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2007 Indian film directed by Apoorva Lakhia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shootout at Lokhandwala is a 2007 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film[2] directed and co-written by Apoorva Lakhia and co-written and co-produced by Sanjay Gupta, with Ekta Kapoor serving as producer and Suresh Nair serving as writer. Based on the 1991 Lokhandwala Complex shootout, a real-life gun battle between gangsters and the Mumbai Police, it stars Amitabh Bachchan, Sanjay Dutt, Suniel Shetty, Vivek Oberoi, Arbaaz Khan, Tusshar Kapoor, Rohit Roy, Aditya Lakhia, and Shabbir Ahluwalia in pivotal roles.
Shootout at Lokhandwala | |
---|---|
Directed by | Apoorva Lakhia |
Written by | Sanjay Gupta Suresh Nair Apoorva Lakhia |
Story by | Sanjay Gupta Suresh Nair Apoorva Lakhia |
Produced by | Ekta Kapoor Sanjay Gupta |
Starring | Amitabh Bachchan Sanjay Dutt Suniel Shetty Vivek Oberoi Abhishek Bachchan Arbaaz Khan Tusshar Kapoor Rohit Roy Aditya Lakhia Shabbir Ahluwalia |
Cinematography | Gururaj R. Jois |
Edited by | Bunty Nagi |
Music by | Strings Anand Raj Anand Mika Singh Biddu Euphoria |
Distributed by | White Feather Films Balaji Motion Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 121 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹18 crore[1] |
Box office | ₹46.04 crore[1] |
Aftab Ahmed "A. A." Khan, head of the ATS, attacked the Lokhandwala Complex on 16 November 1991, with a force of around 400 armed policemen. Dreaded gangster Maya Dolas was hiding in the complex. The leading protagonists in the film have slightly different names than their real-life counterparts, and the film caption is "based on true rumours."
In 1992, former chief justice Dhingra (Amitabh Bachchan) interviews the three leading members of Bombay's Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) — Additional Commissioner of Police Shamsher S. Khan (Sanjay Dutt), Inspector Kaviraj Patil (Sunil Shetty) and Constable Javed Sheikh (Arbaaz Khan) — to defend them in their upcoming inquiry. Khan explains to Dhingra that he hand-picked 27 of Mumbai police's best-enlisted men and officers to help combat crime, borrowing the concept from the LAPD SWAT team. Following Operation Blue Star in 1984, several Sikh extremists fled to Bombay and began establishing a base in the city, engaging in violence, extortion, and other subversive tactics. The death of his best officer at the hands of the extremists prompts Khan to obtain clearance from police commissioner Krishnamurthy (A. A. Khan) to encounter those responsible for the officer's death. Khan asks journalist Meeta Matu (Diya Mirza) to cover the incident so as to deter future incidents.
Maya (Vivek Oberoi), the second-in-command of the 'boss in Dubai', runs the latter's criminal activities in Bombay with his gang. Maya's ambitions are fuelled by his mother (Amrita Singh), growing to the point where he wishes to assert his independence from Dubai and take over Bombay for himself. Khan's ATS focusses on Maya's gang after a police informant connects them to a string of murders in the city. The ATS encounters one of Maya's gang members, causing Maya to retaliate by killing the informant's relative. The ATS contacts the gang members' families to try and convince them to surrender, but the gang threatens and attempts to bribe the members of the ATS in return. Maya, meeting Khan, tells him to keep their families out of it.
When prominent city builder Wadhwani (based on Gopal Rajwani, the owner of the building the movie was set in) refuses to pay Maya Rs. 40 million in protection money, claiming to deal directly with Dubai, Maya kidnaps Wadhwani's son. Wadhwani complains to the boss, who asks Maya to return the child immediately. Maya refuses, stating that he has upped his demands and that he wants control of Bombay. Tipped off by an informant (who, Dhingra alleges, called from Dubai), Khan learns that Maya's gang is located in a flat at Swati building in Lokhandwala. In November 1991, the ATS lays siege on the building with a large force of police. The police kill Wadhwani's son, allowed to leave by Maya to see if any from his flat will be allowed to surrender. During the subsequent shootout, Maya's gang tries to escape by various means, contacting Dubai, bribing a senior officer to intervene on their behalf, and even firing a rocket-propelled grenade as a distraction, but fail. Maya and each member of his gang is eventually killed.
While critical of Khan and the ATS throughout the interview, during their inquiry, Dhingra defends them in court by pointing out that the likes of Khan are necessary to safeguard the public against criminals. Khan and the ATS are acquitted.
Many scenes were shot on actual locations at the Lokhandwala Complex in Mumbai. There was a chase sequence with Sunil Shetty and Arbaaz Khan playing cops, and Ravi Gosain (Aslam Kesai) through Lokhandwala. It would have been difficult to shoot this sequence with the public around. Hidden cameras were used at five places, and the two actors ran 200 meters at the real location to can the scene.
The film sparked much controversy regarding the fictionalised portrayal of the incident.[3][4] Sikh groups complained about the wrongful portrayal of Sikhs as extremists.[5] This led to Sikh groups wanting the film banned and "bitterly" opposing the film.[6][7]
The soundtrack for Shootout at Lokhandwala was released during April 2007 by T-Series.[8]
# | Title | Singer(s) | Lyricist | Composer | Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Mere Yaar" | Sunidhi Chauhan, Anand Raj Anand | Dev Kohli | Anand Raj Anand | 05:01 |
2 | "Aakhri Alvidaa" | Strings | Anwar Maqsood | Strings | 04:39 |
3 | "Ganpat" | Mika Singh | Mika Singh | Mika Singh | 04:29 |
4 | "Unke Nashe Mein" | Sukhwinder Singh, Anand Raj Anand, Mika Singh | Sanjay Gupta (Director) | Anand Raj Anand | 04:49 |
5 | "Live By The Gun" | Biddu | Biddu | Biddu | 04:22 |
6 | "Sone De Maan" | Dr.Palash Sen | Dr. Palash Sen | Euphoria | 04:45 |
7 | "Ganpat (Rap)" | Mika Singh | Mika Singh, Virag Mishra | Mika Singh | 05:47 |
8 | "Aakhri Alvidaa (Club Mix)" | Strings | Anwar Maqsood | Strings | 06:24 |
9 | "Unke Nashe Mein (Club Mix)" | Sukhwinder Singh, Anand Raj Anand, Mika Singh | Sanjay Gupta (Director) | Anand Raj Anand | 05:25 |
Director Sanjay Gupta confirmed a sequel of the film. In early 2012, it was announced that the prequel Shootout at Wadala would star John Abraham, Anil Kapoor, Kangana Ranaut, Tusshar Kapoor, Manoj Bajpayee and Sonu Sood. Abraham is featured as the lead protagonist gangster Manya Surve; Ranaut appears as his girlfriend Vidhya Joshi, and Sood appears as Dawood Ibrahim.
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