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TrustNo1 thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: --L--


Ye batao terrorist angle ka kya hua.
Dikhaya ki nahi ki all through 90s n 00s he was friend of underworld like chota Shakeel and all ?

it was such a bullshit reason that i don't know if it's real or not.
He got ak57 illegally just to protect his dad from Muslim attacks during babri masjid incident. 😆
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Posted: 7 years ago
And his relations with underworld are just due to sanjay being scared of them.
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Posted: 7 years ago
MOVIE-REVIEWS 3-MIN READ

'Sanju' Review: Ranbir Kapoor's Sanjay Dutt biopic is an emotional roller coaster that unfolds like a bestseller!

Meena Iyer | Updated: Jun 29, 2018, 02:45 PM IST

Film: Sanju (Biopic)

Critics Rating: 4/5

Cast: Ranbir Kapoor, Paresh Rawal, Vicky Kaushal

Direction: Rajkumar Hirani

Duration: 2 hours, 42 minutes

Language: Hindi (U/A)

Story:

Superstar son, drug addict, TADA convict, superstar himself; the narrative explores the life and times of Sanjay Dutt. The story attempts to be an autobiographical account (for the most part) of a rich, weak boy who chastened to become a sober, strong man courtesy the tough hand that destiny dealt him with. This film shows how Sanju was supported ably on that arduous journey by his actor-politician-father, Sunil Dutt.

Review:

For those of us who have known Sanjay for four decades, watching this film is like having a catharsis. We probably know of more twists and turns in this actor's life than a 2 hours, 40 minutes film allows but what the repressed emotions that flow watching the goings-on on screen, is hard to share. There's a sense of despair and even defeat that many of us who knew him could only watch as his life spiralled from fame to darkness.

Rajkumar Hirani (Munnabhai franchise, 3 Idiots, PK), the master story-teller doesn't hold his punches as he gives us the story of a persecuted boy who just needed an excuse to blow up his life. The Sanju shown here is always running scared. Scared of his disciplinarian, Gandhian dad, scared of his losing his mother to a terminal illness, scared of the toxic climate that the Babri Masjid blasts brought, scared of just about everything. And, yet there was an Alpha-male trapped within him - someone who wanted to protect his family, his friendship and his own reputation. The intent behind his keeping an AK-56, his drug-addiction, his alcoholism and his caddish ways is not glorified. It is told in a faultless, human way; just the way it is.

There is no sermonising in this film. It is treated on many levels as a piece of fiction. The script allows you fabulous glimpses of deep friendship and above all, it shows you the indefatigable spirit of a righteous father, who fought with his back to the wall to bring his erring, condemned son back from notoriety to fame. The only chapter that has a hagiographic tint is the one that clearly states that Sanjay is no terrorist. Many of us who know him believe that. But yes, he was a victim of a headline-hungry media that has devoured him and spat him out, albeit, scarred for life.

Frankly you don't need to be a fan or a friend or family member of Sanjay Dutt to invest emotionally in this film. Even if you have a vicarious bent of mind (which most of have) you will take away a lot from Sanju.

For those who don't know Dutt, this film works as the story of a wayward child who puts his father through hell without realising it. It shows you the callous side of a spoilt brat who indulged his excesses. It's a tale of repentance and it is in equal measure a story of valour and strength. All battles are not fought at the border; some need to overcome their inner demons on a daily basis to emerge victorious.

Ranbir Kapoor's performance as Sanju is the stuff Academy Award nominations are made of. It's a pitch-perfect act that could bring him laurels for life. Vicky Kaushal as his friend, Kamlesh, should also pick up awards for his supporting act.

But for most people, the hero here is Paresh Rawal who plays Sunil Dutt so flawlessly. If I were Hirani, I would quickly announce a biopic on Senior Dutt next with Rawal playing the part and with story-inputs from Sanjay.

Loved Manisha Koirala in her cameo as Nargis Dutt.

Verdict:

Watch Sanjuit's an emotional roller-coaster that will give you the satisfaction of having read a bestseller

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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: TrustNo1

And his relations with underworld are just due to sanjay being scared of them.

Oh god...it's unbearable.
I am on dharamsankat...on one hand there is Hirani and Ranbir whom I admire and on other hand there is this criminal whom I despise.
Whether to root for the film or not I am confused.. earlier I was totally against the movie since I was sure about the White washing...then thought to forget the fact that its a biopic and see it as a fiction..but my morality is not helping me to go with it.
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Posted: 7 years ago

If you ever wondered why Sanjay Dutt didn't play himself in a movie based on his life watch Sanju', because if there is one person better than Sanjay Dutt to play Sanjay Dutt it is Ranbir Kapoor!!

The way Ranbir transforms on screen from creating "the look with hair and make up on point, to nailing Dutt's characteristic walk with slouched shoulders, and even the way Dutt speaks.

Dutt's story is one we are familiar with. The heady highs and abysmal lows have always being analysed under intense media glare. What makes Sanju' special is that apart from the humour and heart, there is Raju Hirani and his unique and endearing style of story telling that at one moment will make us chuckle and tug at your heartstrings in the next.

Ranbir Kapoor is flawless without ever missing a single beat and giving him company is Vicky Kaushal in the role of Sanju's best friend. A fine performer himself, Kaushal's dosti with Kapoor gives us a lot to cheer about in the film. Paresh Rawal as Sunil Dutt has a significant presence and it is this father-son relationship that is the soul of the movie.

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Posted: 7 years ago

Sanju' film review: Ranbir Kapoor redeems Rajkumar Hirani's fawning Sanjay Dutt biopic

The Sanjay Dutt rescue mission includes a terrific turn by Vicky Kaushal.

by Nandini Ramnath
Published an hour ago

The opening credits for Rajkumar Hirani's Sanjay Dutt biopic Sanju advise viewer discretion, since some scenes are likely to be distressing. It isn't clear whether the director is also referring to the sections that whitewash the Hindi movie star and entirely shift the blame for his transgressions to external factors.

Sanju is the fawning biopic of Sanjay Dutt that the trailer warned us about. It promises complexity and psychological acuity. Until a point, it appears to be on track to creating a nuanced portrait of controversy's favourite child but then it plummets into unquestioning and misty-eyed reverence.

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The screenplay, by Hirani and Abhijat Joshi, opens with a writer presenting an obsequious biography of Sanjay Dutt (Ranbir Kapoor) that compares the actor to Mahatma Gandhi, an in-joke about Hirani's 2006 film Lage Raho Munnabhai, in which Dutt's gangster Munna gets visions of and is transformed by Mahatma Gandhi's ghost.

The brawny actor will have none of it. He rejects the book and seeks another writer to document his tumultuous life. "Nobody knows the real me, he declares. By the end of 162 minutes, neither will you.

Despite this, the appointed writer gives away the biggest clue to the biopic's attitude to its subject. Dutt, in the presence of his third wife Manyata (Dia Mirza), is telling Winnie about the number of women he has bedded. At least 350, he says, and don't include the prostitutes. Winnie's blue contact lenses widen in a mix of incredulity and glee that causes the corners of her lips to meet her earlobes.

The cocktail of gobsmacked fascination and rampaging admiration rarely thins, even when Dutt is at the peak of self-damage. His early substance abuse, which costs him his relationship with Ruby (Sonam Kapoor) and the momentum built by his debut film Rocky in 1981, is blamed on a crooked drug dealer (Jim Sarbh). The second villain is the destruction of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya on December 6, 1992, which led to communal riots across India that were especially serious in Mumbai. Spooked by threats of death and rape levelled at his family members, Dutt buys AK-56 assault rifles from members of Dawood Ibrahim's gang, for which he is arrested and convicted.

But the biggest villain is journalism. Eager to hang Dutt before a fair trial, newspapers churn out false reports that link Dutt and his father, the eminent actor, producer and Congress politician Sunil Dutt (Paresh Rawal), to the terrorist conspiracy that resulted in the bomb blasts in Mumbai in March 1993. "I am not a terrorist, Dutt declares, and the movie devotes a chunk of its running time towards supporting his belief.

He might not have been a terrorist, but what guided Sanjay Dutt's decision to associate with gangsters and buy deadly weapons from them? The movie is unwilling to undertake a psychological exploration of its hero's tendency to make bad choices, and Hirani does not give viewers enough room to decide for themselves. The director even deploys the lyrics of classic Hindi film in his rescue mission. Kuch To Log Kahenge, written by Anand Bakshi for Amar Prem (1972), becomes the anthem for Sanjay Dutt's redemption.

Hirani's films are known for their folksy and unsubtle humour, their commonsensical approach to life's complexities, and melodrama (a recurring shot in his films is of characters wiping the tears from their faces). Hirani's talent for emotional manipulation made viewers reflect on the need for empathy and humanity in modern medicine (Munnabhai M.B.B.S., 2003), the relevance of Gandhian thought (Lage Raho Munnabhai), the problems with rote learning (3 Idiots, 2009) and the fakery of self-apointed godmen (PK, 2014). In Sanju, Hirani deploys all his skills to mount a defence of Dutt, but without acknowledging the culture of nepotism and entitlement that enabled Dutt's frequent journeys beyond the boundaries of the law.

In its relentless quest to offer absolution, Sanju is no better or worse than many other biopics that have flooded Bollywood over the past few years. These films come with in-built applause tracks, tear-jerking moments and narrative arcs that plunge to the depths only so that the eventual fightback will be that much more inspiring,

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The scenes about Dutt's drug abuse and his painful rehabilitation are a warm-up to the biggest battle in his life, but they also contain the movie's strongest moments. They tell us something about Dutt's self-destructive streak and his tense relationship with his illustrious father. They also include one of the movie's best characters and performances. Kamlesh (Vicky Kaushal) befriends Dutt when Nargis is being treated for cancer in New York and provides, along with Sunil Dutt, a moral compass for the beleaguered star. Kaushal's terrific performance overshadows Paresh Rawal's one-note turn as Sunil Dutt, and if there is anybody in Sanju who steals some of the attention from Ranbir Kapoor, it's him.

The salvage job for Sanjay Dutt is made possible only because of the actor playing him. Kapoor's impressive performance reverberates long after the end credits have rolled. Although some of his act involves flat-out mimicry, Kapoor manages to locate Dutt's emotional core and makes the actor an altogether more interesting and complex charcter than he is in the real world. Kapoor squeezes sympathy and empathy out of the most cringe-worthy moments, including the one in which he seduces a woman meant for another.

Said woman (played by Karishma Tanna) disappears as soon as she appears. The women in Sanju are as ornamental as their predecessors in Hirani's films. Reams have been written about Sanjay Dutt's various dalliances, and his romantic entanglements contribute to his screen persona as a man among men. The secret of Dutt's seduction technique is another one of the elements missing from the biopic. There is instead greater frisson in the bromance between Dutt and Kamlesh, which echoes the camaraderie between Munna and Circuit from Hirani's Munnabhai films.

Winnie, who is described as "the world's top biographer, has no function other than to stand in for the uncritical filmmakers. Manisha Koirala's Nargis is little more than a totemic presence, egging on her son through his toughest moments. If there is anything resembling a heroine in this black-and-white saga of a hero and numerous villains, it is Sonam Kapoor's Ruby, who shows some spark in rejecting her drug-addled lover.


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Posted: 7 years ago
Sanju is trending no 1 in twitter
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Posted: 7 years ago
I just got to hear from a friend from India who has just now watched the movie and she says that most of the second half was dedicated to whitewash Sanjay and it does get quite distressing..😔
She says if we ignore the facts, and just look at the movie as a movie, its an absolute Mind blowing Masterpiece! Apparently Ranbir has delivered his life's best performance so far! (and she isn't a fan of Ranbir)


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Posted: 7 years ago
Ranbir Kapoor in a still from Sanju'.

When Sanju broke for an interval, I hurried out to buy that cup of coffee without which a 160-minute film feels like, well, a 160-minute film. When I returned, the 20-something man in the seat next to mine asked what I'd been writing in my notebook. I told him they were notes, and asked why he was at an 8 am show when he could've watched the film later in the day. "In a way, this film is my story, he said. He told me he'd been on drugs. He was in a coma for 15 months. He'd attempted suicide, gone to jail for accidentally firing a gun while running from a hospital. He was three years clean now, and finishing college. He hadn't been able to sleep the previous night out of excitement. There was a faint smell of alcohol on his breath.

I have no idea if anything my neighbour told me was true. But it was a useful reminder that what might seem to one person an impossibly exaggerated story could be as real as documentary to someone else. I looked at the screen and saw Ranbir Kapoor doing an often-uncanny Sanjay Dutt impression. He looked up and saw his past missteps. Somewhere in between these two viewings and a theatre-full of others, Sanju was unfolding.

When it was announced that Rajkumar Hirani was making a Sanjay Dutt biopic, there was a good deal of scepticism. Hindi biopics are nearly always uncontroversial, and often worshipfuland this was a film about the star of Hirani's breakout film, Munna Bhai MBBS. The prospect of Hirani, expert locator of the surreal in the everyday, taking on a real-life subject was admittedly intriguing, but it didn't seem like there was any way the film wouldn't go soft on its subject.

Sanju isn't a hagiographybut it's also careful about how it takes Dutt to task. We're shown the actor's struggles with drugs and alcohol in graphic detail, but the blame is eventually pinned on his supplier (played by Jim Sarbh). Similarly, though the film doesn't paper over the time he kept AK-56 rifles, sourced from a terrorist, in his home, this too is put down to a combination of fear, navet and bad advice. Often, when Sanjay is shown doing something truly horriblelike turning up high to meet his ex-girlfriend when her father has just diedthe scene is given a comic tone. It's a warts-and-all film that hedges its bets: Sanju baba is rarely kept apart from the viewer's sympathy.

Hirani is one of the great deflators of solemnity in Hindi film. When his instinct to subvert works, it works beautifully. But it can also result in scenes that push for laughs while being actively distasteful. If you laughed at the "balaatkar scene in 3 Idiots, you'll probably find the sequence in Sanjuwhere Dutt sleeps with his best friend's girlfriend amusing. Sanjay Dutt is trying to help Kamlesh (Vicky Kaushal), a virgin, "open his account. He's there in the build-up to the big night; he, not Kamlesh, hands the girlfriend lingerie to wear; and when she emerges to find Kamlesh passed out, he's still around. He confesses the next day, but it's a comic moment, and there's a terrible echo of a punchline later in the film when Kamlesh jokes that they'll be even when he sleeps with Dutt's girlfriend after he passes out.

Sanju is recognisably a Hirani filmyou see it in the eccentric touches. A roomful of militant goons stand with their fingers in their ears, like kindergartners. A barber explains in a few crisp lines why he's in jail, and Dutt decides against getting a shave. Sanju is dancing with his dead mother in one scene; in the next, he's cha-cha-cha-ing in rehab. Also characteristic of Hirani and his long-time co-writer, Abhijat Joshi, is the emotional directness. Dutt might be a complicated guy, but this is a simple film, with a phalanx of violins to alert you whenever it's time to shed a tear. At one point, Sunil Dutt (Paresh Rawal) is called "terrorist ka baap. After his son makes good, someone calls him "Munna bhai ka baap.

A clue to how the makers would like Dutt's story to be received by viewers is there in the evolving attitude of Winnie (Anushka Sharma). Hired by Dutt to write his life story, the frizzy-haired writer is ostensibly a sceptic, initially refusing the project and, later, walking out on it. But she's also moved to tears by his reminiscences, does no research of her own, and seems to take everything her subject says at face value. For a film that casts an acerbic eye at news media, Sanju presents a thoroughly compliant alternative.

It makes sense that Hirani would get Ranbir Kapoorwhose characters are often directionlessto play the ultimate lost boy of Hindi cinema. The imitation (astonishing at times) takes over the performance; I found myself more impressed than affected by it. There is one scene that stood apart, though. Sunil Dutt has just finished telling Sanjay a story about his mother, Nargis, and smuggler Haji Mastan. He starts singing "Na moonh chhupake jiyo; his son joins in reluctantly. After some time, Rawal stops, and Kapoor continues, rapt, in a voice that sounds nothing like Sanjay's. The audience in the theatre responded to this moment with appreciative shouts, as if encouraging him to take wing.

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Posted: 7 years ago
People are crying buckets over white washing don't even know what actually happened. If you have been following him and dig through you would know.

Anyways doesn't matter, janta loves him so does the whole industry. I actually made a thread before the release for haters to let them know he's gonna be white washed because to them he needs to be shown as a terrorist which even is against the court verdict.

you have no sympathy or empathy! If someone is going through tough times and that's shown tgen it's whitewashing. people were even saying why should we sympathize with addicts well if I've to tell you then 😕

Anyways i won't be defending him you can cry buckets now over his glorification 😭 😆

Ps: taking guns from those involved in bomb blast is not the same as being involved in bombblasts. You actually believe he knew what they were up to. Then there was this imaginary conversation between Sanju and sunil which tahelka posted like they were there. Btw tahelka has no credibility.
Edited by adventurousman - 7 years ago

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