Soldier (1998 Indian film)
Soldier | |
---|---|
Directed by | Abbas–Mustan |
Screenplay by | Sachin Bhowmick Shyam Goel |
Story by | Shyam Goel |
Produced by | Kumar S. Taurani Ramesh Taurani |
Starring | Bobby Deol Preity Zinta Raakhee Gulzar |
Cinematography | Thomas Xavier |
Edited by | Hussain Burmawala |
Music by | Songs: Anu Malik Background Score: Surinder Sodhi |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Tips Industries Eros Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 155 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹12 crores[1] |
Box office | ₹38.8 crores worldwide |
Soldier is a 1998 Indian Hindi-language thriller film directed by Abbas–Mustan starring Bobby Deol, Preity Zinta and Raakhee Gulzar. The film released on 20 November 1998 and was declared as a superhit by Box Office India, becoming the 2nd highest-grossing film of the year in India.[2] Although Soldier was Preity Zinta's first film, Mani Ratnam's Dil Se.. ended up being released before Soldier and was thus Zinta's film debut. Soldier was the first movie in Abbas-Mustan career, which was not a Hollywood remake or adaptation. According to film writer Shyam Goel, it was inspired by a real incident that happened in Punjab where a woman's forehead was branded with the message that her husband was a traitor. Her husband, a soldier, was accused of treachery, and she was thrown out of her village. The story was already made as a movie in Tamil in 1989 titled Thaai Naadu, starring Sathyaraj in dual roles. Then this film was remade in Dhallywood as Jamin Nai by Syed Harun starring Shabnur, Shakti Kapoor & Mizu Ahmed in lead roles in 2000 and Tamil as Villu by Prabhu Deva starring Vijay & Nayanthara in lead roles in 2009.
Plot[]
In Barmer, 1978, corrupt Indian army officials Pratap Singh, Virender Sinha, Baldev Sinha and Jaswant Dalal have been stealing arms and ammunition led by a mysterious man known only as DK. Major Vijay Malhotra, a competent and high-ranking soldier, catches them in the act but is murdered by DK.
20 years later, the Mumbai Police get a fax from the Australian Interpol branch regarding Jaswant, now a wanted illegal arms supplier. An operation to capture him is handed over to ACP Dinesh Kapoor, an old friend of the late Major Vijay Malhotra, who informs a mysterious man known as Vicky. He wants Vicky to intercept Jaswant and not let the police capture him. Vicky succeeds but when Jaswant tries to kill him, Vicky shoots him.
Vicky travels to Sydney using information from Dinesh and woos Pratap Singh's daughter, Preeti. After all these years, Pratap, Virender, and Baldev have become high-profile arms dealers and live in Australia. After hearing of Jaswant's death and DK's involvement, they worry about betrayal from one another as each of them have secret files that incriminates the entire group.
Vicky meets with Pratap, who identifies him as Jaswant's killer and proposes a way to help make him more powerful. Baldev and his son Jojo realize that Vicky's mother is none other than Virender's wife, Shanti. Vicky is welcomed into Virender's gang. Virender is ecstatic to reunite with his son and happier to learn that he is in love with Pratap's daughter. He wants to use this to his advantage and have Vicky retrieve Pratap's secret file. Vicky instead shoots his father dead and retrieves his secret file, with which he discovers who DK actually is. Vicky convinces Baldev that Pratap betrayed them and killed Virender. Baldev rallies all his henchmen to launch an attack on Pratap but they are killed by Pratap's men. It is revealed that Vicky was working with Pratap to eliminate Virender's gang.
Vicky then reveals to Pratap that he is not actually Virender's son. He used Shanti to get closer to Virender and did the same for Pratap by using Preeti. The reason for all this is because DK gave him a contract to kill not just Jaswant but all the other partners so that he can own 100% of their crime organization. Vicky says that because of Preeti, he will instead kill DK and make Pratap the king. Pratap agrees to go to India with Vicky to kill DK.
After overhearing this, Preeti reveals it to Shanti. Shanti acknowledges that Vicky is not her son and that she had masterminded the plan to kill her husband and his business partners, whose weapons had accidentally killed her own son, unbeknownst to Virender. She reveals that Vicky is actually Raju, the son of Vijay. After Vijay's death, he had been framed for the gang's crimes and labeled a traitor. He was stripped of all medals, and their community ostracized his wife, Geeta, and son Raju. The villagers prevented Vijay's body from being cremated and threw it in the desert, where it became lost in a sandstorm. Raju separated from his mother, who stayed at a temple while he was raised with Shanti. Raju had been seeking revenge and justice for his father, and upon learning everything, Preeti agrees to assist him.
Dinesh releases Jaswant, who is revealed to be alive and had been helping Raju to finish off Virender's gang. Raju arrives in Barmer with Pratap and takes him to his mother's temple. He reveals to a shocked Pratap that he is Vijay Malhotra's son. DK is revealed to be none other than Jaswant in disguise. Jaswant's henchmen overpower Raju and Dinesh. A sandstorm ensues and gives Raju an advantage to kill the henchmen. Pratap and Jaswant confess their crimes to the villagers brought by Preeti. The two are then left to be eaten alive by vultures. With his name cleared, Major Vijay Malhotra is declared a martyr and given an honorable memorial ceremony.
Cast[]
- Bobby Deol as Vicky / Raju Malhotra
- Preity Zinta as Preeti Singh
- Raakhee Gulzar as Geeta Malhotra
- Farida Jalal as Shanti Sinha
- Johnny Lever as Mohan Singh / Lieutenant Sohan Singh (Army Service Corps)
- Suresh Oberoi as Subedar Pratap Singh (Army Service Corps)
- Dalip Tahil as Naib Subedar Virendra Sinha (Army Service Corps)
- Sharat Saxena as Baldev Sinha
- Ashish Vidyarthi as Asst Commissioner of Police Dinesh Kapoor
- Salim Ghouse as DK / Havaldar Jaswant Dalal (Army Service Corps)
- as Sheetal
- Jeetu Verma as Jojo Sinha
- Kulbhushan Kharbanda as Police Commissioner
- Pankaj Dheer as Major Vijay Malhotra (Army Service Corps)
- Amrit Patel as Hotel owner
- as Baaldaar
- Narendra Bedi as taxi driver
- Vivek Vaswani as a College Principal
Soundtrack[]
The soundtrack was composed by Anu Malik and was very hit amongst the audience. It was a key point in the success of the film. The songs "Tera Rang Bale Bale", "Soldier Soldier", "Hum To Dil Chahen", "Mere Dil Jigar Se" and " Mere Khwabon Mein Jo Aye" were chartbusters and the album was the third best selling album of 1998 after Kuch Kuch Hota Hai and Dil Se.... Lyrics were penned by Sameer.
# | Title | Singer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "Soldier Soldier" | Kumar Sanu & Alka Yagnik | 06:13 |
2 | "Tera Rang Balle Balle" | Sonu Nigam & Jaspinder Narula | 04:50 |
3 | "Mehfil Mein Baar Baar" | Kumar Sanu & Alka Yagnik | 05:40 |
4 | "Mere Dil Jigar Se" | Kumar Sanu & Alka Yagnik | 05:32 |
5 | "Mere Khwabon Mein Tum" | Alka Yagnik | 04:23 |
6 | "Meri Saanson Mein Samaye" | Sonu Nigam | 04:23 |
7 | "Hum To Dil Chahe Tumhara" | Kumar Sanu & Hema Sardesai | 05:18 |
8 | "Theme of Soldier (Instrumental)" | 04:47 |
Reception[]
Khalid Mohamed gave Soldier 2 out of 5 stars, writing that it "leaves you feeling ever so much older and colder."[3] Madhur Mittal of The Tribune noted that it "boasts of terrific production and technical values", calling it a "a taut thriller".[4]
Awards[]
Won
- Best Female Debut – Preity Zinta
- Best Action – Late Akbar Bakshi
Nominated
References[]
- ^ Chopra, Anupama (21 September 1998). "Reach for the stars". India Today. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Box Office 1998". Box Office India. n.d. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2008.
- ^ Mohamed, Khalid. "FROM HAIR TO ETERNITY". Filmfare. Times Group. Archived from the original on 2 October 1999.
- ^ Mittal, Madhur (15 November 1998). "A salute to Soldier". The Tribune. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
External links[]
- 1998 films
- Hindi-language films
- Indian films
- 1990s Hindi-language films
- Films directed by Abbas–Mustan
- Films shot in Sydney
- Films scored by Anu Malik
- Indian Army in films
- Films set in Sydney
- Films about military personnel
- Indian action thriller films
- Indian films about revenge
- Films with screenplays by Sachin Bhowmick
- Films scored by Surinder Sodhi
- Hindi films remade in other languages
- 1998 action thriller films