Rang De Basanti x264[1280 X 560]UpScaled {Simba}[dvdrip]

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Description



FORMAT: MPEG-4
FILE SIZE: 1.35 GiB
WIDTH: 1280 pixels
HEIGHT: 560 pixels
ASPECT RATIO:2.25:1
FRAME RATE:25.000 fps
VIDEO BITRATE: 1 102 Kbps
AUDIO CHANNEL(s): Front: L R
LANGUAGE: Hindi
SUBTITLES: Yes
NOTE: SUBTITLES NOT A PROPER DON'T USE.

Aamir Khan
R. Madhavan
Sharman Joshi
Soha Ali Khan
Waheeda Rehman
Siddharth Narayan
Kunal Kapoor
Atul Kulkarni
Alice Patten


Plot summary
Struggling British filmmaker Sue McKinley (Alice Patten) comes across the diary of her grandfather, Mr. McKinley (Steven Mackintosh), who served as a jailer in the British Army during the Indian independence movement. Through the diary, she learns about the story of five freedom fighters who were active in the movement: Chandrasekhar Azad, Bhagat Singh, Shivaram Rajguru, Ashfaqulla Khan, and Ram Prasad Bismil. Having decided to make a film about them, Sue travels to India. With the help of her friend, Sonia (Soha Ali Khan), Sue initially casts four young men, Daljit "DJ" (Aamir Khan), Karan Singhania (Siddharth Narayan), Aslam (Kunal Kapoor) and Sukhi (Sharman Joshi), to portray as the revolutionaries.
Though they are not enthusiastic at the idea of acting in a film about the independence movement, Sue eventually manages to convince them. Laxman Pandey (Atul Kulkarni), a political party activist, joins the cast later, despite initially being unpopular due to his anti - Muslim beliefs and contempt for Aslam, a Muslim. In the process of filming, the idealism of India’s revolutionary heroes seeps into the protagonists. They gradually begin to realize that their own lives are quite similar to the characters they portray in Sue's film and that the state of affairs that once plagued the revolutionaries continues to torment their generation.
Meanwhile, Ajay Singh Rathod (R. Madhavan), a Flight Lieutenant in the Indian Air Force who is Sonia's fiancé, is killed when his flight crashes. The government proclaims that the crash was caused by pilot error and closes the investigation. Knowing that Rathod was an ace pilot, Sonia and her friends do not accept the official explanation. Instead, they claim that he sacrificed his life to save hundreds of other lives that would have been lost had he ejected from the aircraft and left the aircraft to crash into the populous city. They investigate and learn that the crash was due to a corrupt defence minister (Mohan Agashe), who had signed a contract exchanging cheap and illegal MiG-21 aircraft spare parts for a personal favour. To their surprise, they also learn that the key person who was responsible for organizing the deal was Karan's father, Rajnath Singhania (Anupam Kher).
Angered by the situation, the group and their supporters decide to protest peacefully at India Gate, a war memorial in New Delhi. Police forcefully break up their protest using batons; in the process, Rathod's mother (Waheeda Rehman) is severely hurt and she slips into a coma. DJ, Karan, Aslam, Sukhi, and Laxman decide that they must emulate the early freedom fighters and resort to violence to achieve justice. As a result, they kill the defence minister to avenge Rathod's death, while Karan murders his father for his corrupt actions. The minister is reported to have been killed by terrorists and is hailed as a martyr by the media. To bring forth their intentions behind the killings, the five of them attempt to reach the public through a radio station. They forcibly take over the All India Radio station premises after having evacuated its employees. Karan goes on air and reveals the truth about the defence minister and his wrongdoings. While still on the air, they are all killed in an ambush by the police and military commandos.
Production notes
Rakeysh Mehra took seven years to research and develop the story, including three to write the script.[2] While some raised doubts about his morale following the failure of his last film, Aks, at the box office, he retorted by saying that it would not affect him at all.[3] He added that not only did his storytelling technique improve, but past mistakes also had helped him improve his filmmaking abilities.[4] Development of Rang De Basanti originated with several ideas Mehra came up with early on but later dropped or greatly evolved into new directions. One of these involved a group of youngsters who worked in an automobile repair shop, while another was about the life of Bhagat Singh, an Indian freedom revolutionary.[4] During this time, he personally conducted a survey with a group of youths in New Delhi and Mumbai about the Indian revolutionaries he was planning on depicting, which indicated that many of children did not recognize the names of some of the most prominent revolutionaries. This led Mehra to believe that the sense of "patriotism had blurred" in the young generation.[4] Because of this, he dropped his original plans in favor of a new idea in which a British documentary filmmaker on a visit to India realizes that the local "kids are more Western than her".[4] This new story, which eventually formed the basis for Rang De Basanti's script, was influenced by Mehra's upbringing, youth and experiences over the years,[2] including his desire to join the Indian Air Force while in school, as well as his recollections of listening to Independence Day speeches and watching patriotic films such as Mother India.[4] Although Mehra denies that the film is autobiographical, he confessed that the character sketches were loosely inspired by himself and his friends.
Mehra approached Angad Paul after having been impressed with his production work on British films Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch. Paul, who was keen to work in India, liked Mehra's story, and agreed to produce the film,[5] bringing with him David Reid and Adam Bohling as executive producers. Despite having no prior knowledge of Hindi cinema, Reid and Bohling's belief in the script was strong enough that they each were willing to work at half their normal rate.[6] While it was originally suggested that two different language versions of the film would be made concurrently, in English (as Paint it Yellow) and Hindi,[3][7] the plans for an English version were dropped during development. Mehra believed that English language version felt alien and that "one can tell a film in just one language".[4] After the English version was dropped, the writer Kamlesh Pandey was brought on board to pen the first draft of the film in Hindi,[4] marking the start of his screenwriting career.[8] Thereafter Mehra and co-writer Rensil D’Silva took over the script, working on it for about two years.[4] Prasoon Joshi, the film's lyricist, also worked on the dialogue for the film, marking his first venture into screenwriting.[9]
The film suffered a significant setback when one of the initial producers ultimately failed to contribute any funds towards the film; the shortfall left production looking uncertain just two months away from the beginning of principal photography. However, after Aamir Khan agreed to act in the film, Mehra approached Ronnie Screwvala of UTV Motion Pictures with the script.[4] Screwvala, who supported Mehra from the beginning of the film's production, had faith in the film,[10] reasoning that in historical films, "the treatment and execution is very different from regular masala fare",[11] and that such films "find favour with the audience owing to their elaborate sets and period costumes".[11] The film's budget was reported as Rs. 250 million (approximately US$5.5 million),[6] and despite going a little over the initially planned budget, Mehra did not have any serious disagreements with UTV














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Rang De Basanti x264[1280 X 560]UpScaled {Simba}[dvdrip]

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