. In the ending moments of the movie, Sanjay feels Kalpana beside him as the screen pans out to a fading sunset.

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Cast

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  • Aamir Khan as Sanjay Singhania / Sachin Chauhan, a rich businessman; the chairman of a telecommunications company, Air Voice; who later suffers from short-term memory loss after a tragic incident caused by Ghajini, being solely motivated, thus, to kill him and his cohorts
  • Asin as Kalpana Shetty, a model who gains publicity by falsely proclaiming herself to be the girlfriend of Sanjay Singhania, but soon becomes his love interest, later getting killed by Ghajini
  • Jiah Khan as Sunita Kalantri, a medical student, who tries to study the case of Sanjay Singhania and his amnesiac problem, even though she is forbidden to do so
  • Pradeep Rawat as Ghajini Dharmatma, a gang honcho and the mastermind of many illegal and criminal ventures who is targeted by Sanjay
  • Riyaz Khan as Inspector Arjun Yadav, a police inspector who is investigating the murders Sanjay committed (voiceover by Rajesh Khattar)
  • Khalid Siddiqui as Pankaj Shroff, Sanjay's private assistant and an Air Voice manager
  • Tinnu Anand as Satveer Kohli, Kalpana's boss
  • Sai Tamhankar as Amrita Kashyap, Sunita's friend
  • Supreeth Reddy as Ghajini's henchman
  • Mahendra Ghule as Ghajini's henchman
  • Vibha Chibber as Havaldar Vaijayanti
  • Sunil Grover as Sampat, a model who is being trained as the fake Sanjay Singhania
  • Rajendran as Ghajini's henchman
  • Firdausi Jussawalla as Dr. Peston Wadia
  • Sonal Sehgal as ad model

Cameo appearance

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Production

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Development

Post the massive success of Ghajini, Murugadoss expressed interest in remaking the film with Salman Khan, but Pradeep Rawat felt like Aamir Khan might gel with Murugadoss better. It was rumoured earlier that the film was titled Kajri.[8] It is a remake of the Tamil film, Ghajini (2005). Aamir Khan, who had never before worked in a remake film in his career,[9] was initially hesitant to do the film, but was convinced by Suriya, the original star of the Tamil Ghajini, who told him he was "the only one who could do justice to the character."[10] Suriya was a fan of Khan, and had some involvement in the film's development, discussing minute details with Khan for two years during the film's development.[9]

Casting

Priyanka Chopra was offered the role of Kalpana, but was later replaced by Asin, who reprised her role from the original Tamil film.[11]

Khan was involved in the film's creative writing process, deciding what should remain from the original Tamil Ghajini and what changes should be made. Murugadoss revealed that the altered climax of the film was rewritten by Khan. According to Murugadoss:[12]

We didn't make too many changes in the rest of the film. Every time I'd suggest a change in Ghajini from the original, Aamir would firmly cut it down, saying we should stick to the Tamil script. But he decided we should rewrite the climax. The entire location, incidents and dialogues for the climax were re-written by Aamir. I think the Hindi version is far better than the Tamil Ghajini because of the changes Aamir made.

Influences

Murdagoss's original 2005 Tamil version of Ghajini was inspired by the American film Memento (2000), which itself was adapted from the short story "Memento Mori". The film stars Guy Pearce as Leonard Shelby, a former insurance fraud investigator searching for the man he believes raped and killed his wife during a burglary. Leonard suffers from anterograde amnesia, which he contracted from severe head trauma during the attack on his wife. Certain concepts like writing notes behind instant Polaroid photographs and tattooing facts on his body are also similar. According to Khan, "Ghajini is not a remake or even slightly inspired by Memento, but rather a remake of the Tamil film, Ghajini".[13] However, he acknowledged that Murgadoss's original Tamil film was at least partly inspired by Memento, stating, "Murgadoss had heard about a film called Memento and the concept had really fascinated him. Without having seen the film he went ahead and wrote his own version of the script and screenplay. Having finished his script, he then saw Memento, found it very different from what he had written, and went ahead and made Ghajini."[14]

The CGI opening brain sequence was inspired by the 1999 film Fight Club by David Fincher. This sequence was also used in the Tamil version of the film.

The film's title is a reference to Mahmud of Ghazni, the tenth-century Sultan of the Ghaznavid Empire whose name is pronounced "Ghajini" in Tamil.[15] Several comical scenes in the film are similar to Happy Go Lovely (1951).

Filming

Shooting started in Chennai in May 2007.[16] Climax was shot in Old City, Hyderabad. Other filming locations included Bangalore, Cape Town in South Africa, the Deadpan Desert in Namibia and Mumbai. Aamir Khan had spent a year working out at the gym, training for his role.[17] This film marked the Bollywood debut for Asin. The film's production budget was 65 crore (US$14.94 million).[18]

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Release

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Ghajini was released on 25 December 2008 with an estimated 1,500 prints worldwide,[19] including 1,200 prints (digital and analogue versions) in the domestic market,[20][21] making it the largest Bollywood release at that time. The domestic rights were sold to Geetha Arts for ₹530 million, while satellite, overseas and home media rights were sold at a total of ₹400 million, breaking the records of Shah Rukh Khan's film Om Shanti Om's ₹730 million.[22]

The overseas distributors, Reliance Entertainment released the film with 300 prints in 22 countries, including 112 prints in the US and Canada, 65 prints in the UK and 36 prints in the UAE. Ghajini was also released in Norway, Germany, Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Singapore.[23] It had around 650 paid previews which fetched it around ₹70 million.[21]

Home media

The two-disc collector's edition DVD was manufactured by Big Home Video and distributed by international distributor, Adlabs Films Ltd. (now Reliance MediaWorks) on 13 March 2009.[24]

Video games

A PC video game based on the film was manufactured and produced by FXLabs Studios Pvt Ltd and Geetha Arts, and marketed and distributed by Eros Home Entertainment: Ghajini – The Game. It is a third-person action game consisting of five levels of play; here the player controlled the protagonist Sanjay to accomplish missions using martial arts, weapons, and artefacts.[25] It was hailed as India's first true 3D PC game with an MSRP of US$14.99.[citation needed] Although never officially rated, the distributor recommends that 15+ year old players partake in the game.[26]

Mobile video games were also released by Indiagames based on the film including Ghajini The Game and Ghajini Ultimate Workout.[27][28]

Controversy

Director A. R. Murugadoss was arrested shortly before the film's completion. According to Salem Chandrasekhar, the producer of the Tamil original, he had not bought the rights to remake the film in Hindi.[29]

Anil Kapoor sarcastically mentioned that the director of the original film, Memento (2000) Christopher Nolan, from which Murugadoss based-off story, was very upset, he told Anil "I have heard that one of my films has been copied. I (Kapoor) said Ghajini. He was very upset about it. I told Aamir also. I told (Nolan) the film had just been released over there and is a big success. (He then said) Yeah, no money, no credit, no nothing.” [30]

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Reception

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Critical response

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film received an approval rating of 54% based on 13 reviews, with an average rating of 5.90/10.[31]

Rajeev Masand of CNN IBN wrote "Ghajini isn't a particularly good film, but entertainment it delivers by the bucketful."[32] Martin D'Souza of Bollywood Trade News Network notes its flaws in the script, while praising the action sequences.[33] Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama remarked that the movie "is a winner all the way".[34] Nikhat Kazmi of The Times of India praised the performance by Aamir Khan as its high point.[35] Zee News described Aamir's performance as his best to date.[36]

Sukanya Verma of Rediff describes the film as "a sleek album of dark memories, which are terrifying to relive and shattering to experience".[37] Noyon Jyoti Parasara of AOL India said, "Most comparisons often point out that a remake is not as worthy.Ghajini however succeeds when it is compared to the Tamil version directed by the same director."[38] Anupama Chopra of NDTV said "Ghajini isn't a great film or even a very good one but I recommend that you see it. It is, as we used to say in the old days, paisa vasool.[39] Kaveree Bamzai of India Today said that "This is brutality, choreographed by a poet, and therefore that much more compelling."[40]

Gaurav Malani of India Times criticises its length while praising the performance of the cast.[41] Raja Sen of Rediff criticised the performance of Asin while concluding, "overwhelming feeling is one of regret".[42] Shubhra Gupta of Express India concluded that Ghajini is too long, too violent, and criticised Jiah Khan's acting and dancing skills, but praised the performances of Aamir Khan and Asin.[43] Hindustan Times wrote "You'd like to give Ghajini a long-term memory loss. Kya, kyon, kahan? Murugadoss.? Aamir? Asin? Who? Got to jog my memory... maybe after 15 minutes."[44]

Box office

Ghajini released worldwide on 25 December 2008, on Christmas Day. The film became the first-ever Bollywood film to open in double digits, collecting ₹102 million ($1.27 million) on its opening day, followed by ₹118 million ($1.47 million), ₹102.5 million ($1.28 million) and ₹87.5 million ($1.09 million), taking its four-day opening weekend collection to ₹410 million ($5.13 million). The film went past ₹1 billion ($12.5 million) domestically in its fourth week, thus becoming the first ever Bollywood film to cross ₹100 crore net domestically. It was the first Bollywood film to enter the 100 crore club.[45]

Ghajini became the highest-grossing Indian film ever at the time,[46] and was declared an "All Time Blockbuster".[45][47] Its record was surpassed a year later by another Aamir Khan film, 3 Idiots (2009).[46]

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Soundtrack

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Quick facts Soundtrack album by A.R Rahman, Released ...

The film has six songs, including two remixes, composed by A. R. Rahman and with lyrics penned by Prasoon Joshi.

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Reception

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Bollywood Hungama wrote, "The music of Ghajini is all set to make waves way into 2009 after the Christmas release of the film. When 'best of the best' list would be compiled at the year end, it would be hard to ignore Ghajini."[49] Rediff.com gave it the highest possible rating of five stars with the reviewer praising Rahman saying, "This could just be one of his finest albums ever. Not just are the tracks great, but each one segues into the next with perfect unpredictability."[48] According to the Indian trade website Box Office India, the soundtrack album sold about 1.9 million units, making it the year's best selling Bollywood music soundtrack album.[50]

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Awards and nominations

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See also

Notes

    References

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