Apaharan
2005 Indian film
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Apaharan (transl. Abduction) is a 2005 Indian Hindi-language crime drama film written and directed by Prakash Jha. The film stars Ajay Devgn, Bipasha Basu, and Nana Patekar in the lead roles. It revolves around the complex relationship and clashing ideologies between a father and a son set in the backdrop of the kidnapping industry in the eastern state of Bihar, India.
Manoj Tyagi
Shridhar Raghavan
| Apaharan | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Prakash Jha |
| Screenplay by | Prakash Jha Manoj Tyagi Shridhar Raghavan |
| Story by | Prakash Jha |
| Produced by | Prakash Jha |
| Starring | Ajay Devgn Nana Patekar Bipasha Basu |
| Cinematography | Arvind Kumar |
| Edited by | Santosh Mandal |
| Music by | Songs: Aadesh Shrivastava Score: Wayne Sharpe |
Production companies | Entertainment One Prakash Jha Productions Holi Cow Pictures |
| Distributed by | Reliance Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 173 minutes |
| Country | India |
| Language | Hindi |
| Box office | ₹231.6 million[1] |
Apaharan was released on 2 December 2005 and was a commercial success at the box-office.[2][3]
Plot
Ajay Shastri, an unemployed graduate, dreams of joining the police force but faces opposition from his principled father, Raghuvansh Shastri. Desperate, he borrows money and bribes officials, but when his father exposes the corruption, Ajay turns to crime. A failed kidnapping lands him in trouble with Gaya Singh, a henchman of powerful MLA and underworld don Tabrez Alam.
Ajay eventually joins Tabrez's gang and rises to power in Bihar's kidnapping racket. However, political betrayals and his father's moral influence lead him to turn against Tabrez. After being imprisoned, Ajay kills Tabrez when he visits him in jail but is gunned down in return, ending both their lives.
Cast
- Ajay Devgn as Ajay Shastri
- Nana Patekar as Tabrez Alam
- Ayub Khan as Kashinath
- Murali Sharma as Muralidhar
- Bipasha Basu as Megha Basu
- Khalid Siddiqui as Kamal Kishore
- Yashpal Sharma as Gaya Singh
- Mohan Agashe as Professor Raghuvansh Shastri
- Mukesh Tiwari as SP Anwar Khan
- Daya Shankar Pandey as Daya Shankar
- Akhilendra Mishra as Chief Minister Brijnath Mishra
- Chetan Pandit as Home Minister Dinkar Pandey
- Prithvi Zutshi as Dwarka
- Saurabh Dubey as Anil Shrivastava
- Sanjay Swaraj as Seth Chandmal
- Ashwini Kalsekar as Mrs. Khan, Anwar Khan's wife
- Anup Soni as Akash Ranjan, Aaj Tak news reporter
- Pankaj Tripathi as Gaya Singh's crony
- Ehsaan Khan as DSP Veerendra Shukla
- Anil Yadav as Naga
- Deepak Bhatia as Ramdhani Singh
- Brij Gopal as Jagannath Mandal
- Radhakrishna Dutta as Seth Soorajmal
- Mukul Nag as Usman
- Padam Singh as Dharam Singh
- Mrinalini Sharma as Sonia
- Vikram Sahu as Megha's father
- Jayashankar Tripathi as Bankalal's brother-in-law
- Arvind Pandey as Sukhi Chacha
- Shreechand Makhija as Buchchi Kaka, Shastri's servant
- Yusuf Hussain as Tabrez's advocate
Music
| Title | Singer(s) | Lyrics | Music |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Aaiye Aao Ji Babu" | Sapna Mukherjee, KK | Sameer | Aadesh Shrivastava |
Awards and nominations
| Award | Category | Recipients and nominees | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Film Awards(India) | Best Screenplay | Prakash Jha, Manoj Tyagi and Shridhar Raghavan | Won | |
| Filmfare Awards | Best Dialogue | Prakash Jha | Won | |
| Filmfare Awards | Best Villain | Nana Patekar | Won | |
| Annual Central European Bollywood Awards (India) | Best Supporting Actress(Popular Award) | Bipasha basu | Nominated |