Dum (2003 Hindi film)

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Dum
Dum (2003 Hindi film).jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEeshwar Nivas
Written byDharani
Based onDhill (Tamil)
Produced byAli Morani
Karim Morani
StarringVivek Oberoi
Diya Mirza
Atul Kulkarni
Govind Namdeo
Mukesh Rishi
Sushant Singh
CinematographySurinder Rao
Edited byBharat Singh
Music bySandeep Chowta
Release date
  • 24 January 2003 (2003-01-24)
Running time
171 minutes[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Box office245 million (equivalent to 770 million or US$10 million in 2020)

Dum (transl. Guts) is a 2003 Indian Hindi-language action film directed by Eeshwar Nivas and produced by Ali and Karim Morani. It is an official remake of 2001 Tamil film Dhill. The film stars Vivek Oberoi, Diya Mirza, Govind Namdeo and Atul Kulkarni in lead roles, while Sushant Singh, Mukesh Rishi and Sheeba have supporting roles. The film's music was penned by Sandeep Chowta, under the banner of Sony Music Studios.

The film released theatrically on 24 January 2003. Film director S. Dharani, who wrote and directed the orignal, criticised the film for straying from the source material and making changes that created significant story problems, which resulted in the film not performing well in the box office.[2]

Plot[]

Uday (Vivek Oberoi) and Mohan come from poor middle-class families. Against their families wishes, the boys are hell bent on joining the police force. The duo aim to make it big solely on the basis of their abilities. Despite lack of any recommendations or leverages to make it to the police academy, luck smiles on them in the form of Raj Dutt Sharma, their training officer.

The duo too return his favour by realizing their dreams and making him proud. They soon become popular as no nonsense upright cops. One day, however, Kaveri (Dia Mirza), who happens to be Uday's girlfriend, gets into an argument with Inspector Shankar aka Encounter Shankar after she witnesses him taking a leak in the river & scolds him. Shankar tries to slap Kaveri but Uday intervenes and beats Shankar up badly. Shankar swears vengeance on him and leaves. On learning this, Sharma tells Uday that Shankar is an egoistic, corrupt cop who uses his powers for all the wrong kinds of motives.

He reveals that on orders of Minister Deshmukh, a goon named Babu Kasai killed his rival. Sharma's wife Lakshmi was one of the many witnesses who saw the murder, but only she came forward to testify. Shankar, who was also on Deshmukh's payroll, barged into Sharma's household and killed Sharma's daughter in front of Lakshmi. After sending Lakshmi into shock, Shankar was promoted over Sharma, the latter was demoted and given the job of selecting officers for training.

This was one of the reasons why Sharma selected the duo. Uday now decides that he will not stop until Shankar's menace ends once and for all. Here, Shankar already goes into offensive by killing Mohan. After cornering Uday, Shankar thinks that he is safe. But Uday retaliates by attacking Shankar. He kills Babu with Shankar's gun stolen by him, making everybody believe that Shankar gunned the criminal. In retaliation, Shankar kills Deshmukh and frames Uday for it. Now, it is revealed that Babu's death was faked and that he is actually in captivity of Uday.

Unaware of this, Shankar manages to launch a massive manhunt against Uday. On learning that Babu is still alive, Shankar springs into action to track down Babu, Uday and Kaveri. He traces the trio and a shootout occurs. Babu gets fatally injured during the fracas. Taking advantage of the situation, Shankar tries to corner and kill Uday. Meanwhile, Babu, who is on his deathbed, confesses all his crimes to Kaveri, who videotapes it.

The Commissioner himself turns up at the crime scene, where Kaveri shows the dying confession to him. With Shankar's real face exposed, the Commissioner orders both Uday and Shankar to surrender. Shankar tries to run away, but Uday tracks him down and kills him, thus avenging all the wrongs Shankar caused. Uday surrenders, after which he is duly tried at the court. Based on the evidence, he is exonerated, after which he is cheerfully greeted by the people in the end.

Cast[]

Release[]

The film was released in cinemas on 24 January 2003. In the UK, the distributor removed the visuals of a gunshot impact to secure a 12A classification.[3]

Critical reception[]

Dum received mixed reviews from critics.

Planet Bollywood gave the film a 7.5/10 rating, feeling the second half "the essence was lost", also comparing the film to Cineyug's previous film Arjun which carried a similar theme. The reviewer, however praised the action sequences and background score.[4] Writing for Bollywood Hungama, Taran Adarsh gave the film one and a half stars out of five, praising the first half while criticizing the second; he praised the cinematography and the action sequences aside from the performances of Oberoi and Kulkarni, but wrote off the screenplay and execution.[5] Rediff.com also responded negatively, similarly praising Sushant Singh and some moments in the first half, but criticized the cinematography and placement of the songs. The reviewer felt the film's message involving vigilantism was misleading.[6]

Soundtrack[]

The album was composed by Sandeep Chowta and the lyrics were penned by Sameer, Abbas Tyrewala and Nitin Raikwar.

Caption text
No. Title Lyrics Artist(s) Length
1. "Dum" Sameer, Abbas Tyrewala, Nitin Raikwar Sandeep Chowta 4:58
2. "Jeena" Nitin Raikwar Sonu Nigam, Sowmya Raoh 4:48
3. "Babuji Zara Dheere Chalo" Sameer Sukhwinder Singh, Sonu Kakkar 4:59
4. "Someday" Nitin Raikwar Leslie Lewis, Anuradha Sriram 4:54
5. "Dil Hi Dil Mein" Abbas Tyrewala Sonu Nigam, Sowmya Raoh 4:33
6. "Suntaja" Sameer Sukhwinder Singh, Jolly Mukherjee, Javed Ali, Sowmya Raoh 5:03
7. "Dum" Sameer, Abbas Tyrewala, Nitin Raikwar Sonu Nigam 4:57
8. "Babuji Zara - Bijli Mix" Sameer Sukhwinder Singh, Sonu Kakkar 5:49

References[]

  1. ^ "Dum". British Board of Film Classification.
  2. ^ "'They have messed up the film!'". Rediff.com.
  3. ^ "Dum". British Board of Film Classification.
  4. ^ "Dum - movie review by Amit - Planet Bollywood".
  5. ^ "Dum Movie Review". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 23 January 2003.
  6. ^ "Might is right, right is not right in Dum". Rediff.com. Retrieved 24 January 2003.

External links[]

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