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Bhagam Bhag

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Bhagam Bhag
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPriyadarshan
Written byNeeraj Vora (screenplay and dialogues)
Based onMannar Mathai Speaking
by Siddique–Lal
Produced bySunil Shetty
Dhilin Mehta
Starring
CinematographyJeeva
Edited byArun Kumar
N. Gopalakrishnan
Music bySongs:
Pritam Chakraborty
Background Score:
Salim-Sulaiman
Production
companies
Distributed byIndian Films
Release date
  • 21 December 2006 (2006-12-21)
Running time
159 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget₹32 crore[1]
Box office₹67.82 crore[1]

Bhagam Bhag (transl. Mad rush) is a 2006 Indian Hindi-language comedy film directed by Priyadarshan and written by Neeraj Vora. It was produced by Sunil Shetty and Dhilin Mehta. The film stars Akshay Kumar, Govinda and Paresh Rawal as the three leads alongside Lara Dutta, Rajpal Yadav, Jackie Shroff, Arbaaz Khan, Shakti Kapoor, Manoj Joshi, Razak Khan, Sharat Saxena and Asrani. The film tells the story of a theatre group which travels to London for a show only to be accused of a murder they did not commit, while mistakenly becoming the enemies of a drug dealer and a gang.

The film adapted certain subplots of the Malayalam film Mannar Mathai Speaking which itself was based on the 1958 film Vertigo.[2] The film was remade in Telugu as Brahmanandam Drama Company (2008).[3]

The film was released theatrically on 21 December 2006, during Christmas, and received mixed reviews from critics but was a commercial success and became the 9th highest-grossing film of the year.[citation needed]

Plot

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Champak Chaturvedi runs a theatrical troupe in India. He hires two men, Bunty, a graduate in arts, and Babla, who can neither read nor write English. One has to play the role of the play's hero, while one is the villain. Both men end up squabbling with each other, as both want the hero's part. Champak finds out that Bunty has harassed the play's heroine, Anjali, and punishes him.

The group gets a contract to stage 30 plays in Britain by Ravinder Taneja; however, on the day of the departure, Anjali opts out, leaving Champak no alternative but to travel without a heroine, hoping to recruit one while in Britain. Upon arrival, Champak tells his whole crew that whoever brings him a heroine will be given the role of the main hero. Babla sets about to find a suitable heroine from the Indian population. In order to find one, on the advice of Gullu, a cab driver, he goes to a garden where he is followed by Bunty, and the two agree to take the turns in the role of the hero. Babla has his suitcase accidentally switched by two men containing heroin, and as a result, both men, Bunty and Babla, end up being considered suspects by the local police, whose commissioner is an Indian, J. D. Mehra.

The two men who switched the suitcase are revealed to be working under Manubhai Gandhi, a builder who is also a drug smuggler and trying to sell drugs to his buyer, Sher Khan. Bunty looks for a heroine alongside Gullu. Two goons, Guru and Hakka, know a woman who lives in Germany and insist to drive to Germany with the two along with all their men. The two trick all the goons into falling out, and Guru breaks his leg in the process. Bunty recruits a woman named Munni after she attempts to commit suicide in front of their car. Munni is accepted as the heroine of the play, and through the course of time, both Munni and Bunty fall in love with each other. Munni suddenly throws herself in front of a vehicle one day and ends up in the hospital.

When she regains her senses, she tells everyone that she is Nisha Chauhan and is married to Vikram, who lives in Liverpool. The doctor tells Bunty that Munni/Nisha has suicidal tendencies and thus attempted suicide by jumping in front of the vehicle. Vikram arrives, thanks everyone, and takes his wife home. A few days later, Bunty receives a phone call from a frantic Nisha, who tells him to come over immediately. He, along with Champak and Babla, arrive there to find her body in flames. She is declared dead in the hospital.

One day, Bunty briefly sees Nisha on the streets, but no one believes him. The group then decides to enact a play in which there is no need for a heroine. Guru and his men find Bunty and chase him to get their revenge, but Bunty escapes, and Guru breaks his other leg while chasing Bunty. On the night of the play, a frightened Champak also sees Nisha in the washroom of the theatre. All of a sudden, Vikram bumps into Babla, Bunty, and Champak with a gun in his hand, and Bunty accidentally presses the trigger of the gun, killing him. They hide Vikram's body and Champak's bloodstained kurta to avoid any suspicion. They go on to perform the play, but Vikram's body falls on the stage out of nowhere.

Mehra, who was present in the audience, investigates the case and finds Champak's bloodstained kurta and Babla's chain on Vikram's body and has the trio arrested. When the trio is being taken in a police car, Gandhi's men throw a bomb in the car out of revenge as they suspect the trio to be secret police, which compels them to escape. Bunty suggests that they'll have to prove their innocence to get out of this trouble, and for that, they need to find Nisha. They find out that Nisha has booked a ticket after breaking into her house to Mumbai under the name of Aditi Desai. They call at the number she registered for booking and find out she has assumed the name of Sheetal and works at the bar.

Bunty, Babla, and Champak go to find the girl working at a bar and go looking for her in the bar, only to find another girl named Sheetal working there. They decide to follow her as they suspect her to be a friend of Nisha. During this time, Champak is kidnapped by Gandhi's men, and they torture him to get the information that they suspect he knows about their drug smuggling business. Meanwhile, Guru and his men take Gullu's taxi and threaten that they won't give it back until he brings Bunty to them so they can get their revenge. Gullu is then captured by the taxi's owner and his men, who threaten he will have Gullu sent to jail if he doesn't get the taxi back.

Babla and Bunty follow Sheetal to a train, where they witness her handing the ticket to Mumbai to Nisha. Bunty catches her and chases her to the top of a tower. Gullu witnesses this and calls Guru and his men to take Bunty and return the taxi, and the taxi owner and his men to take the taxi back. Gandhi also chooses the tower as his destination to complete his deal with Khan and asks him to come there. Nisha reveals to Bunty that her actual name is Aditi Desai, and she was hired by Vikram Chauhan to act as her real wife, Nisha Chauhan, for some time in exchange for 20 lakh and a ticket to India. But, when her work was done and she had to go away, she witnessed Vikram killing her real wife to extort money from her. She tried to save Nisha but failed to do so. It was the real Nisha who got burnt and died.

On the play night, Aditi had come to tell the truth to Bunty and others, but she was seen by Vikram, who was also there and wanted to kill Aditi (fake Nisha), who was the only witness in his wife's murder. But before he could kill her, Mehra, in a shocking turn of events, shot him. He was already wounded when he encountered Bunty, Babla, and Champak. Mehra then arrives and tells his side of the story—that he killed Vikram to avenge Nisha, who he reveals was his sister; Vikram drugged her in order to gain control of her wealth inheritance. He tries to kill Aditi, as she was also the only witness in Vikram's murder, but before this happens, Gandhi and his two men (with Champak as their prisoner), Guru and his men (who have kidnapped Taneja as they believe he is Bunty's boss who told him to deceive them), Gullu, Khan, the taxi owner, and the taxi owner's men arrive. Gandhi believes everyone present is undercover police trying to catch him and fires in the air, hitting a nest of bees who chase everyone (apart from Mehra, who escapes) outside onto the clock on the top floor.

A fire brigade team tries to rescue them, but all of them fall off the ladder and get injured as they fall and land in different places. All of them are admitted to the hospital, where Mehra visits Champak's team, returns their passports, and surrenders himself to the police.

Cast

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Production

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Shooting took place in Oxford, United Kingdom in July–August 2006, filming at several University of Oxford landmarks. The film borrows core plot from the Malayalam film Mannar Mathai Speaking with comedy sub plots from another Malayalam film Nadodikkattu.[4] The plot twist in the climax was borrowed from the 1999 Marathi thriller Bindhaast which Priyadarshan had earlier remade in Tamil as Snegithiye and Malayalam as Raakilipattu.[5] The climax comedy sequence was adapted from the 1963 classic It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.[citation needed]

Soundtrack

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Bhagam Bhag
Soundtrack album by
Released18 November 2006
Length60:05
LabelT-Series
ProducerPritam Chakraborty
Pritam Chakraborty chronology
Dhoom 2
(2006)
Bhagam Bhag
(2006)
Hattrick
(2007)

All lyrics are written by Sameer; all music is composed by Pritam Chakraborty

No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Tere Bin"Kunal Ganjawala, Sunidhi Chauhan5:40
2."Signal"Remo Fernandes, Suzanne D'Mello5:00
3."Bhagam Bhag"Neeraj Shridhar4:39
4."Afreen"KK, Sunidhi Chauhan6:06
5."Signal" (Remix)Remo Fernandes, Suzanne D'Mello4:56
6."Tere Bin" (Remix)Kunal Ganjawala, Sunidhi Chauhan4:44
7."Afreen" (Remix)KK, Sunidhi Chauhan4:47
8."Bhagam Bhag" (Press Play Mix)Neeraj Shridhar4:37
9."Tere Bin" (Reprised)Kunal Ganjawala, Shreya Ghoshal5:46
10."Bhagam Bhag" (Ragga Mix)Neeraj Shridhar5:01
11."Chal Ud Chalein" (Run Run)Jojo, Suhail Kaul4:42
Total length:60:05

Note: the Soundtrack also contains "Aa Khushi Se Khud Kushi Kar Le", which is the Solo Version Sung by Sunidhi Chauhan, which was not used in the movie, it was Later Remade with Shaan and included in the 2007 film "Darling". The music for "Afreen" is taken from "Heaven on Their Minds" from the Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice musical, Jesus Christ Superstar.

Release

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The film was worldwide released on 21 December 2006. The distribution rights of the movie were sold to UTV Motion Pictures. The DVD of the movie was released by T-Series Home Entertainment. The film has been made streaming available on JioCinema, Zee5, MX Player and Amazon Prime Video since 2020.

Reception

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The Times of India gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and stated, "The actors try hard, but the script and the dialogues let them down. Even the situations aren't funny enough, except for a few. Case in point, watch Paresh trying to chew a grenade and Govinda asking for a bite too. Funny!"[6] Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and stated, "Bhagam Bhag will be loved for its comedy in the first hour, but the whodunit in the second hour tapers the impact."[7]

Gullu Singh of Rediff.com gave the film 2 out of 5 stars and stated, "The real hero of the film is Kumar. He outshines everyone and has some of the best dialogues in the film. He is a treat to watch."[8] Indu Mirani of DNA India gave the film 0.5 out of 5 stars and stated, "Ever since Priyadarshan made Hera Pheri in 2000, he has been continually repeating the formula. When he doesn't do so, as with Kyon Ki (2005), he fails miserably."[9]

Sequel

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In November 2024, it was reported that Akshay Kumar has acquired the rights to Bhagam Bhag from Shemaroo and is working on the development of Bhagam Bhag 2. Currently, the film is in the script-writing stage, with a new team of writers assigned to create a story that will capture the same energy and humor that made the original a massive hit. The film will reunite the original trio of Kumar, Govinda, and Paresh Rawal, and is expected to go on floors in 2025, with a release slated for 2026.[10][11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Bhagam Bhag". boxofficeindia.com. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  2. ^ "Best Sequels of Malayalam Cinema, Ranked: From Kireedam To Oru CBI Diary Kurippu". Film Companion. 17 February 2021. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  3. ^ "Sriramachandrulu films prod. No1 muhurat - Telugu cinema function - Sivaji, Ravi Krishna & Brahmanandam". idlebrain.com.
  4. ^ "Bhagam Bhag pay royalty to Malyalam film maker" Archived 4 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Realbollywood.com. 13 December 2006.
  5. ^ Jha, Lata (11 September 2017). "Ten Marathi films remade in other languages". Livemint.
  6. ^ "Bhagam Bhaag Movie Review", The Times of India, retrieved 9 July 2021
  7. ^ Hungama, Bollywood (22 December 2006). "Bhagam Bhag Review 3/5 | Bhagam Bhag Movie Review | Bhagam Bhag 2006 Public Review | Film Review". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  8. ^ "Bhagam Bhag: Akshay top, Govinda flop". rediff.com. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  9. ^ Mirani, Indu (22 December 2006). "Review: Bhagam Bhag". Daily News and Analysis. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  10. ^ "Akshay Kumar to reunite with Govinda and Paresh Rawal for 'Bhagam Bhag 2': Report". The Times of India. 7 November 2024. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  11. ^ "EXCLUSIVE: Akshay Kumar set for Bhagam Bhag again with Govinda and Paresh Rawal; Rights acquired for Part 2". Pinkvilla. 6 November 2024. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
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