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Sholay

Sholay (Hindustani: [ˈʃoːleː] , transl. Embers) is a 1975 Indian Hindi-language action-adventure film directed by Ramesh Sippy, produced by his father G. P. Sippy, and written by Salim–Javed. The film is about two criminals, Veeru (Dharmendra) and Jai (Amitabh Bachchan), hired by a retired police officer (Sanjeev Kumar) to capture the ruthless dacoit Gabbar Singh (Amjad Khan). Hema Malini and Jaya Bhaduri also star, as Veeru and Jai's love interests, Basanti and Radha, respectively. The music was composed by R D Burman.

Sholay
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRamesh Sippy
Written bySalim–Javed
Produced byG. P. Sippy
Starring
CinematographyDwarka Divecha
Edited byM. S. Shinde
Music byR. D. Burman
Production
companies
United Producers
Sippy Films
Distributed bySippy Films
Release date
  • 15 August 1975 (1975-08-15)
Running time
204 minutes[1][a]
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget30 million[2]
Box officeest. ₹350 million (India)[3]
250 million tickets (worldwide)[4]

The film was shot in the rocky terrain of Ramanagara, in the southern state of Karnataka, over a span of two and a half years. After the Central Board of Film Certification mandated the removal of several violent scenes, Sholay was released as a 198-minute long film. In 1990, the original director's cut of 204 minutes became available on home media. When first released, Sholay received negative critical reviews and a tepid commercial response, but favourable word-of-mouth publicity helped it to become a box office success. It broke records for continuous showings in many theatres across India, and ran for more than five years at Mumbai's Minerva theatre. The film was also an overseas success in the Soviet Union. It was the highest-grossing Indian film ever at the time, and was the highest-grossing film in India up until Hum Aapke Hain Koun..! (1994). By numerous accounts, Sholay remains one of the highest-grossing Indian films of all time, adjusted for inflation.

Sholay is often regarded as one of the greatest and most influential Indian film of all time. It was ranked first in the British Film Institute's 2002 poll of "Top 10 Indian Films" of all time. In 2005, the judges of the 50th Filmfare Awards named it the Best Film of 50 Years. The film is a Dacoit Western (sometimes called a "Curry Western"), combining the conventions of Indian dacoit films with that of Spaghetti Westerns along with elements of Samurai cinema. Sholay is also a defining example of the masala film, which mixes several genres in one work. Scholars have noted several themes in the film, such as glorification of violence, conformation to feudal ethos, debate between social order and mobilised usurpers, homosocial bonding, and the film's role as a national allegory. The combined sales of the original soundtrack, scored by R. D. Burman, and the dialogues (released separately), set new sales records. The film's dialogues and certain characters became extremely popular, contributing to numerous cultural memes and becoming part of India's daily vernacular. In January 2014, Sholay was re-released to theatres in the 3D format.

Plot

Jai and Veeru are small-time crooks who are released from prison, where they are recruited by a former Inspector Thakur Baldev Singh to capture a notorious dacoit named Gabbar Singh wanted for ₹50,000,[b] as the duo had saved Thakur from a train robbery which makes Thakur to recruit them for the mission with an additional ₹20,000 reward. The duo leave for Thakur's village in Ramgarh, where Gabbar is residing and terrorizing the villagers.

After reaching Ramgarh, Veeru falls for Basanti, a feisty talkative horse-cart driver. Jai meets Thakur's widowed daughter-in-law Radha and falls for her, who later reciprocates his feelings. The two thwart Gabbar's dacoits, who came to extort money. During the festival of Holi, Gabbar's gang attacks the villagers where they corner Jai and Veeru, but the duo manage to attack and chase them away from the village. The duo are upset at Thakur's inaction (when Jai and Veeru were cornered, Thakur had a gun within his reach, but did not help them) and consider calling off the mission. Thakur reveals that a few years ago, Gabbar had killed his family members (except Radha), and had both his arms cut off; he concealed the dismemberment by always wearing a shawl, which was the sole reason he could not use the gun.

Realizing this, Jai and Veeru take an oath that they will capture Gabbar alive. After learning the duo's heroics, Gabbar kills the local imam Rahim Chacha's son Ahmed and forces the villagers to make Jai and Veeru surrender to him. The villagers refuse and instead get the duo to kill a few of Gabbar's henchmen. Gabbar retaliates by having his men capture Veeru and Basanti. Jai arrives and attacks the hideout, where the trio are able to flee Gabbar's hideout with dacoits in pursuit. Shooting from behind a rock, Jai and Veeru nearly run out of ammunition. Unaware that Jai was wounded in the gunfight, Veeru is forced to leave for more ammunition and also to drop Basanti at a safe place.

Jai sacrifices himself by using his last bullet to ignite dynamite sticks on a bridge from close range, killing Gabbar's men. Veeru returns, and Jai dies, leaving Radha and Veeru devastated. Enraged, Veeru attacks Gabbar's den and kills his remaining men where he catches Gabbar and nearly beats him to death. Thakur appears and reminds Veeru of the vow to hand over Gabbar alive. Thakur uses his spike-soled shoes to severely injure Gabbar and his hands. The police arrive and arrest Gabbar for his crimes. After Jai's funeral, Veeru leaves Ramgarh and finds Basanti waiting for him on the train.

Cast

Production

Development

The screenwriter pair Salim–Javed, consisting of Salim Khan and Javed Akhtar, began narrating the idea for Sholay as a four-line snippet to filmmakers in 1973.[11][12] The idea was rejected by two producer/director teams, including directors Manmohan Desai and Prakash Mehra.[12] About six months after the release of Zanjeer (1973),[c] Salim-Javed contacted G. P. Sippy and his son Ramesh Sippy,[11] and narrated the four-line snippet to them.[12] Ramesh Sippy liked the concept of Sholay and hired them to develop it. The original idea of the film involved an army officer who decided to hire two ex-soldiers to avenge the murder of his family. The army officer was later changed to a policeman because Sippy felt that it would be difficult to get permission to shoot scenes depicting army activities. Salim-Javed completed the script in one month, incorporating names and personality traits of their friends and acquaintances.[12] The film's script and dialogues are in Hindustani;[13] Salim-Javed wrote the dialogues in Urdu script, which was then transcribed by an assistant into Devanagari script so that Hindi readers could read the Urdu dialogues.[14]

The film's plot was loosely styled after Akira Kurosawa's 1954 samurai cinema film, Seven Samurai.[15][16] Sholay is a defining example of the Dacoit Western film, combining the conventions of Indian dacoit films, especially Mehboob Khan's Mother India (1957) and the Dilip Kumar and Nitin Bose film Gunga Jumna (1961),[17] with that of Westerns,[15][16] especially Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Westerns such as Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) as well as The Magnificent Seven (1960).[16] It also has some plot elements borrowed from the Indian films Mera Gaon Mera Desh (1971) and Khote Sikkay (1973).[12] A scene depicting an attempted train robbery was inspired by a similar scene in Gunga Jumna,[18] and has also been compared to a similar scene in North West Frontier (1959).[19] A scene showing the massacre of Thakur's family has been compared with the massacre of the McBain family in Once Upon a Time in the West.[20] Sholay may have also been influenced by Sam Peckinpah's Westerns, such as The Wild Bunch (1969) and Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973), and George Roy Hill's Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969).[21]

The character Gabbar Singh was modelled on a real-life dacoit of the same name who had menaced the villages around Gwalior in the 1950s. Any policeman captured by the real Gabbar Singh had his ears and nose cut off, and was released as a warning to other policemen.[22][23] Gabbar Singh was also influenced by larger-than-life characters in Pakistani author Ibn-e-Safi's Urdu novels,[24] Dilip Kumar's dacoit character Gunga from the film Gunga Jumna who speaks with a similar mixed Khariboli and Awadhi dialect,[25] and villains from Sergio Leone's films.[26] Sippy wanted to do away with the clichéd idea of a man becoming a dacoit due to societal issues, as was the case in other films, and focused on Gabbar being an emblem of pure evil. To emphasise the point of Gabbar being a new type of villain, Sippy avoided the typical tropes of dacoits wearing dhotis and pagris and sporting a Tika and worshipping "Ma Bhavani"; Gabbar would be wearing army fatigues.[27] The character of the jailer, played by Asrani was influenced by Adolf Hitler. Javed Akhtar brought a book on World War II which had several pictures of Hitler posing to set the typical posture of the character in the film. Asrani spiced up his character with some ideas about Hitler's speech delivery he had heard from a teacher in FTII. The trademark 'Ha Ha' at the end of his monologues was inspired by a similar performance by Jack Lemmon in The Great Race.[28][29] Soorma Bhopali, a minor comic relief character, was based on an acquaintance of actor Jagdeep, a forest officer from Bhopal named Soorma. The real-life Soorma eventually threatened to press charges when people who had viewed the film began referring to him as a woodcutter.[30] The main characters' names, Jai and Veeru, mean "victory" and "heroism" in Hindi.[31]

Casting

The producers considered Danny Denzongpa for the role of bandit chief Gabbar Singh, but he could not accept it as he was committed to act in Feroz Khan's Dharmatma (1975), under production at the same time.[32] Amjad Khan, who was the second choice, prepared himself for the part by reading the book Abhishapta Chambal, which told of the exploits of Chambal dacoits. The book was written by Taroon Kumar Bhaduri, the father of fellow cast member Jaya Bhaduri.[33] Sanjeev Kumar also wanted to play the role of Gabbar Singh, but Salim-Javed "felt he had the audience's sympathy through roles he'd done before; Gabbar had to be completely hateful."[11]

Sippy wanted Shatrughan Sinha to play the part of Jai, but there were already several big stars signed, and Amitabh Bachchan, who was not very popular yet, lobbied hard to get the part for himself.[12] He was cast after Salim-Javed recommended him for Sholay in 1973; Bachchan's performance in their first collaboration, Zanjeer, convinced Salim-Javed he was the right actor for the part.[34] Salim-Javed were also impressed with Bachchan's performance in Raaste Kaa Patthar (1972), and at Bachchan's request, Dharmendra had personally put in a word for him. All these factors ensured that the role was Bachchan's.[35]

As cast members had read the script ahead of time, many were interested in playing different parts. Pran was considered for the role of Thakur Baldev Singh, but Sippy thought Sanjeev Kumar was a better choice.[36] Initially, Salim-Javed approached Dilip Kumar to play Thakur's role, but he turned down the offer; Dilip Kumar later said it was one of the few films he regretted turning down.[11] Initially, Dharmendra was also interested to play the role of Thakur. He eventually gave up the role when Sippy informed him that Sanjeev Kumar would play Veeru if that happened, and would thus be paired with Hema Malini, who Dharmendra was trying to woo. Dharmendra knew that Kumar was also interested in Malini.[37] Malini was reluctant to play the role of a tangewali, more so after Sippy told her that the film belongs to Sanjeev Kumar and Amjad Khan, but she trusted Sippy to give her a meaty role, given that he had played a huge role in essaying her stardom through their previous collaborations.[38]

During the film's production, four of the leads became romantically involved.[16] Bachchan married Bhaduri four months before filming started. This led to shooting delays when Bhaduri became pregnant with their daughter Shweta. By the time the film released, she was pregnant with their son Abhishek. Dharmendra had begun courting Malini during their earlier film Seeta Aur Geeta (1972), also directed by Sippy, and used the location shoot of Sholay to further pursue her. During their romantic scenes, Dharmendra would often pay the light boys to spoil the shot, thereby ensuring many retakes which would allow him to spend more time with her. The couple married five years after the film's release.[39]

Filming

 
Ramdevarabetta, near the town of Ramanagara; much of Sholay was shot in rocky locations such as this.

Much of Sholay was shot in the rocky terrain of Ramanagara, a town near Bangalore, Karnataka.[40][41] The filmmakers had to build a road from the Bangalore highway to Ramanagara for convenient access to the sets.[42] Art director Ram Yedekar had an entire township built on the site. A prison set was constructed near Rajkamal Studios in Bombay, also outdoors, to match the natural lighting of the on-location sets.[43] One part of Ramanagara was for a time called "Sippy Nagar" as a tribute to the director of the film.[44] As of 2010, a visit to the "Sholay rocks" (where much of the film was shot) was still being offered to tourists travelling through Ramanagara.[45]

Filming began on location on 3 October 1973, with a scene featuring Bachchan and Bhaduri.[46] The film had a lavish production for its time (with frequent banquets and parties for the cast),[47] took two and a half years to make, and went over budget. One reason for its high cost was that Sippy re-filmed scenes many times to get his desired effect. "Yeh Dosti", a 5-minute song sequence, took 21 days to shoot, two short scenes in which Radha lights lamps took 20 days to film because of lighting problems, and the shooting of the scene in which Gabbar kills the imam's son lasted 19 days.[48] The train robbery sequence, shot on the Bombay–Poona railway route near Panvel, took more than 7 weeks to complete.[49]

Sholay was the first Indian film to have a stereophonic soundtrack and to use the 70 mm widescreen format.[50] However, since actual 70 mm cameras were expensive at the time, the film was shot on traditional 35 mm film and the 4:3 picture was subsequently converted to a 2.2:1 frame.[51] Regarding the process, Sippy said, "A 70 mm [sic] format takes the awe of the big screen and magnifies it even more to make the picture even bigger, but since I also wanted a spread of sound we used six-track stereophonic sound and combined it with the big screen. It was definitely a differentiator."[52] The use of 70 mm was emphasised by film posters on which the name of the film was stylised to match the CinemaScope logo. Film posters also sought to differentiate the film from those which had come before; one of them added the tagline: "The greatest star cast ever assembled – the greatest story ever told".[53]

Alternate version

The director's original cut of Sholay has a different ending in which Thakur kicks Gabbar onto a nail on one of the two poles that Gabbar had used to chain Thakur when he had cut off his arms, stabbing him in the back and killing him, along with some additional violent scenes. Gabbar's death scene, and the scene in which the imam's son is killed, were cut from the film by India's Censor Board, as was the scene in which Thakur's family is massacred.[48] The Censor Board was concerned about the violence, and that viewers may be influenced to violate the law by punishing people severely.[54] Although Sippy fought to keep the scenes, eventually he had to re-shoot the ending of the film, and as directed by the Censor Board, have the police arrive just before Thakur can kill Gabbar.[55] The censored theatrical version was the only one seen by audiences for fifteen years. The original, unedited cut of the film finally came out in a British release on VHS in 1990.[51] Since then, Eros International has released two versions on DVD. The director's cut of the film preserves the original full frame and is 204 minutes in length; the censored widescreen version is 198 minutes long.[1][51][56][a]

Themes and interpretations

Scholars have noted several themes in the film, such as glorification of violence, conformation to feudal ethos, debate between social order and mobilised usurpers, homosocial bonding, and the film's role as a national allegory.[58]

Koushik Banerjea, a sociologist in the London School of Economics, notes that Sholay exhibits a "sympathetic construction of 'rogue' masculinity" exemplified by the likeable outlaws Jai and Veeru.[59] Banerjea argues during the film, the moral boundary between legality and criminality gradually erodes.[60] Film scholar Wimal Dissanayake agrees that the film brought "a new stage in the evolving dialectic between violence and social order" to Indian cinema.[61] Film scholar M. Madhava Prasad states that Jai and Veeru represent a marginalised population that is introduced into conventional society.[62] Prasad says that, through the elements of revenge included in the plot and the application of Jai and Veeru's criminality for the greater good, the narrative reflects reactionary politics, and the audience is compelled to accept feudal order.[62] Banerjea explains that though Jai and Veeru are mercenaries, they are humanised by their emotional needs. Such dualism makes them vulnerable, in contrast to the pure evil of Gabbar Singh.[60]

Gabbar Singh, the film's antagonist, was well received by the audience, despite his pervasive sadistic cruelty.[61] Dissanayake explains that the audience was fascinated by the dialogues and mannerisms of the character, and this element of spectacle outweighed his actions, a first for Indian melodrama.[61] He notes that the picturisation of violence in the film was glamourised and uninhibited.[63] He further notes that, unlike earlier melodramas in which the female body occupies the audience's attention as an object of male fetish, in Sholay, the male body becomes the centrepiece. It becomes the battleground where good and evil compete for supremacy.[63] Dissanayake argues that Sholay can be viewed as a national allegory: it lacks a comforting logical narrative, it shows social stability being repeatedly challenged, and it shows the devaluation of human life resulting from a lack of emotions. Taken together, these elements comprise the allegorical representation of India.[64] The narrative style of Sholay, with its violence, revenge, and vigilante action, is occasionally compared by scholars to the political unrest in India at the time of its release. This tension culminated in the Emergency (rule by decree) declared by prime minister Indira Gandhi in 1975.[65]

Dissanayeke and Sahai note that, although the film borrowed heavily from the Hollywood Western genre, particularly in its visuals, it was successfully "Indianised".[66] As an example, William van der Heide has compared a massacre scene in Sholay with a similar scene in Once Upon a Time in the West. Although both films were similar in technical style, Sholay emphasised Indian family values and melodramatic tradition, while the Western was more materialistic and restrained in its approach.[20] Maithili Rao, in Encyclopedia of Hindi Cinema, notes that Sholay infuses the style of the Western genre into a "feudalistic ethos".[67] Ted Shen of the Chicago Reader notes Sholay's "hysterical visual style" and intermittent "populist message".[68] Cultural critic and Islamic scholar Ziauddin Sardar lampoons the film in his book The Secret Politics of Our Desires: Innocence, Culpability and Indian Popular Cinema, both for its caricature and stereotyping of Muslim and women characters, and for what he calls mockery of innocent villagers.[69] Sardar notes that the two most prominent Muslim characters in the film are Soorma Bhopali (a buffoonish criminal), and an impotent victim of the bandits (the imam). Meanwhile, the sole function of one female character (Radha) is to suffer her fate in silence, while the other female lead (Basanti) is just a garrulous village belle.[69]

Some scholars have indicated that Sholay contains homosocial themes.[70][71] Ted Shen describes the male bonding shown in the film as bordering on camp style.[68] Dina Holtzman, in her book Bollywood and Globalization: Indian Popular Cinema, Nation, and Diaspora, states that the death of Jai, and resultant break of bonding between the two male leads, is necessary for the sake of establishing a normative heterosexual relationship (that of Veeru and Basanti).[72]

Music

R. D. Burman composed the film's music, and the lyrics were written by Anand Bakshi. The songs used in the film, and released on the original soundtrack are listed below.[73] Following that is a list of unused tracks and dialogues which were released later on an updated soundtrack.[74]

Kishore Kumar, Lata Mangeshkar and Manna Dey performed vocals for Dharmendra, Malini and Bachchan, respectively.

The song "Mehbooba Mehbooba" was sung by its composer, R. D. Burman, who received his sole Filmfare Award nomination for playback singing for his effort. The song, which is often featured on Bollywood hit song compilations,[75] is based on "Say You Love Me" by Greek singer Demis Roussos.[19]

"Mehbooba Mehbooba" has been extensively anthologised, remixed, and recreated.[76] A version was created in 2005 by the Kronos Quartet for their Grammy-nominated album You've Stolen My Heart, featuring Asha Bhosle.[77] It was also remixed and sung by Himesh Reshammiya, along with Bhosle, in his debut acting film Aap Kaa Surroor (2007). "Yeh Dosti" has been called the ultimate friendship anthem.[78][79] It was remixed and sung by Shankar Mahadevan and Udit Narayan for the 2010 Malayalam film Four Friends,[80] and also in 2010 it was used to symbolise India's friendship with the United States during a visit from President Barack Obama.[81]

Several songs from the soundtrack were included in the annual Binaca Geetmala list of top filmi songs. "Mehbooba Mehooba" was listed at No. 24 on the 1975 list, and at No. 6 on the 1976 list. "Koi Haseena" was listed at No. 30 in 1975, and No. 20 in 1976. "Yeh Dosti" was listed at No. 9 in 1976.[82] Despite the soundtrack's success, at the time, the songs from Sholay attracted less attention than the film's dialogue—a rarity for Hindi language films. The producers were thus prompted to release records with only dialogue.[83][84] Taken together, the album sales reached an unprecedented 500,000 units.[85] By 1979, the soundtrack went Platinum[86] (equivalent to 1 million sales at the time),[87] becoming one of the top-selling Bollywood soundtracks of the 1970s.[88]

Music critic Oli Marlow reviewed the soundtrack in 2013, calling it a unique fusion of religious, folk, and classical music, with influences from around the world. He also commented on the sound design of the film, calling it psychedelic, and saying that there was "a lot of incredible incidental music" in the film that was not included in the soundtrack releases.[89] In a 1999 paper submitted to London's Symposium on Sound in Cinema, film critic Shoma A. Chatterji said, "Sholay offers a model lesson on how sound can be used to signify the terror a character evokes. Sholay is also exemplary in its use of soundmatching to jump cut to a different scene and time, without breaking the continuity of the narrative, yet, intensifying the drama."[90]

Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Title Music (Sholay)" (Instrumental) 02:46
2."Yeh Dosti"Kishore Kumar and Manna Dey05:21
3."Haa Jab Tak Hai Jaan"Lata Mangeshkar05:26
4."Koi Haseena"Kishore Kumar and Hema Malini04:00
5."Holi Ke Din"Kishore Kumar and Lata Mangeshkar05:42
6."Mehbooba Mehbooba"R. D. Burman03:54
7."Yeh Dosti" (sad version)Kishore Kumar01:49
Bonus tracks — Released later
No.TitleSingers / SpeakersLength
8."Ke Chand Sa Koi Chehra" (Qawwali)Kishore Kumar, Manna Dey, Bhupinder Singh, Anand Bakshi –
9."Veeru Ki Sagai" (dialogues)Hema Malini, Dharmendra, Amitabh Bachchan –
10."Gabbar Singh" (dialogues)Amjad Khan, Sanjeev Kumar, Dharmendra –

Reception

Box office

Sholay was released on 15 August 1975, Indian Independence Day, in Bombay. Due to lackluster reviews and a lack of effective visual marketing tools, it saw poor financial returns in its first two weeks. From the third week, however, viewership picked up owing to positive word of mouth.[91] During the initial slow period, the director and writer considered re-shooting some scenes so that Amitabh Bachchan's character would not die. When business picked up, they abandoned this idea.[92] After being helped additionally by a soundtrack release containing dialogue snippets,[60] Sholay soon became an "overnight sensation".[50] The film was then released in other distribution zones such as Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bengal, and Hyderabad on 11 October 1975.[93] It became the highest-grossing Hindi language film of 1975, and film ranking website Box Office India has given the film a verdict of All Time Blockbuster.[94]

Sholay went on to earn a still-standing record of 60 golden jubilees[d] across India,[50] and was the first film in India to celebrate a silver jubilee[e] at over 100 theatres.[50] It was shown continuously at Bombay's Minerva theatre for over five years.[15] Sholay was the Indian film with the longest theatrical run until Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995) broke its record of 286 weeks in 2001.[95][96]

Exact figures are not available on the budget and box-office earnings of Sholay, but film trade sources provide estimates of its success. According to Box Office India, Sholay earned about 150 million in net income[f] (valued at about US$16,778,000 in 1975)[b] in India during its first run,[98] which was many times its 30 million (valued at about US$3,355,000 in 1975)[b] budget.[2][98] Those earnings in India were a record that remained unbroken for nineteen years, which is also the longest amount of time that a film has held the record for being the highest grossing film in India. Its original gross was increased further with re-releases during the late 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s.[99] The film's total gross revenue in India amounted to ₹350 million[3][100] ($39.15 million).[b] Box Office India estimates the film's total footfalls in India as over 100 million tickets sold.[101] The film was also an overseas success in the Soviet Union, where it was released in 1979.[102] The film sold 48.4 million tickets during its initial run at the Soviet box office,[103] before eventually selling 60 million tickets including re-runs.[104] The film was also released in China, as two parts in 1988.[105]

It was the highest-grossing Indian film ever up until Disco Dancer (1982),[106] and the highest-grossing film in India up until Hum Aapke Hain Koun..! (1994).[3] In 1985, India Today estimated that the film drew a total audience of 250 million over the years,[4] which is comparable to the number of tickets sold by some of the world's highest-grossing films of all time adjusted for inflation.[107] It is often cited that, after adjusting the figures for inflation, Sholay remains one of the highest-grossing films in the history of Indian cinema, although such figures are not known with certainty.[108] Box Office India estimated ₹1.63 billion as Sholay's adjusted domestic net income in 2008,[f][109] while Times of India estimated over ₹3 billion as the adjusted domestic gross in 2009.[110] Mid-Day estimated the film's total adjusted gross as ₹15 billion ($246 million) in 2014.[111]

Critical response

Initial critical reviews of Sholay were negative. Among contemporary critics, K.L. Amladi of India Today called the film a "dead ember" and "a gravely flawed attempt".[112][113] Filmfare said that the film was an unsuccessful mincing of Western style with Indian milieu, making it an "imitation western—neither here nor there."[112] Others labelled it as "sound and fury signifying nothing" and a "second-rate take-off" of the 1971 film Mera Gaon Mera Desh.[96] Trade journals and columnists initially called the film a flop.[114] In a 1976 article in the journal Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, author Michael Gallagher praised the technical achievement of the film, but otherwise criticised it stating, "As a spectacle it breaks new ground, but on every other level it is intolerable: formless, incoherent, superficial in human image, and a somewhat nasty piece of violence".[115]

Over time, the critical reception to Sholay greatly improved; it is now considered a classic, and among the greatest Hindi-language films.[16][116] In a 2005 BBC review, the well-rounded characters and simple narrative of the film were commended, but the comical cameos of Asrani and Jagdeep were considered unnecessary.[117] On the film's 35th anniversary, the Hindustan Times wrote that it was a "trailblazer in terms of camera work as well as music," and that "practically every scene, dialogue or even a small character was a highlight."[118] In 2006, The Film Society of Lincoln Center described Sholay as "an extraordinary and utterly seamless blend of adventure, comedy, music and dance", labelling it an "indisputable classic".[119] Chicago Review critic Ted Shen criticised the film in 2002 for its formulaic plot and "slapdash" cinematography, and noted that the film "alternates between slapstick and melodrama".[68] In their obituary of the producer G.P. Sippy, The New York Times said that Sholay "revolutionized Hindi filmmaking and brought true professionalism to Indian script writing".[15]

Awards

Sholay was nominated for nine Filmfare Awards, and the only winner was M. S. Shinde, who won the award for Best Editing.[120] The film also won three awards at the 1976 Bengal Film Journalists' Association Awards (Hindi section): "Best Actor in Supporting Role" for Amjad Khan, "Best Cinematographer (Colour)" for Dwarka Divecha, and "Best Art Director" for Ram Yedekar.[121] Sholay received a special award at the 50th Filmfare Awards in 2005: Best Film of 50 Years.[122]

Awards Category Nominee Result
Bengal Film Journalists Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Amjad Khan Won
Best Cinematography Dwarka Divecha
Best Art Direction Ram Yadekar
23rd Filmfare Awards Best Editing M. S. Shinde
Best Film G. P. Sippy Nominated
Best Director Ramesh Sippy
Best Actor Sanjeev Kumar
Best Supporting Actor Amjad Khan
Best Comedian Asrani
Best Story Salim-Javed
Best Music Director R. D. Burman
Best Lyricist Anand Bakshi for "Mehbooba Mehbooba"
Best Male Playback Singer R. D. Burman
50th Filmfare Awards Special Award Best Film for Completing 50 Years Received

Legacy and cultural influence

Sholay has received many "Best Film" honours. It was declared the "Film of the Millennium" by BBC India in 1999.[15] It topped the British Film Institute's "Top 10 Indian Films" of all time poll of 2002,[123] and was voted the greatest Indian movie in a Sky Digital poll of one million British Indians in 2004.[124] It was also included in the magazine Time's "Best of Bollywood" list in 2010,[125] and in IBN Live's list of the "100 greatest Indian films of all time" in 2013.[126] In 2023, Time Out ranked it #1 on its list of the "100 Best Bollywood Movies."[127]

Sholay inspired many films and pastiches, and spawned a genre of films, the "Curry Western",[128] which is a play on the term Spaghetti Western. A more accurate label for the genre is the Dacoit Western, due to its roots in earlier Indian dacoit films such as Mother India (1957) and Gunga Jumna (1961).[17] It was also an early and most definitive masala film,[129][130] and a trend-setter for "multi-star" films.[131] The film was a watershed for scriptwriters in Hindi language films, who were not paid well before Sholay; after the film's success, its writing duo Salim-Javed became stars in their own right and script writing became a more respected profession.[50] The BBC has described Sholay as the "Star Wars of Bollywood", comparing its impact on Hindi language films to the impact that Star Wars (1977) later had on Hollywood, while comparing Gabbar Singh to Darth Vader.[132]

 
A line of Gabbar Singh (Tera kya hoga, meaning, "What will happen to you?") and a picture of him is painted on the back of an auto rickshaw, a common mode of public transport. Dialogues and characters from the film have contributed to many cultural tropes in India's daily life.

Certain scenes and dialogues from the film earned iconic status in India, such as "Kitne aadmi the" (How many men were there?), "Jo dar gaya, samjho mar gaya" (One who is scared is dead), and "Bahut yaarana laagta hai" (Looks like you two are very close) – all dialogues of Gabbar Singh.[16][133] These and other popular dialogues entered the people's daily vernacular.[134] Characters and dialogues from the film continue to be referred to and parodied in popular culture.[135] Gabbar Singh, the sadistic villain, ushered in an era in Hindi films characterised by "seemingly omnipotent oppressors as villains", who play the pivotal role in setting up the context of the story, such as Shakal (played by Kulbhushan Kharbanda) of Shaan (1980), Mogambo (Amrish Puri) of Mr. India (1987) and Bhujang (Amrish Puri) of Tridev (1989).[136] Filmfare, in 2013, named Gabbar Singh the most iconic villain in the history of Indian cinema,[137] and four actors were included in its 2010 list of "80 Iconic Performances" for their work in this film.[138][139][140][141]

The film is often credited with making Amitabh Bachchan a "superstar", two years after he became a star with Zanjeer (1973).[129][142] Some of the supporting actors remained etched in public memory as the characters they played in Sholay; for example, Mac Mohan continued to be referred to as "Sambha", even though his character had just one line.[143] Major and minor characters continue to be used in commercials, promos, films and sitcoms.[50][144] Amjad Khan acted in many villainous roles later in his career. He also played Gabbar Singh again in the 1991 spoof Ramgarh Ke Sholay, and reprised the role in commercials.[145] The British Film Institute in 2002 wrote that fear of Gabbar Singh "is still invoked by mothers to put their children to sleep".[146] The 2012 film Gabbar Singh, named after the character, became the highest-grossing Telugu film up to that point.[147] Comedian Jagdeep, who played Soorma Bhopali in the film, attempted to use his Sholay success to create a spinoff. He directed and played the lead role in the 1988 film Soorma Bhopali, in which Dharmendra and Bachchan had cameos.[148]

In 2004, Sholay was digitally remastered and shown again to packed theatres in India, including Mumbai's Minerva, where it had run successfully 29 years earlier.[149] An attempt to remake Sholay, Ram Gopal Varma's film Aag (2007), starring Amitabh Bachchan as the villain, was a commercial and critical disaster.[150] Because of television and home media, Sholay is widely available and still popular. Twenty years after its release, Sholay was first shown on the Indian DD National television channel, where it drew the highest ratings ever for an Indian film broadcast.[151] Video game producer Mobile2win released the Sholay Ramgarh Express game for mobile phones in 2004, along with other Sholay themed content such as wallpapers, video clips, and ringtones; another video game Sholay: Bullets of Justice developed by Gameshastra has also been released.[152][153] Sholay Adventures, a 2014 Indian animated television film adaptation of Sholay aired on Pogo TV.[154] In 2019, a film titled The Sholay Girl, based on the stunt woman Reshma Pathan, was released. Pathan had worked as the body double for Malini in the film.[155]

Sholay has been the subject of two books and many articles. Wimal Dissanayake and Malti Sahai's Sholay, A Cultural Reading (1992) attempts a comprehensive scholarly study that sets the film within the broader history of popular cinema in India. Anupama Chopra's Sholay: The Making of a Classic (2000) provides an inside look at the film's production based on interviews with the director, stars, and crew members.[54][129]

Sholay has been labelled by Chopra as the gold standard in Indian cinema, and a reference point for audiences and trade analysts. Over the years, the film has reached a mythic stature in popular culture,[116] and has been called the greatest Hindi film of all time.[156] It belongs to only a small collection of films, including Kismet (1943), Mother India (1957), Mughal-e-Azam (1960) and Hum Aapke Hain Koun..! (1994), which are repeatedly watched throughout India, and are viewed as definitive Hindi films with cultural significance.[157] The lasting effect of Sholay on Indian cinema was summarised by Anupama Chopra, when in 2004 she called it "no longer just a film, [but] an event".[158] In the 2000 book Sholay: The Making of a Classic, the noted director Shekhar Kapur stated "there has never been a more defining film on the Indian screen. Indian film history can be divided into Sholay BC and Sholay AD".[159] The film was jointly released in Pakistan by Geo films and Mandviwalla Entertainment on 17 April 2015, almost 40 years after its theatrical release. The film's premiere in the country was held in Karachi.[160]

Screenwriter V. Vijayendra Prasad, responsible for a number of blockbusters in the early 21st century, including the South Indian franchise Baahubali and the Hindi film Bajrangi Bhaijaan (starring Salim's son Salman Khan), cited Sholay as a major inspiration on his work.[161]

3D re-release

Filmmaker Ketan Mehta's company Maya Digital was responsible for converting Sholay into the 3D format.[162] Mehta was approached by G. P. Sippy's grandson, Sasha Sippy, about the project in 2010.[162] In March 2012, Shaan Uttam Singh, the grandson of producer G. P. Sippy, said that he would sponsor a conversion of the film to 3D, and release it in late 2012;[163] this was later postponed to late 2013,[164] and eventually finalised for 3 January 2014.[165] It took 250 million (US$3.1 million) to convert Sholay to 3D.[166]

Under the leadership of computer animator Frank Foster, 350 people worked to convert the film into the digital 3D format, for which every scene had to be individually restored, colour-corrected and re-composited in 3D to match the depth.[g][162] New set-pieces, particularly those suited to the new format were also included, such as digital logs which scatter in the direction of the camera during the first half of the film when the train collides with them, the gunshot scene which frees Jai and Veeru from their handcuffs, and panoramic views of Gabbar's hideout in the caves.[162]

The theatrical trailer and release date were unveiled by the original script-writers Salim Khan and Javed Akhtar.[169] The two original leads, Bachchan and Dharmendra, were also involved in promoting the re-release.[170] The film was released in 1,000 screens in India, and additional screens overseas.[167] It earned approximately 100 million (US$1.3 million) during its re-release, not enough to recover its conversion cost.[171]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) notes three running times of Sholay. The version that was submitted in film format to BBFC had a running time of 198 minutes. A video version of this had a running time of 188 minutes. BBFC notes that "When a film is transferred to video the running time will be shorter by approximately 4% due to the differing number of frames per second. This does not mean that the video version has been cut or re-edited." The director's cut was 204 minutes long.[57]
  2. ^ a b c d The exchange rate in 1975 was 8.94 Indian rupees () per 1 US dollar (US$).[5]
  3. ^ Salim-Javed won their first Filmfare Awards for Zanjeer: Filmfare Award for Best Screenplay and Best Story in 1974.
  4. ^ A golden jubilee means that a film has completed 50 consecutive weeks of showing in a single theatre.
  5. ^ A silver jubilee means that a film has completed 25 consecutive weeks of showing in a single theatre.
  6. ^ a b According to the website Box Office India, film tickets are subject to "entertainment tax" in India, and this tax is added to the ticket price at the box office window of theatres. The amount of this tax is variable among states. "Nett gross figures are always after this tax has been deducted while gross figures are before this tax has been deducted." Although since 2003 the entertainment tax rate has significantly decreased, as of 2010, gross earnings of a film can be 30–35% higher than nett gross, depending on the states where the film is released.[97]
  7. ^ The 3D version of the film has a run-time of 198 minutes and the original shots were of standard film frame rate, i.e. 24 frames per second, therefore this version has 285,120 frames which were digitised, upscaled to High Definition (HD) and element mapped.[167][168]

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External links

sholay, confused, with, 1984, film, hindustani, ˈʃoːleː, transl, embers, 1975, indian, hindi, language, action, adventure, film, directed, ramesh, sippy, produced, father, sippy, written, salim, javed, film, about, criminals, veeru, dharmendra, amitabh, bachch. Not to be confused with Sholay 1984 film Sholay Hindustani ˈʃoːleː transl Embers is a 1975 Indian Hindi language action adventure film directed by Ramesh Sippy produced by his father G P Sippy and written by Salim Javed The film is about two criminals Veeru Dharmendra and Jai Amitabh Bachchan hired by a retired police officer Sanjeev Kumar to capture the ruthless dacoit Gabbar Singh Amjad Khan Hema Malini and Jaya Bhaduri also star as Veeru and Jai s love interests Basanti and Radha respectively The music was composed by R D Burman SholayTheatrical release posterDirected byRamesh SippyWritten bySalim JavedProduced byG P SippyStarringDharmendra Sanjeev Kumar Hema Malini Amitabh Bachchan Jaya Bhaduri Amjad KhanCinematographyDwarka DivechaEdited byM S ShindeMusic byR D BurmanProductioncompaniesUnited ProducersSippy FilmsDistributed bySippy FilmsRelease date15 August 1975 1975 08 15 Running time204 minutes 1 a CountryIndiaLanguageHindiBudget 30 million 2 Box officeest 350 million India 3 250 million tickets worldwide 4 The film was shot in the rocky terrain of Ramanagara in the southern state of Karnataka over a span of two and a half years After the Central Board of Film Certification mandated the removal of several violent scenes Sholay was released as a 198 minute long film In 1990 the original director s cut of 204 minutes became available on home media When first released Sholay received negative critical reviews and a tepid commercial response but favourable word of mouth publicity helped it to become a box office success It broke records for continuous showings in many theatres across India and ran for more than five years at Mumbai s Minerva theatre The film was also an overseas success in the Soviet Union It was the highest grossing Indian film ever at the time and was the highest grossing film in India up until Hum Aapke Hain Koun 1994 By numerous accounts Sholay remains one of the highest grossing Indian films of all time adjusted for inflation Sholay is often regarded as one of the greatest and most influential Indian film of all time It was ranked first in the British Film Institute s 2002 poll of Top 10 Indian Films of all time In 2005 the judges of the 50th Filmfare Awards named it the Best Film of 50 Years The film is a Dacoit Western sometimes called a Curry Western combining the conventions of Indian dacoit films with that of Spaghetti Westerns along with elements of Samurai cinema Sholay is also a defining example of the masala film which mixes several genres in one work Scholars have noted several themes in the film such as glorification of violence conformation to feudal ethos debate between social order and mobilised usurpers homosocial bonding and the film s role as a national allegory The combined sales of the original soundtrack scored by R D Burman and the dialogues released separately set new sales records The film s dialogues and certain characters became extremely popular contributing to numerous cultural memes and becoming part of India s daily vernacular In January 2014 Sholay was re released to theatres in the 3D format Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 3 4 Alternate version 4 Themes and interpretations 5 Music 6 Reception 6 1 Box office 6 2 Critical response 6 3 Awards 7 Legacy and cultural influence 8 3D re release 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksPlotJai and Veeru are small time crooks who are released from prison where they are recruited by a former Inspector Thakur Baldev Singh to capture a notorious dacoit named Gabbar Singh wanted for 50 000 b as the duo had saved Thakur from a train robbery which makes Thakur to recruit them for the mission with an additional 20 000 reward The duo leave for Thakur s village in Ramgarh where Gabbar is residing and terrorizing the villagers After reaching Ramgarh Veeru falls for Basanti a feisty talkative horse cart driver Jai meets Thakur s widowed daughter in law Radha and falls for her who later reciprocates his feelings The two thwart Gabbar s dacoits who came to extort money During the festival of Holi Gabbar s gang attacks the villagers where they corner Jai and Veeru but the duo manage to attack and chase them away from the village The duo are upset at Thakur s inaction when Jai and Veeru were cornered Thakur had a gun within his reach but did not help them and consider calling off the mission Thakur reveals that a few years ago Gabbar had killed his family members except Radha and had both his arms cut off he concealed the dismemberment by always wearing a shawl which was the sole reason he could not use the gun Realizing this Jai and Veeru take an oath that they will capture Gabbar alive After learning the duo s heroics Gabbar kills the local imam Rahim Chacha s son Ahmed and forces the villagers to make Jai and Veeru surrender to him The villagers refuse and instead get the duo to kill a few of Gabbar s henchmen Gabbar retaliates by having his men capture Veeru and Basanti Jai arrives and attacks the hideout where the trio are able to flee Gabbar s hideout with dacoits in pursuit Shooting from behind a rock Jai and Veeru nearly run out of ammunition Unaware that Jai was wounded in the gunfight Veeru is forced to leave for more ammunition and also to drop Basanti at a safe place Jai sacrifices himself by using his last bullet to ignite dynamite sticks on a bridge from close range killing Gabbar s men Veeru returns and Jai dies leaving Radha and Veeru devastated Enraged Veeru attacks Gabbar s den and kills his remaining men where he catches Gabbar and nearly beats him to death Thakur appears and reminds Veeru of the vow to hand over Gabbar alive Thakur uses his spike soled shoes to severely injure Gabbar and his hands The police arrive and arrest Gabbar for his crimes After Jai s funeral Veeru leaves Ramgarh and finds Basanti waiting for him on the train CastDharmendra as Veeru Sanjeev Kumar as Thakur Baldev Singh Hema Malini as Basanti Amitabh Bachchan as Jai Jaidev Jaya Bhaduri as Radha Thakur s daughter in law Iftekhar as Inspector Khurana Radha s Father Amjad Khan as Gabbar Singh Satyen Kappu as Ramlaal Thakur s servant A K Hangal as Rahim Chacha the imam in the village Sachin Pilgaonkar as Ahmed son of the imam Jagdeep as Soorma Bhopali a comical wood trader Leela Mishra as Mausi Basanti s maternal aunt Asrani as the Jailor a comical character modelled after Charlie Chaplin in The Great Dictator 6 Keshto Mukherjee as Hariram prison barber and Jailor s side kick Mac Mohan as Sambha Gabbar Singh s sidekick Viju Khote as Kaalia another of Gabbar s men whom he kills in a game of Russian roulette Vikas Anand as Jailor Helen in a special appearance in song Mehbooba Mehbooba Jalal Agha in a special appearance in song Mehbooba Mehbooba Raj Kishore as a jail inmate with gayish mannerisms 7 Arvind Joshi as elder son of Thakur Baldev Singh 8 Sharad Kumar as Ninni younger son of Thakur Baldev Singh 9 Gita Siddharth as Geeta Baldev Singh daughter in law 10 Om Shivpuri as a police officer investigating Gabbar s attack on a villageProductionDevelopment The screenwriter pair Salim Javed consisting of Salim Khan and Javed Akhtar began narrating the idea for Sholay as a four line snippet to filmmakers in 1973 11 12 The idea was rejected by two producer director teams including directors Manmohan Desai and Prakash Mehra 12 About six months after the release of Zanjeer 1973 c Salim Javed contacted G P Sippy and his son Ramesh Sippy 11 and narrated the four line snippet to them 12 Ramesh Sippy liked the concept of Sholay and hired them to develop it The original idea of the film involved an army officer who decided to hire two ex soldiers to avenge the murder of his family The army officer was later changed to a policeman because Sippy felt that it would be difficult to get permission to shoot scenes depicting army activities Salim Javed completed the script in one month incorporating names and personality traits of their friends and acquaintances 12 The film s script and dialogues are in Hindustani 13 Salim Javed wrote the dialogues in Urdu script which was then transcribed by an assistant into Devanagari script so that Hindi readers could read the Urdu dialogues 14 The film s plot was loosely styled after Akira Kurosawa s 1954 samurai cinema film Seven Samurai 15 16 Sholay is a defining example of the Dacoit Western film combining the conventions of Indian dacoit films especially Mehboob Khan s Mother India 1957 and the Dilip Kumar and Nitin Bose film Gunga Jumna 1961 17 with that of Westerns 15 16 especially Sergio Leone s Spaghetti Westerns such as Once Upon a Time in the West 1968 as well as The Magnificent Seven 1960 16 It also has some plot elements borrowed from the Indian films Mera Gaon Mera Desh 1971 and Khote Sikkay 1973 12 A scene depicting an attempted train robbery was inspired by a similar scene in Gunga Jumna 18 and has also been compared to a similar scene in North West Frontier 1959 19 A scene showing the massacre of Thakur s family has been compared with the massacre of the McBain family in Once Upon a Time in the West 20 Sholay may have also been influenced by Sam Peckinpah s Westerns such as The Wild Bunch 1969 and Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid 1973 and George Roy Hill s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 1969 21 The character Gabbar Singh was modelled on a real life dacoit of the same name who had menaced the villages around Gwalior in the 1950s Any policeman captured by the real Gabbar Singh had his ears and nose cut off and was released as a warning to other policemen 22 23 Gabbar Singh was also influenced by larger than life characters in Pakistani author Ibn e Safi s Urdu novels 24 Dilip Kumar s dacoit character Gunga from the film Gunga Jumna who speaks with a similar mixed Khariboli and Awadhi dialect 25 and villains from Sergio Leone s films 26 Sippy wanted to do away with the cliched idea of a man becoming a dacoit due to societal issues as was the case in other films and focused on Gabbar being an emblem of pure evil To emphasise the point of Gabbar being a new type of villain Sippy avoided the typical tropes of dacoits wearing dhotis and pagris and sporting a Tika and worshipping Ma Bhavani Gabbar would be wearing army fatigues 27 The character of the jailer played by Asrani was influenced by Adolf Hitler Javed Akhtar brought a book on World War II which had several pictures of Hitler posing to set the typical posture of the character in the film Asrani spiced up his character with some ideas about Hitler s speech delivery he had heard from a teacher in FTII The trademark Ha Ha at the end of his monologues was inspired by a similar performance by Jack Lemmon in The Great Race 28 29 Soorma Bhopali a minor comic relief character was based on an acquaintance of actor Jagdeep a forest officer from Bhopal named Soorma The real life Soorma eventually threatened to press charges when people who had viewed the film began referring to him as a woodcutter 30 The main characters names Jai and Veeru mean victory and heroism in Hindi 31 Casting The producers considered Danny Denzongpa for the role of bandit chief Gabbar Singh but he could not accept it as he was committed to act in Feroz Khan s Dharmatma 1975 under production at the same time 32 Amjad Khan who was the second choice prepared himself for the part by reading the book Abhishapta Chambal which told of the exploits of Chambal dacoits The book was written by Taroon Kumar Bhaduri the father of fellow cast member Jaya Bhaduri 33 Sanjeev Kumar also wanted to play the role of Gabbar Singh but Salim Javed felt he had the audience s sympathy through roles he d done before Gabbar had to be completely hateful 11 Sippy wanted Shatrughan Sinha to play the part of Jai but there were already several big stars signed and Amitabh Bachchan who was not very popular yet lobbied hard to get the part for himself 12 He was cast after Salim Javed recommended him for Sholay in 1973 Bachchan s performance in their first collaboration Zanjeer convinced Salim Javed he was the right actor for the part 34 Salim Javed were also impressed with Bachchan s performance in Raaste Kaa Patthar 1972 and at Bachchan s request Dharmendra had personally put in a word for him All these factors ensured that the role was Bachchan s 35 As cast members had read the script ahead of time many were interested in playing different parts Pran was considered for the role of Thakur Baldev Singh but Sippy thought Sanjeev Kumar was a better choice 36 Initially Salim Javed approached Dilip Kumar to play Thakur s role but he turned down the offer Dilip Kumar later said it was one of the few films he regretted turning down 11 Initially Dharmendra was also interested to play the role of Thakur He eventually gave up the role when Sippy informed him that Sanjeev Kumar would play Veeru if that happened and would thus be paired with Hema Malini who Dharmendra was trying to woo Dharmendra knew that Kumar was also interested in Malini 37 Malini was reluctant to play the role of a tangewali more so after Sippy told her that the film belongs to Sanjeev Kumar and Amjad Khan but she trusted Sippy to give her a meaty role given that he had played a huge role in essaying her stardom through their previous collaborations 38 During the film s production four of the leads became romantically involved 16 Bachchan married Bhaduri four months before filming started This led to shooting delays when Bhaduri became pregnant with their daughter Shweta By the time the film released she was pregnant with their son Abhishek Dharmendra had begun courting Malini during their earlier film Seeta Aur Geeta 1972 also directed by Sippy and used the location shoot of Sholay to further pursue her During their romantic scenes Dharmendra would often pay the light boys to spoil the shot thereby ensuring many retakes which would allow him to spend more time with her The couple married five years after the film s release 39 Filming nbsp Ramdevarabetta near the town of Ramanagara much of Sholay was shot in rocky locations such as this Much of Sholay was shot in the rocky terrain of Ramanagara a town near Bangalore Karnataka 40 41 The filmmakers had to build a road from the Bangalore highway to Ramanagara for convenient access to the sets 42 Art director Ram Yedekar had an entire township built on the site A prison set was constructed near Rajkamal Studios in Bombay also outdoors to match the natural lighting of the on location sets 43 One part of Ramanagara was for a time called Sippy Nagar as a tribute to the director of the film 44 As of 2010 update a visit to the Sholay rocks where much of the film was shot was still being offered to tourists travelling through Ramanagara 45 Filming began on location on 3 October 1973 with a scene featuring Bachchan and Bhaduri 46 The film had a lavish production for its time with frequent banquets and parties for the cast 47 took two and a half years to make and went over budget One reason for its high cost was that Sippy re filmed scenes many times to get his desired effect Yeh Dosti a 5 minute song sequence took 21 days to shoot two short scenes in which Radha lights lamps took 20 days to film because of lighting problems and the shooting of the scene in which Gabbar kills the imam s son lasted 19 days 48 The train robbery sequence shot on the Bombay Poona railway route near Panvel took more than 7 weeks to complete 49 Sholay was the first Indian film to have a stereophonic soundtrack and to use the 70 mm widescreen format 50 However since actual 70 mm cameras were expensive at the time the film was shot on traditional 35 mm film and the 4 3 picture was subsequently converted to a 2 2 1 frame 51 Regarding the process Sippy said A 70 mm sic format takes the awe of the big screen and magnifies it even more to make the picture even bigger but since I also wanted a spread of sound we used six track stereophonic sound and combined it with the big screen It was definitely a differentiator 52 The use of 70 mm was emphasised by film posters on which the name of the film was stylised to match the CinemaScope logo Film posters also sought to differentiate the film from those which had come before one of them added the tagline The greatest star cast ever assembled the greatest story ever told 53 Alternate version The director s original cut of Sholay has a different ending in which Thakur kicks Gabbar onto a nail on one of the two poles that Gabbar had used to chain Thakur when he had cut off his arms stabbing him in the back and killing him along with some additional violent scenes Gabbar s death scene and the scene in which the imam s son is killed were cut from the film by India s Censor Board as was the scene in which Thakur s family is massacred 48 The Censor Board was concerned about the violence and that viewers may be influenced to violate the law by punishing people severely 54 Although Sippy fought to keep the scenes eventually he had to re shoot the ending of the film and as directed by the Censor Board have the police arrive just before Thakur can kill Gabbar 55 The censored theatrical version was the only one seen by audiences for fifteen years The original unedited cut of the film finally came out in a British release on VHS in 1990 51 Since then Eros International has released two versions on DVD The director s cut of the film preserves the original full frame and is 204 minutes in length the censored widescreen version is 198 minutes long 1 51 56 a Themes and interpretationsScholars have noted several themes in the film such as glorification of violence conformation to feudal ethos debate between social order and mobilised usurpers homosocial bonding and the film s role as a national allegory 58 Koushik Banerjea a sociologist in the London School of Economics notes that Sholay exhibits a sympathetic construction of rogue masculinity exemplified by the likeable outlaws Jai and Veeru 59 Banerjea argues during the film the moral boundary between legality and criminality gradually erodes 60 Film scholar Wimal Dissanayake agrees that the film brought a new stage in the evolving dialectic between violence and social order to Indian cinema 61 Film scholar M Madhava Prasad states that Jai and Veeru represent a marginalised population that is introduced into conventional society 62 Prasad says that through the elements of revenge included in the plot and the application of Jai and Veeru s criminality for the greater good the narrative reflects reactionary politics and the audience is compelled to accept feudal order 62 Banerjea explains that though Jai and Veeru are mercenaries they are humanised by their emotional needs Such dualism makes them vulnerable in contrast to the pure evil of Gabbar Singh 60 Gabbar Singh the film s antagonist was well received by the audience despite his pervasive sadistic cruelty 61 Dissanayake explains that the audience was fascinated by the dialogues and mannerisms of the character and this element of spectacle outweighed his actions a first for Indian melodrama 61 He notes that the picturisation of violence in the film was glamourised and uninhibited 63 He further notes that unlike earlier melodramas in which the female body occupies the audience s attention as an object of male fetish in Sholay the male body becomes the centrepiece It becomes the battleground where good and evil compete for supremacy 63 Dissanayake argues that Sholay can be viewed as a national allegory it lacks a comforting logical narrative it shows social stability being repeatedly challenged and it shows the devaluation of human life resulting from a lack of emotions Taken together these elements comprise the allegorical representation of India 64 The narrative style of Sholay with its violence revenge and vigilante action is occasionally compared by scholars to the political unrest in India at the time of its release This tension culminated in the Emergency rule by decree declared by prime minister Indira Gandhi in 1975 65 Dissanayeke and Sahai note that although the film borrowed heavily from the Hollywood Western genre particularly in its visuals it was successfully Indianised 66 As an example William van der Heide has compared a massacre scene in Sholay with a similar scene in Once Upon a Time in the West Although both films were similar in technical style Sholay emphasised Indian family values and melodramatic tradition while the Western was more materialistic and restrained in its approach 20 Maithili Rao in Encyclopedia of Hindi Cinema notes that Sholay infuses the style of the Western genre into a feudalistic ethos 67 Ted Shen of the Chicago Reader notes Sholay s hysterical visual style and intermittent populist message 68 Cultural critic and Islamic scholar Ziauddin Sardar lampoons the film in his book The Secret Politics of Our Desires Innocence Culpability and Indian Popular Cinema both for its caricature and stereotyping of Muslim and women characters and for what he calls mockery of innocent villagers 69 Sardar notes that the two most prominent Muslim characters in the film are Soorma Bhopali a buffoonish criminal and an impotent victim of the bandits the imam Meanwhile the sole function of one female character Radha is to suffer her fate in silence while the other female lead Basanti is just a garrulous village belle 69 Some scholars have indicated that Sholay contains homosocial themes 70 71 Ted Shen describes the male bonding shown in the film as bordering on camp style 68 Dina Holtzman in her book Bollywood and Globalization Indian Popular Cinema Nation and Diaspora states that the death of Jai and resultant break of bonding between the two male leads is necessary for the sake of establishing a normative heterosexual relationship that of Veeru and Basanti 72 MusicSholaySoundtrack album by R D BurmanReleased1975 1975 Recorded1975GenreBollywood music Feature film soundtrackLength28 59LabelUniversal Music IndiaPolydor Records ProducerR D BurmanR D Burman chronologyKala Sona 1975 Sholay 1975 Dharam Karam 1975 R D Burman composed the film s music and the lyrics were written by Anand Bakshi The songs used in the film and released on the original soundtrack are listed below 73 Following that is a list of unused tracks and dialogues which were released later on an updated soundtrack 74 Kishore Kumar Lata Mangeshkar and Manna Dey performed vocals for Dharmendra Malini and Bachchan respectively The song Mehbooba Mehbooba was sung by its composer R D Burman who received his sole Filmfare Award nomination for playback singing for his effort The song which is often featured on Bollywood hit song compilations 75 is based on Say You Love Me by Greek singer Demis Roussos 19 Mehbooba Mehbooba has been extensively anthologised remixed and recreated 76 A version was created in 2005 by the Kronos Quartet for their Grammy nominated album You ve Stolen My Heart featuring Asha Bhosle 77 It was also remixed and sung by Himesh Reshammiya along with Bhosle in his debut acting film Aap Kaa Surroor 2007 Yeh Dosti has been called the ultimate friendship anthem 78 79 It was remixed and sung by Shankar Mahadevan and Udit Narayan for the 2010 Malayalam film Four Friends 80 and also in 2010 it was used to symbolise India s friendship with the United States during a visit from President Barack Obama 81 Several songs from the soundtrack were included in the annual Binaca Geetmala list of top filmi songs Mehbooba Mehooba was listed at No 24 on the 1975 list and at No 6 on the 1976 list Koi Haseena was listed at No 30 in 1975 and No 20 in 1976 Yeh Dosti was listed at No 9 in 1976 82 Despite the soundtrack s success at the time the songs from Sholay attracted less attention than the film s dialogue a rarity for Hindi language films The producers were thus prompted to release records with only dialogue 83 84 Taken together the album sales reached an unprecedented 500 000 units 85 By 1979 the soundtrack went Platinum 86 equivalent to 1 million sales at the time 87 becoming one of the top selling Bollywood soundtracks of the 1970s 88 Music critic Oli Marlow reviewed the soundtrack in 2013 calling it a unique fusion of religious folk and classical music with influences from around the world He also commented on the sound design of the film calling it psychedelic and saying that there was a lot of incredible incidental music in the film that was not included in the soundtrack releases 89 In a 1999 paper submitted to London s Symposium on Sound in Cinema film critic Shoma A Chatterji said Sholay offers a model lesson on how sound can be used to signify the terror a character evokes Sholay is also exemplary in its use of soundmatching to jump cut to a different scene and time without breaking the continuity of the narrative yet intensifying the drama 90 Original Motion Picture SoundtrackNo TitleSinger s Length1 Title Music Sholay Instrumental 02 462 Yeh Dosti Kishore Kumar and Manna Dey05 213 Haa Jab Tak Hai Jaan Lata Mangeshkar05 264 Koi Haseena Kishore Kumar and Hema Malini04 005 Holi Ke Din Kishore Kumar and Lata Mangeshkar05 426 Mehbooba Mehbooba R D Burman03 547 Yeh Dosti sad version Kishore Kumar01 49 Bonus tracks Released laterNo TitleSingers SpeakersLength8 Ke Chand Sa Koi Chehra Qawwali Kishore Kumar Manna Dey Bhupinder Singh Anand Bakshi 9 Veeru Ki Sagai dialogues Hema Malini Dharmendra Amitabh Bachchan 10 Gabbar Singh dialogues Amjad Khan Sanjeev Kumar Dharmendra ReceptionBox office Sholay was released on 15 August 1975 Indian Independence Day in Bombay Due to lackluster reviews and a lack of effective visual marketing tools it saw poor financial returns in its first two weeks From the third week however viewership picked up owing to positive word of mouth 91 During the initial slow period the director and writer considered re shooting some scenes so that Amitabh Bachchan s character would not die When business picked up they abandoned this idea 92 After being helped additionally by a soundtrack release containing dialogue snippets 60 Sholay soon became an overnight sensation 50 The film was then released in other distribution zones such as Delhi Uttar Pradesh Bengal and Hyderabad on 11 October 1975 93 It became the highest grossing Hindi language film of 1975 and film ranking website Box Office India has given the film a verdict of All Time Blockbuster 94 Sholay went on to earn a still standing record of 60 golden jubilees d across India 50 and was the first film in India to celebrate a silver jubilee e at over 100 theatres 50 It was shown continuously at Bombay s Minerva theatre for over five years 15 Sholay was the Indian film with the longest theatrical run until Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge 1995 broke its record of 286 weeks in 2001 95 96 Exact figures are not available on the budget and box office earnings of Sholay but film trade sources provide estimates of its success According to Box Office India Sholay earned about 150 million in net income f valued at about US 16 778 000 in 1975 b in India during its first run 98 which was many times its 30 million valued at about US 3 355 000 in 1975 b budget 2 98 Those earnings in India were a record that remained unbroken for nineteen years which is also the longest amount of time that a film has held the record for being the highest grossing film in India Its original gross was increased further with re releases during the late 1970s 1980s 1990s and early 2000s 99 The film s total gross revenue in India amounted to 350 million 3 100 39 15 million b Box Office India estimates the film s total footfalls in India as over 100 million tickets sold 101 The film was also an overseas success in the Soviet Union where it was released in 1979 102 The film sold 48 4 million tickets during its initial run at the Soviet box office 103 before eventually selling 60 million tickets including re runs 104 The film was also released in China as two parts in 1988 105 It was the highest grossing Indian film ever up until Disco Dancer 1982 106 and the highest grossing film in India up until Hum Aapke Hain Koun 1994 3 In 1985 India Today estimated that the film drew a total audience of 250 million over the years 4 which is comparable to the number of tickets sold by some of the world s highest grossing films of all time adjusted for inflation 107 It is often cited that after adjusting the figures for inflation Sholay remains one of the highest grossing films in the history of Indian cinema although such figures are not known with certainty 108 Box Office India estimated 1 63 billion as Sholay s adjusted domestic net income in 2008 f 109 while Times of India estimated over 3 billion as the adjusted domestic gross in 2009 110 Mid Day estimated the film s total adjusted gross as 15 billion 246 million in 2014 111 Critical response Initial critical reviews of Sholay were negative Among contemporary critics K L Amladi of India Today called the film a dead ember and a gravely flawed attempt 112 113 Filmfare said that the film was an unsuccessful mincing of Western style with Indian milieu making it an imitation western neither here nor there 112 Others labelled it as sound and fury signifying nothing and a second rate take off of the 1971 film Mera Gaon Mera Desh 96 Trade journals and columnists initially called the film a flop 114 In a 1976 article in the journal Studies An Irish Quarterly Review author Michael Gallagher praised the technical achievement of the film but otherwise criticised it stating As a spectacle it breaks new ground but on every other level it is intolerable formless incoherent superficial in human image and a somewhat nasty piece of violence 115 Over time the critical reception to Sholay greatly improved it is now considered a classic and among the greatest Hindi language films 16 116 In a 2005 BBC review the well rounded characters and simple narrative of the film were commended but the comical cameos of Asrani and Jagdeep were considered unnecessary 117 On the film s 35th anniversary the Hindustan Times wrote that it was a trailblazer in terms of camera work as well as music and that practically every scene dialogue or even a small character was a highlight 118 In 2006 The Film Society of Lincoln Center described Sholay as an extraordinary and utterly seamless blend of adventure comedy music and dance labelling it an indisputable classic 119 Chicago Review critic Ted Shen criticised the film in 2002 for its formulaic plot and slapdash cinematography and noted that the film alternates between slapstick and melodrama 68 In their obituary of the producer G P Sippy The New York Times said that Sholay revolutionized Hindi filmmaking and brought true professionalism to Indian script writing 15 Awards Sholay was nominated for nine Filmfare Awards and the only winner was M S Shinde who won the award for Best Editing 120 The film also won three awards at the 1976 Bengal Film Journalists Association Awards Hindi section Best Actor in Supporting Role for Amjad Khan Best Cinematographer Colour for Dwarka Divecha and Best Art Director for Ram Yedekar 121 Sholay received a special award at the 50th Filmfare Awards in 2005 Best Film of 50 Years 122 Awards Category Nominee ResultBengal Film Journalists Association Awards Best Supporting Actor Amjad Khan WonBest Cinematography Dwarka DivechaBest Art Direction Ram Yadekar23rd Filmfare Awards Best Editing M S ShindeBest Film G P Sippy NominatedBest Director Ramesh SippyBest Actor Sanjeev KumarBest Supporting Actor Amjad KhanBest Comedian AsraniBest Story Salim JavedBest Music Director R D BurmanBest Lyricist Anand Bakshi for Mehbooba Mehbooba Best Male Playback Singer R D Burman50th Filmfare Awards Special Award Best Film for Completing 50 Years ReceivedLegacy and cultural influenceSholay has received many Best Film honours It was declared the Film of the Millennium by BBC India in 1999 15 It topped the British Film Institute s Top 10 Indian Films of all time poll of 2002 123 and was voted the greatest Indian movie in a Sky Digital poll of one million British Indians in 2004 124 It was also included in the magazine Time s Best of Bollywood list in 2010 125 and in IBN Live s list of the 100 greatest Indian films of all time in 2013 126 In 2023 Time Out ranked it 1 on its list of the 100 Best Bollywood Movies 127 Sholay inspired many films and pastiches and spawned a genre of films the Curry Western 128 which is a play on the term Spaghetti Western A more accurate label for the genre is the Dacoit Western due to its roots in earlier Indian dacoit films such as Mother India 1957 and Gunga Jumna 1961 17 It was also an early and most definitive masala film 129 130 and a trend setter for multi star films 131 The film was a watershed for scriptwriters in Hindi language films who were not paid well before Sholay after the film s success its writing duo Salim Javed became stars in their own right and script writing became a more respected profession 50 The BBC has described Sholay as the Star Wars of Bollywood comparing its impact on Hindi language films to the impact that Star Wars 1977 later had on Hollywood while comparing Gabbar Singh to Darth Vader 132 nbsp A line of Gabbar Singh Tera kya hoga meaning What will happen to you and a picture of him is painted on the back of an auto rickshaw a common mode of public transport Dialogues and characters from the film have contributed to many cultural tropes in India s daily life Certain scenes and dialogues from the film earned iconic status in India such as Kitne aadmi the How many men were there Jo dar gaya samjho mar gaya One who is scared is dead and Bahut yaarana laagta hai Looks like you two are very close all dialogues of Gabbar Singh 16 133 These and other popular dialogues entered the people s daily vernacular 134 Characters and dialogues from the film continue to be referred to and parodied in popular culture 135 Gabbar Singh the sadistic villain ushered in an era in Hindi films characterised by seemingly omnipotent oppressors as villains who play the pivotal role in setting up the context of the story such as Shakal played by Kulbhushan Kharbanda of Shaan 1980 Mogambo Amrish Puri of Mr India 1987 and Bhujang Amrish Puri of Tridev 1989 136 Filmfare in 2013 named Gabbar Singh the most iconic villain in the history of Indian cinema 137 and four actors were included in its 2010 list of 80 Iconic Performances for their work in this film 138 139 140 141 The film is often credited with making Amitabh Bachchan a superstar two years after he became a star with Zanjeer 1973 129 142 Some of the supporting actors remained etched in public memory as the characters they played in Sholay for example Mac Mohan continued to be referred to as Sambha even though his character had just one line 143 Major and minor characters continue to be used in commercials promos films and sitcoms 50 144 Amjad Khan acted in many villainous roles later in his career He also played Gabbar Singh again in the 1991 spoof Ramgarh Ke Sholay and reprised the role in commercials 145 The British Film Institute in 2002 wrote that fear of Gabbar Singh is still invoked by mothers to put their children to sleep 146 The 2012 film Gabbar Singh named after the character became the highest grossing Telugu film up to that point 147 Comedian Jagdeep who played Soorma Bhopali in the film attempted to use his Sholay success to create a spinoff He directed and played the lead role in the 1988 film Soorma Bhopali in which Dharmendra and Bachchan had cameos 148 In 2004 Sholay was digitally remastered and shown again to packed theatres in India including Mumbai s Minerva where it had run successfully 29 years earlier 149 An attempt to remake Sholay Ram Gopal Varma s film Aag 2007 starring Amitabh Bachchan as the villain was a commercial and critical disaster 150 Because of television and home media Sholay is widely available and still popular Twenty years after its release Sholay was first shown on the Indian DD National television channel where it drew the highest ratings ever for an Indian film broadcast 151 Video game producer Mobile2win released the Sholay Ramgarh Express game for mobile phones in 2004 along with other Sholay themed content such as wallpapers video clips and ringtones another video game Sholay Bullets of Justice developed by Gameshastra has also been released 152 153 Sholay Adventures a 2014 Indian animated television film adaptation of Sholay aired on Pogo TV 154 In 2019 a film titled The Sholay Girl based on the stunt woman Reshma Pathan was released Pathan had worked as the body double for Malini in the film 155 Sholay has been the subject of two books and many articles Wimal Dissanayake and Malti Sahai s Sholay A Cultural Reading 1992 attempts a comprehensive scholarly study that sets the film within the broader history of popular cinema in India Anupama Chopra s Sholay The Making of a Classic 2000 provides an inside look at the film s production based on interviews with the director stars and crew members 54 129 Sholay has been labelled by Chopra as the gold standard in Indian cinema and a reference point for audiences and trade analysts Over the years the film has reached a mythic stature in popular culture 116 and has been called the greatest Hindi film of all time 156 It belongs to only a small collection of films including Kismet 1943 Mother India 1957 Mughal e Azam 1960 and Hum Aapke Hain Koun 1994 which are repeatedly watched throughout India and are viewed as definitive Hindi films with cultural significance 157 The lasting effect of Sholay on Indian cinema was summarised by Anupama Chopra when in 2004 she called it no longer just a film but an event 158 In the 2000 book Sholay The Making of a Classic the noted director Shekhar Kapur stated there has never been a more defining film on the Indian screen Indian film history can be divided into Sholay BC and Sholay AD 159 The film was jointly released in Pakistan by Geo films and Mandviwalla Entertainment on 17 April 2015 almost 40 years after its theatrical release The film s premiere in the country was held in Karachi 160 Screenwriter V Vijayendra Prasad responsible for a number of blockbusters in the early 21st century including the South Indian franchise Baahubali and the Hindi film Bajrangi Bhaijaan starring Salim s son Salman Khan cited Sholay as a major inspiration on his work 161 3D re releaseFilmmaker Ketan Mehta s company Maya Digital was responsible for converting Sholay into the 3D format 162 Mehta was approached by G P Sippy s grandson Sasha Sippy about the project in 2010 162 In March 2012 Shaan Uttam Singh the grandson of producer G P Sippy said that he would sponsor a conversion of the film to 3D and release it in late 2012 163 this was later postponed to late 2013 164 and eventually finalised for 3 January 2014 165 It took 250 million US 3 1 million to convert Sholay to 3D 166 Under the leadership of computer animator Frank Foster 350 people worked to convert the film into the digital 3D format for which every scene had to be individually restored colour corrected and re composited in 3D to match the depth g 162 New set pieces particularly those suited to the new format were also included such as digital logs which scatter in the direction of the camera during the first half of the film when the train collides with them the gunshot scene which frees Jai and Veeru from their handcuffs and panoramic views of Gabbar s hideout in the caves 162 The theatrical trailer and release date were unveiled by the original script writers Salim Khan and Javed Akhtar 169 The two original leads Bachchan and Dharmendra were also involved in promoting the re release 170 The film was released in 1 000 screens in India and additional screens overseas 167 It earned approximately 100 million US 1 3 million during its re release not enough to recover its conversion cost 171 See alsoPortals nbsp Bollywood nbsp Film nbsp India List of highest grossing Indian films Gabbar Singh Gujjar the real bandit Gabbar Singh Footnotes a b The British Board of Film Classification BBFC notes three running times of Sholay The version that was submitted in film format to BBFC had a running time of 198 minutes A video version of this had a running time of 188 minutes BBFC notes that When a film is transferred to video the running time will be shorter by approximately 4 due to the differing number of frames per second This does not mean that the video version has been cut or re edited The director s cut was 204 minutes long 57 a b c d The exchange rate in 1975 was 8 94 Indian rupees per 1 US dollar US 5 Salim Javed won their first Filmfare Awards for Zanjeer Filmfare Award for Best Screenplay and Best Story in 1974 A golden jubilee means that a film has completed 50 consecutive weeks of showing in a single theatre A silver jubilee means that a film has completed 25 consecutive weeks of showing in a single theatre a b According to the website Box Office India film tickets are subject to entertainment tax in India and this tax is added to the ticket price at the box office window of theatres The amount of this tax is variable among states Nett gross figures are always after this tax has been deducted while gross figures are before this tax has been deducted Although since 2003 the entertainment tax rate has significantly decreased as of 2010 gross earnings of a film can be 30 35 higher than nett gross depending on the states where the film is released 97 The 3D version of the film has a run time of 198 minutes and the original shots were of standard film frame rate i e 24 frames per second therefore this version has 285 120 frames which were digitised upscaled to High Definition HD and element mapped 167 168 References a b Sholay PG British Board of Film Classification Archived from the original on 9 November 2013 Retrieved 12 April 2013 a b Chopra 2000 p 143 a b c Sholay emerges as Bollywood s most successful re run product even after 20 years India Today 15 September 1995 Archived from the original on 1 January 2017 Retrieved 9 December 2018 a b Mitra Sumit 31 July 1985 After series of box office duds Ramesh Sippy strikes back with romantic venture Saagar India Today Archived from the original on 9 February 2019 Retrieved 7 February 2019 Statistical Abstract of the United States 1977 p 917 Banerjee amp Srivastava 1988 pp 166 169 Sarkar Suparno 6 April 2018 Sholay actor Raj Kishore latest among Bollywood celebs who died in 2018 International Business Times India Archived from the original on 6 April 2018 Retrieved 6 April 2018 Sharman Joshi father Arvind Joshi workedin Amitabh Bachchan Dharmendra Sholay TimesNowHindi com Archived from the original on 22 January 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2020 Biography Sharad Kumar Amazon com Archived from the original on 22 October 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2020 Parichay And Sholay Actor Gita Siddharth Kak Passes Away India com Archived from the original on 14 October 2020 Retrieved 12 October 2020 a b c d Khan Salim Sukumaran Shradha 14 August 2010 Sholay the Beginning OPEN Magazine Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 a b c d e f Chopra 2000 pp 22 28 Cinar Alev Roy Srirupa Yahya Maha 2012 Visualizing Secularism and Religion Egypt Lebanon Turkey India University of Michigan Press p 117 ISBN 978 0 472 07118 0 Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 one of the most popular Hindi Urdu films in Bollywood history Sholay Aḵẖtar Javid Kabir Nasreen Munni 2002 Talking Films Conversations on Hindi Cinema with Javed Akhtar Oxford University Press p 49 ISBN 978 0 19 566462 1 Archived from the original on 8 January 2014 JA I write dialogue in Urdu but the action and descriptions are in English Then an assistant transcribes the Urdu dialogue into Devnagari because most people read Hindi But I write in Urdu a b c d e Pandya Haresh 27 December 2007 G P Sippy Indian 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original on 3 February 2020 Retrieved 3 February 2020 Ramgarh of Sholay to become district The Times of India 22 June 2007 Archived from the original on 13 October 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2008 Chopra 2000 p 45 Roy 2003 p 225 We are not remaking Sholay Rediff 30 December 1999 Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 Retrieved 20 April 2013 Mekkad Salil 19 June 2010 Sholay ka Ramgarh Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 5 October 2015 Retrieved 27 September 2010 Chopra 2000 p 64 Chopra 2000 pp 66 67 a b Chopra 2000 pp 77 79 IANS 4 August 2010 Sholay continues to smoulder Pune Mirror Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 6 December 2010 a b c d e f 35 years on the Sholay fire still burns NDTV 14 August 2010 Archived from the original on 12 June 2013 Retrieved 12 April 2013 a b c Sholay 1975 Region 0 DVD Review The Digital Fix Archived from the original on 21 November 2016 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Raghavendra Nandini 10 April 2010 3D effect Back to 70 mm 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evil and social order in Indian melodrama an evolving dialectic In Dissanayake Wimal ed Melodrama and Asian Cinema Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 41465 4 Dissanayake Wimal Sahai Malti 1992 Sholay a cultural reading Wiley Eastern ISBN 978 81 224 0394 7 Dudrah Rajinder Kumar Desai Jigna 2008 The Bollywood Reader McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 335 22212 4 Dwyer Rachel 2005 One Hundred Bollywood Films BFI ISBN 978 1 84457 098 0 Archived from the original on 3 January 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Elliott Emory Payne Jasmine Ploesch Patricia 2007 Global migration social change and cultural transformation Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 60054 6 Archived from the original on 11 January 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Gallagher Michael 1976 Indian and Western Cinema Film Report Studies An Irish Quarterly Review 65 260 Irish Province of the Society of Jesus 344 348 JSTOR 30090035 Ganti Tejaswini 2004 Bollywood a guidebook to popular Hindi cinema Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 28854 5 Archived from the original on 20 March 2017 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Hayward S 2006 Cinema Studies The Key Concepts Routledge ISBN 0 415 36782 4 Heide William Van der 2002 Malaysian cinema Asian film border crossings and national cultures Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 90 5356 580 3 Archived from the original on 9 June 2016 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Hogan Patrick Colm 2008 Understanding Indian Movies Culture Cognition and Cinematic Imagination University of TEXAS Press ISBN 978 0 292 77955 6 Holtzman Dina 2011 Between Yaars The Queering of Dosti in Contemporary Bollywood Films In Bhattacharya Mehta Rini Pandharipande Rajeshwari eds Bollywood and Globalization Indian Popular Cinema Nation and Diaspora Anthem Press ISBN 978 0 85728 782 3 Archived from the original on 19 February 2017 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Jain Manju 2009 Narratives Of Indian Cinema Primus Books ISBN 978 81 908918 4 4 Jess Cooke Carolyn 2009 Film Sequels Theory and Practice from Hollywood to Bollywood Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 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Britannica Popular Prakashan ISBN 978 81 7991 066 5 Archived from the original on 5 April 2019 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Sardar Ziauddin 1998 Dilip Kumar Made Me Do It In Nandy Ashis ed The Secret Politics of Our Desires Innocence Culpability and Indian Popular Cinema Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 85649 516 5 Archived from the original on 2 January 2012 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Sparks Karen Jacobs 2008 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 Encyclopaedia Britannica ISBN 978 1 59339 425 7 Statistical Abstract of the United States 1977 PDF US Bureau of the Census 1977 Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 13 April 2013 Varma Pavan K 2010 Creativity and Distortion Becoming Indian Penguin Books India ISBN 978 0 670 08346 6 Zankar Anil 2003 Heroes and Villains Good versus Evil In Gulzar Nihalani Govind Chatterjee Saibal eds Encyclopaedia of Hindi Cinema Encyclopaedia Britannica Popular Prakashan ISBN 978 81 7991 066 5 Archived from the original on 5 April 2019 Retrieved 15 July 2016 External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Sholay Sholay at IMDb nbsp Sholay at Rotten Tomatoes nbsp Sholay at Bollywood Hungama Sholay at AllMovie nbsp Sholay at the British Film Institute Sholay at the TCM Movie Database nbsp Sholay 30th Anniversary site at BBC Asian Network Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sholay amp oldid 1217796274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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