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Ziddi (1997 film)

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Ziddi
Directed byGuddu Dhanoa
Written byRobin Henry
Produced byN.R. Pachisia
StarringSunny Deol
Raveena Tandon
Raj Babbar
Ashish Vidyarthi
CinematographySripad Natu
Edited byA. Muthu
Music bySongs:
Dilip Sen-Sameer Sen
Background Score:
Surinder Sodhi
Distributed byRatan International
Release date
  • 11 April 1997 (1997-04-11)
Running time
171 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Box office₹32.43 crore (equivalent to ₹371 crore or US$45 million in 2023)[1]

Ziddi (transl. Stubborn) is a 1997 Indian action film directed by Guddu Dhanoa, starring Sunny Deol, Raveena Tandon, Raj Babbar and Ashish Vidyarthi. It follows a short-tempered and stubborn Deva, who is feared because of his ruthless ways and severe punishment to the local hoodlums and later vows to avenge the death of his siblings.

It went on to become one of the biggest Bollywood hits of 1997, grossing Rs 324.3 million (US$5.7 million) at the box office. The film was remade in Tamil as Dharma, starring Vijayakanth and in Bangladeshi as Shanto Keno Mastan in 1998. The 1998 Kannada film One Man Army was an unofficial adaptation.

Plot

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Deva, an angry young man, lives with his father, Advocate Ashok Pradhan, mother Gayatri, brother Akash and sister Guddi. He is greatly vigilant about the well-being of his family – an intrinsic reason of his fury and stubbornness. One day a man named Vilas tries to molest Guddi and forcefully grabs her hand. Deva, in a fit of extreme rage, rips off the hand of the man. Deva is arrested, and is sent to jail for 4 years.

After his liberation from jail, Deva along with his henchmen form a tribunal of justice called "Deva Ki Adaalat", where he punishes the evil-doers, mostly the tyrants over the poor. Soon, Deva's name is filed as one of the top four criminals of the city, the other three being Jindaal, Laal Singh and Khan. These three men are in an effort to do away with Deva, who acts as an impediment to their illegal activities. Asst. Commissioner of Police Inder Saxena has a genial relationship with Deva and his family, but is secretly planning to apprehend and punish him. Concurrently, a club dancer Jaya falls for Deva.

In due course of time, Inder marries Guddi. One day, Akash stops at a building under construction erected by "Laal Builders" to deliver some goods. Incidentally, at the top floor of the building he eavesdrop on the three crime bosses – Jindaal, Laal Singh and Khan devising an evil plot to kill the Chief Minister and frame Deva for the murder. In great panic, Akash flees from the spot but in the haste drops the cap of his pen on which the name "AKASH" is engraved. He reports this dreadful plot to Inder by phone after a failed attempt to call Deva. Inder arrives shortly and both of them walk up to the top of the building where the three men are abetting. Inder retains the pen-cap (which Akash dropped behind) and after an onslaught on Akash by Jindaal, Laal Singh and Khan, Inder slays Akash by throwing him off the building to avenge the death of his brother Vilas, whose hand Deva ripped off.

One day, the Chief Minister comes to meet Deva after the latter convenes him for a private meeting. Jindaal bursts onto the scene, before Deva arrives and fires at the CM in a lethal attempt to assassinate him. However, Deva turns up in time and carries the acutely wounded CM to a safe location. A search operation is launched for Deva by the police. Deva kills Laal Singh in a heavy blood-shedding rout.

Inder's wife Guddi comes across Akash's pen-cap inside a drawer at their home, which leads her to learn with shock and horror that Inder killed Akash. She rings up Deva, but before she utters the truth, Inder arrives with Jindaal, and Khan and detaches the telephone cord. The three men assault Guddi before Inder stabs her to death.

Eventually, Deva tracks down Khan as one of the killers of his brother and kills him by stabbing Khan to death. Later, Deva finds Akash's pen-cap among Guddi's mortal remains. Deva now knows that Inder has joined hands with Jindal.

A squad of policemen led by Inder besieges Deva's refuge. Jindaal arrives at the spot to kill the CM who is under vital medical treatment in Deva's shelter. Deva and his men with the help of the local residents annihilate the armed force. He kills Jindaal when the latter tries to fire at the CM, and beats up Inder. Finally, Deva's father Ashok Pradhan arrives and shoots Inder to death.

"Jaanwar ko maarne ke liye jaanwar banna padta hai" (To kill a beast, one has to become a beast) – the honest advocate upholds.

In the final scene, the CM asserts Deva's innocence. Deva is sentenced to seven years in jail.

Cast

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Production

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Mamta Kulkarni was offered the lead role, but declined. Mithun Chakraborthy was signed for Sunny Deol's role, but opted out later.[citation needed]

Box office

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Ziddi was successful at the box office, with a net collection of Rs 292.5 million. The movie flourished particularly in north India. The songs were well-received, with the dandy number "Mera Dil Le Gayi Oye" becoming extremely popular.[2]

Soundtrack

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The album has seven songs in the vocals of Hariharan, K. S. Chithra, Lalit Sen, Udit Narayan, Kumar Sanu, Shweta Shetty and Alka Yagnik. Sameer Sen-Dilip Sen composed the music for the album which was acclaimed by the audience. Besides "Mera Dil Le Gayi Oye" with Punjabi dash and touch, the song "Hum Tumse Na Kuch Keh Paaye" became popular as a soft romantic ballad[citation needed]. The other songs, in addition, became appealing[clarification needed].[2] The song "Mera Dil Le Gayi Oye" also known as "Kammo" is based on "Billo" although the song was reportedly mangled.[3]

The Ziddi soundtrack album sold 2.2 million units in India, making it one of the year's top ten best-selling Bollywood soundtrack albums.[4]

Track list

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# Title Singer(s)
1 "Hum Tumse Na Kuchh" Hariharan, K. S. Chithra
2 "Mera Dil Le Gayee" Lalit Sen
3 "Hum Tumse Se Na Kuch Keh Paaye" Hariharan
4 "Hum Mile Tum Mile" Udit Narayan, Alka Yagnik
5 "Kaale Kaale Baal" Shweta Shetty
6 "O Haseena" Kumar Sanu, Chithra
7 "Aji Suno Suno" Udit Narayan, Chihtra

Awards and nominations

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References

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  1. ^ "Boxofficeindia.com". 20 October 2010. Archived from the original on 20 October 2010. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Ziddi (1997) music". desiest.com. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
  3. ^ Shreevatsa Nevatia (9 December 2019). "Finding its fizz". India Today.
  4. ^ "Music Hits 1990-1999 (Figures in Units)". Box Office India. Archived from the original on 5 February 2010. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
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