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Fashion_2005 thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
'Chak De India has got so much patriotism'

Reuters
New Delhi, August 15:


Chak De India, a movie that focuses on gender inequality in India through women's field hockey and adds a dash of patriotism has pleased critics and scored at the box office as well.

Chak De India, which opened last week starring Shah Rukh Khan, the most bankable star in the Hindi film industry, is loosely based on the true story of a 1980s Indian national men's hockey goalkeeper.

Khan plays the captain of the Indian team who misses a do-or-die penalty shootout against arch rival Pakistan in the final of a world championship, sparking a national outrage and triggering charges of match-fixing, leading to his ouster.

He returns 7 years later as the coach of a ragtag women's national team and transforms a bunch of divided girls from far corners of the country into world beaters.

"It's a big success, it's a definite earner," said Bollywood trade analyst Komal Nahta. "Two things are responsible — one it is a very well written screenplay, and secondly it has got so much patriotism, it has worked."

Bollywood films based on sport are not rare but most of them have revolved around cricket as the country boasts the largest following for the game in the world. Some stories have also been set around boxing.

Field hockey, once India's national sport and one in which the country ruled the world for a large part of the last century, has lost its appeal along with a decline in the national team's fortunes.

Chak De India was a winner not only because it has managed to make hockey a topic of conversation but also because it peddles patriotism, fights gender bias, rips apart class distinctions and makes a valid criticism of regional chauvinism and minority bashing, critics said.

While Khan, the reigning star of Bollywood, has been praised for his uncharacteristically understated acting — with some critics saying he may not be able to better this performance — his team of unknown actors has also drawn widespread appreciation.

Some of the biggest applause in cinema halls showing Chak De India comes when the women go around breaking Indian stereotypes — walking out of homes, beating up men who harass them in public and declining marriage proposals — all for hockey.

The opening of the film was timed to coincide with the 60th anniversary of India's Independence from British colonial rule and Chak De India has the inevitable hint of jingoism so popular with Indian audiences.

One of the players in the film asks Khan's character what he was doing outside in the dead of the night as flags are being raised on the eve of a world championship final his team has entered in Melbourne.

Khan replies: "I am watching a white man raise the Indian national flag for the first time."
srklicious thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago

Originally posted by: srk_biggest_fan

srk looks better than any of other "body builders" he looks awsome he has alwayz been ahead of everybody in acting department now those people are just jealous cuz he beat them in body too 😳 now they can't be called best body in bollywood cuz the king got it all body brains and acting and humility srk is winner all the way 😳


woow suha very nice saying yaar i completly agree with u dear 😳
srklicious thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
aww ur mosst welcome fary sis 😳
naadanmasakalli thumbnail
Posted: 18 years ago

Originally posted by: Fashion_2005

'Chak De India has got so much patriotism'

Reuters
New Delhi, August 15:


Chak De India, a movie that focuses on gender inequality in India through women's field hockey and adds a dash of patriotism has pleased critics and scored at the box office as well.

Chak De India, which opened last week starring Shah Rukh Khan, the most bankable star in the Hindi film industry, is loosely based on the true story of a 1980s Indian national men's hockey goalkeeper.

Khan plays the captain of the Indian team who misses a do-or-die penalty shootout against arch rival Pakistan in the final of a world championship, sparking a national outrage and triggering charges of match-fixing, leading to his ouster.

He returns 7 years later as the coach of a ragtag women's national team and transforms a bunch of divided girls from far corners of the country into world beaters.

"It's a big success, it's a definite earner," said Bollywood trade analyst Komal Nahta. "Two things are responsible — one it is a very well written screenplay, and secondly it has got so much patriotism, it has worked."

Bollywood films based on sport are not rare but most of them have revolved around cricket as the country boasts the largest following for the game in the world. Some stories have also been set around boxing.

Field hockey, once India's national sport and one in which the country ruled the world for a large part of the last century, has lost its appeal along with a decline in the national team's fortunes.

Chak De India was a winner not only because it has managed to make hockey a topic of conversation but also because it peddles patriotism, fights gender bias, rips apart class distinctions and makes a valid criticism of regional chauvinism and minority bashing, critics said.

While Khan, the reigning star of Bollywood, has been praised for his uncharacteristically understated acting — with some critics saying he may not be able to better this performance — his team of unknown actors has also drawn widespread appreciation.

Some of the biggest applause in cinema halls showing Chak De India comes when the women go around breaking Indian stereotypes — walking out of homes, beating up men who harass them in public and declining marriage proposals — all for hockey.

The opening of the film was timed to coincide with the 60th anniversary of India's Independence from British colonial rule and Chak De India has the inevitable hint of jingoism so popular with Indian audiences.

One of the players in the film asks Khan's character what he was doing outside in the dead of the night as flags are being raised on the eve of a world championship final his team has entered in Melbourne.

Khan replies: "I am watching a white man raise the Indian national flag for the first time."



yup it did got so much patriotism
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Posted: 18 years ago
LA Weekly Review

GO CHAK DE INDIA The inspirational go-for-the-gusto sports movie is such a staple genre of global cinema that nitpicking about the latest rip-off is a waste of energy. The only point worth making about the propulsive Chak De India (Let's Go, India), the second feature directed by Shimit Amin (after the blistering Nana Patekar police thriller Ab Tak Chhappan [56 So Far]), is that it weaves its familiar story with some fresh textures and even manages to invest the conflict on the field with a resonance that transcends the tick-tock turnover of the numerals on the scoreboard. Working from a script by Jaideep Sahni (Company) that folds in close to a dozen different agendas — for the players, their coach and even the soul of India as nation — Amin manages to make breathless excitement out of the all-but-inevitable underdog triumph of the Indian women's field-hockey team during the World Cup Finals match in Melbourne. A former editor, Amin emerges in the hockey sequences as a visual virtuoso, employing a hand-held, fast-cut style that recalls the Bourne movies. But he's even better at raising urgent questions whose social implications hardly need to be spelled out. Can star players with chips on their shoulders learn to forgo personal glory for the sake of the team? Can players from different regions and of different faiths learn to pull together in the name of India? The weightiest burden of all falls on Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, who turns in another of his fine-grained, non-star performances (like the ones in Swades and Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna) as the team's coach, Kabir Khan. A former Team India player denounced as a "traitor" after a penalty-shot loss to Pakistan, Kabir is not just a nominal movie Muslim but a palpably real one, a man whose inner-soundtrack anthem is a devotional wail addressed to Allah — a prayer for India. (AMC Covina 30, Naz 8, Laemmle Fallbrook 7) (David Chute)

http://www.laweekly.com/film+tv/film-reviews/film-reviews-de lirious-death-at-a-funeral-7-dias/17046/
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Posted: 18 years ago
Box office analysis

Joginder Tuteja,
IndiaGlitz [Thursday, August 16, 2007>


First weekend performance of latest release:

All talks revolved around CHAK DE INDIA in the weekend gone by. And no, for a change (thankfully), there weren't mixed reports that were making the rounds around the town. No one stood up and said that 'maza nahi aaya'! In fact it was heartening to see that both industry as well as audience was unanimous in hailing it as a landmark film for everyone involved.

And no, it wasn't just a case of only critics giving it a 4 star rating and audience appreciating it just for an 'effort'. Instead the film has proved to be a wholesome massy entertainer with even commoners accepting it wholeheartedly with feedback ranging from very good to excellent.
The film opened to a positive note and by the time Friday dawned, the word of mouth had spread like a wild fire. As the nation woke up on Saturday morning, the SMSs and calls were the order of the day as everyone acknowledged the fact that Shimit Amin and Jaideep Sahni had done which other film makers had mainly tried in the past when it came to making a film for the house of Yash Raj Films.

They ensured that a film was made which stayed rooted to it's theme without being trapped in the world of glitz and glamour. A win for Shimit, Jaideep and of course Shahrukh Khan without whom CHAK DE INDIA wouldn't have been what it is today, the film has proved to be a surprise of the season and is poised to be a big hit in the coming weeks.

http://www.indiaglitz.com/channels/hindi/article/33033.html
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Posted: 18 years ago
Hrithik- Aishwarya pairing looks more hot and sexy than Shah Rukh- Kajol in a bollywood flick.

AGREE 36% (8 votes)

DISAGREE 32% (7 votes)

PARTLY IN AGREEMENT 0% (0 votes)

But Shah Rukh- Kajol look more awesome in their on-screen chemistry and performance. 32% (7 votes)

Total votes: 22

http://magnamags.com/magna_stardust/
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Posted: 18 years ago
Like Beckham, with sticks

TURNS out Eddie McGuire is not the only one cultivating links with movie stars. While Collingwood has invited two-time Oscar winner Robert de Niro to the footy this weekend, Melbourne's hockey community is in the grip of Bollywood fever. Victorian Vipers player Sarah O'Connor was among those packed into the premiere of Chak De India (Go For It India) in Richmond last Friday night, after portraying an Australian player in scenes shot at the State Netball Hockey Centre late last year.

The film features Bollywood megastar Shah Rukh Khan as coach of the Indian women's team seven years after he is ousted from the game in disgrace as a player. "One man mentoring a hockey team of young and feisty girls," spruiks the preview. "For the girls, it is a chance to make their nation proud. For their coach, it is a chance to reclaim his lost honour."

There was no mistaking the heart-throb factor. A changeroom at Royal Park was converted to a plush dressing room with fridges and couches, said Hockey Victoria chief executive Adam Wallish, who helped find extras for the film from clubs around the state. And thousands were recruited from Melbourne's Indian community for the crowd scenes. "I'd kill for crowds like that at our state league games," Wallish said.

O'Connor, 22, was coming to terms with her new-found stardom when "Sporting Life" called yesterday. "I didn't know much about Bollywood, except they do a lot of dancing and singing. Now that I've seen it, I'm like, this is pretty big," said O'Connor, who has a speaking role in which she clashes with one of the Indian players at a cocktail party. "I play a bit of a *****," she said. "I didn't know who he (Khan) was, but I'd heard he was the Brad Pitt of Bollywood, and then I met him and you could just tell. He had the look and the smell. As soon as he came out, it was like a rock concert. People were going mental, they baked cakes, brought flowers, some girls fainted. When I shook his hand, I thought maybe I shouldn't wash it."

Chak De India is like Bend It Like Beckham, with sticks. But it keeps Bollywood silliness to a minimum. "There's an underdog team and they come together and win. It's predictable, but it's good. It has a great storyline," O'Connor said. "It was funny, when I did the movie we had the big crowds, so you kind of feel what it would be like to play for Australia. Then a month after we finished filming, I got a call-up to go to Argentina with the Australian team for the Champions Trophy. I got all these emails from the Indian girls saying, 'This is the real thing'!"

http://www.theage.com.au/news/sport/all-agog-with-warney/200 7/08/16/1186857681858.html?page=2
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Posted: 18 years ago
SRK's balancing act for OSO

Shah Rukh Khan has decided to release his Om Shanti Om post Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Saawariya but before Yash Raj's Aaja Nachle.

His earlier release date, November 9 was clashing with Saawariya and following personal requests by Bhansali he had agreed to postpone it. But pushing it ahead by few weeks meant an unwanted clash with Madhuri Dixit's comeback film produced by Yash Raj. So he has finally settled in for November 16 as OSO's release date.

A Bollywood insider tells us, "It is confirmed now that SRK is releasing OSO after Diwali week. Sanjay Leela Bhansali's personal request is not the only reason for this postponement. Saawariya is the first film produced by one of Hollywood's biggest studios, Sony which has bigger plans of film production in India and is also looking at setting up a studio apart from finding a strategic partner in Bollywood. The reigning superstar of Bollywood doesn't want to enter the bad books of Sony and is also eyeing a major deal with them in terms of setting up the studio and co-production for his mega venture planned, the Rs. 100 crore budgeted, Joker. This has propelled him to bow down to requests of postponing his re-incarnation saga ahead by a week, letting go the most lucrative week considered for Bollywood."

"The Chak De India star was first told to push OSO ahead by 2-3 weeks which would have meant a direct clash with Yash Raj's Aaja Nachle, scheduled for November 30. Considering the relationship he shares with Yash Raj, SRK decided to just push ahead his film by just one week instead of two or three weeks," the insider adds.

"Saawariya features two debutante star kids, the Kapoor khandaan scion, Ranbir Kapoor and Anil Kapoor's daughter, Sonam. Bhansali was scared of his film's box office performance with an opposition like that of the King Khan starrer which is carrying excellent reports. His initial request to SRK had met with no results but now the final decision has been taken which shall be keeping all the concerned parties happy," concludes the source.

Bhansali's production house officials admitted to him having approached SRK for postponing the film. SRK's production house, Red Chillies Entertainment officials, however told us, "We are releasing our film's music in mid September and promotions of OSO shall begin from August last week. The release date will be formally announced during the music launch."

http://news.indya.com/newsDetails.aspx?xfile=2007/August/New s_20070816_130
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Posted: 18 years ago
Hey everyone how are you and how is fc going?

and Sabi dii not talked to you since ages 😭 😭

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