Dhamaal

Dhamaal
Theatrical release poster
Directed byIndra Kumar
Written by
  • Dialogues:
  • Paritosh Painter
  • Bunty Rathore
Screenplay by
  • Paritosh Painter
  • Balwinder Singh Suri
Story byParitosh Painter
Based onIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
by Stanley Kramer
Produced by
  • Indra Kumar
  • Ashok Thakeria
Starring
CinematographyVijay Arora
Edited bySanjay Sankla
Music by
Production
company
Maruti International
Release date
  • 7 September 2007 (2007-09-07)
Running time
137 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Box officeest. 50.73 crore[1]

Dhamaal (transl. Fun) is a 2007 Indian Hindi-language comedy film directed by Indra Kumar and produced by Ashok Thakeria. The film stars Sanjay Dutt, Riteish Deshmukh, Arshad Warsi, Aashish Chaudhary and Javed Jaffrey in the lead roles while Asrani, Sanjay Mishra, Murli Sharma, Vijay Raaz, Manoj Pahwa, Tiku Talsania and Prem Chopra are featured in supporting roles.[2] Inspired by Stanley Kramer's It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), it is the first installment of the Dhamaal film series.

In 2011, the film spawned a sequel, under the title Double Dhamaal, with the lead cast reprising their roles.[3] A third reboot sequel, under the name Total Dhamaal was released in February 2019, with only Deshmukh, Warsi and Jaffrey returning with an entirely new cast and a fresh story, having no connections to its predecessors.

Plot

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Roy is kicked out of his job for not guarding a certain building. Adi is using a mixtape to play a saxophone. After his audience finds out, they thrash him. Adi's autistic brother Manav tries to get a Rs. 50 Banknote back from a guy by reaching his wallet, only for his hand to be stuck in the guy's back pocket, while putting the wallet back after getting the money and follows him to the one of the stalls in the restroom. The guy soon finds out and thrashes Manav. Boman Contractor accidentally damages his father Nari's car's window, he is then kicked out of his house by Nari. All four of them wind up together in a woman's house, where they go partying at nightclubs. In the house however, they're useless, as they don't do anything around and haven't paid their rent yet, the woman kicks them out of the house for not paying their rents and tells them to get a decent job.

Desperate to earn money, they devise up a plan. Adi tells Manav to steal a painting from the house to sell to the son of the late businessman Dwiwedi. However, Manav accidentally picks up a blank painting. They humorously sell the painting for Rs. 20,000 to Dwiwedi. They then pick up the original painting with the intention to sell it to Mr. Aggarwal, not knowing that he has been murdered. The case is handled by Inspector Gadha Kulkarni, who learns that before Mr. Aggrawal was murdered. When the four arrive at Agrawal's residence, he immediately arrests them.

While driving on the highway, Kulkarni frees the foursomes upon being informed that they are innocent. The four are overjoyed until they suddenly witness a car accident and encounter the dying driver, Don Bose. He tells them that he has hidden a treasure in the St. Sebastian garden in Goa under a big 'W'. He tells them to divide the money equally among themselves and then dies. They come across Inspector Kabir Nayak who has been trying to arrest Bose for the past ten years. He tries to extract information from the four but in vain, and they escape from there and decide to travel to Goa. Desperate for his promotion, Kabir is determined to capture the four. The four steal Boman's car which still belongs to Nari. The friends manage to steal the car but not before hitting Nari on the head and making him unconscious. Roy loses control of the car in a forest and hits it against a tree, breaking both headlights. They decide to spend the night in the car. The next day Kabir is transferred to Yavatmal for failing to capture Bose. Furious, he walks towards his table where Nari is waiting for him to file a complaint against his son for stealing his car, and gives Kabir the photos of Boman and his car. Meanwhile, all four come across a broken bridge which is the only way through the forest. They decide to jump the car but Boman is reluctant to do so. They manage to succeed but it crashes and explodes.

Kabir tracks the four down after discovering the destroyed car. He is able to learn the location of the treasure due to Manav's dumbness. He ties all four of them to a tree and sets off. However, they manage to escape and it is revealed that Roy had actually cut the engine wires of Kabir's car so to make sure he has not gone too far. They reach a dhaba and pretend to be detectives. They make the villagers and the dhaba owner believe that Kabir is Pasha, a dangerous gang leader and lures them to capture him for the reward would be Rs. 15 lakhs. Kabir defeats the villagers and he and the four arrive at a settlement – 60% would belong to the four and 40% would belong to Kabir. But Adi insists on having his and Manav's money in separate shares when they were planning to pay Boman as one share for damaging his car. Consequently, a fight ensues and is decided that whoever reaches the treasure first would take all the money.

All four part ways and try to reach Goa as soon as possible. Roy encounters a dacoit Babu Bhai and agree to divide the money among themselves provided they reach Goa as soon as possible. Boman also encounters his father. Though Nari initially wants to kill his son, he changes his mind after he learns about the ten crores. Nari and Boman find a private pilot but hilarious conditions cause the duo to fly in utter despair when the pilot abandons the steer and collapses into alcoholism while airline customer service provider D. K. Malik pushes them to near madness, failing to save himself, but they manage to reach Goa. Adi and Manav travel together. They keep failing to hitch a ride to take them to Goa until they bump into Iyer, who irritates them throughout the journey by continuously extending his patronymic name while introducing himself. Kabir nearly escapes death with a school child whom he saved as he hangs off a cliff and is pushed to deal with some school children who were supposed to visit and perform at a charity event.

Finally, as they together reach the garden, they mutually agree to find the treasure together before dividing it. They locate four palm trees which make the shape of a 'W', but Kabir arrives there and tells them to divide the money against them to which all agree. They dig there and are able to find the money. But again a fight ensues over the payment for the damage of the car. All are enraged when Adi and Manav are decided to pay the money as one unit but are separate units while taking money. The fight goes on during which Kabir takes all the money and runs. He tries to escape in a hot air balloon on a beach but finds it tied to a pole. He dives in an effort to cut the rope but is beaten up by the rest who pursue him. The balloon blows off shore and all are disheartened. Conditions change when the wind changes direction and the balloon again blows onshore. Night falls and they follow the balloon in a towing van. The balloon clashes against a pole and the bag falls down. All of them try to collect as much money as they can when suddenly some spot lights focus on them and a crowd cheers loudly behind them. Realizing that they are on a stage and the occasion is the charity event to be attended by the performing children who were with Kabir, they further learn about the pathetic condition of the orphaned kids who were to be honored through charity, and decide to donate the money to the orphans. At the end, the chief guest of the event – Commissioner M. I. Chaturvedi, who is Kabir's boss, praises all of them, while also telling Kabir that he will receive his promotion and that there is no better of use of this money than giving it for a charitable cause.

Cast

[edit]

Soundtrack

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Dhamaal
Soundtrack album by
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelT-Series

The film's soundtrack is composed by Adnan Sami with lyrics penned by Sameer. The songs, "Dekho Dekho" and "Miss India Marthi Mujhpe", were both known as the title song, since the main chorus of both the songs included the title "Dhamaal".

All lyrics are written by Sameer; all music is composed by Adnan Sami

No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Chal Nache Shor Machalein"Adnan Sami, Shaan4:56
2."Chandani Raat Hai Saiyan"Asha Bhosle, Amit Kumar4:22
3."Dekho Dekho Dil Ye Bole"Adnan Sami, Shaan5:13
4."Miss India Martee Mujhpe"Adnan Sami, Amit Kumar5:05
5."Chal Nache Shor Machalein" (Instrumental)Navin Prabhakar4:22
6."Chandani Raat Hai Saiyan" (Instrumental)Raghav Sachar4:02
7."Chandani Raat Hai Saiyan" (Remix)Sandeep Shirodkar4:56

Critical response

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Taran Adarsh of IndiaFM gave the film 3 out of 5, writing "On the whole, DHAMAAL is one joyride that should keep its investors smiling!"[4] Rajeev Masand gave the film 3 out of 5, writing "A little over two hours long, barely any time wasted on unnecessary songs, and surprisingly, the complete absence of any romantic track – there’s so much to like about Dhamaal. Then that’s three out of five and a thumbs up for director Indra Kumar’s squeaky-clean comedy Dhamaal. Sometimes, a good laugh is all you need to make your day. Don’t miss this one, a good laugh is guaranteed. "[5] Syed Firdaus Ashraf of Rediff.com gave the film 3 out of 5, writing "Actors like Vijay Raaz (as the Air Traffic Controller who tries to give directions to a plane that has lost its pilot, Manoj Pahwa, to binge drinking), and Sanjay Mishra (a dacoit) take the film to another level. However, the film could have been tighter. Editor Sanjay Sankla should have been better with the scissors. Besides, the story doesn't run too deep. It is never explained how the four good-for-nothing blokes become friends in the first place. Despite the minor flaws though, Dhamaal is similar to David Dhawan's brand of comedies: Fully dhamaal!"[6]

Khalid Mohamed of Hindustan Times gave more mixed review, writing "In sum, Dhamaal isn’t exactly what the title promises. But it does have its laugh-out-loud moments.. it’s not bad at all. Go ahead and try. "[7]

Sequel

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A sequel named Double Dhamaal was released in 2011. The third film of the franchise was named Total Dhamaal and released in 2019.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Dhamaal Archived 16 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine. Box Office India.
  2. ^ Gajjar, Manish (24 August 2007). "BBC - Shropshire - Bollywood - Dhamaal". BBC.com. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  3. ^ "Double Dhamaal: Complete Cast and Crew details". Bollywood Hungama. Archived from the original on 24 April 2011. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
  4. ^ Adarsh, Taran (7 September 2007). "Dhamaal Review 3/5 | Dhamaal Movie Review | Dhamaal 2007 Public Review | Film Review". Bollywood Hungama. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  5. ^ "Review: Thumbs up for laugh riot Dhamaal « Rajeev Masand – movies that matter : from bollywood, hollywood and everywhere else". Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  6. ^ "Dhamaal movie!". www.rediff.com. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  7. ^ "Review: Dhamaal". Hindustan Times. 7 September 2007. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
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