Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman
Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman | |
---|---|
Directed by | Aziz Mirza |
Written by | Manoj Lalwani |
Produced by | G. P. Sippy Vivek Vaswani (co-producer) |
Starring | Shah Rukh Khan Amrita Singh Juhi Chawla Nana Patekar Sandeep Vartak |
Cinematography | Binod Pradhan |
Edited by | Javed Sayyed |
Music by | Jatin–Lalit |
Production company | Sippy Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 152 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Box office | ₹3.44 crore (India) |
Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman (transl. Raju became a Gentleman) is a 1992 Indian Hindi-language romantic comedy-drama film directed by Aziz Mirza starring Shah Rukh Khan, Amrita Singh, Juhi Chawla and Nana Patekar. Khan plays Raju, a young Diploma Holder in Civil Engineering from Darjeeling who comes to Bombay hoping to become a successful engineer.[1] The film emerged as a commercial success. The movie plot is loosely inspired by the 1987 movie The Secret of My Success[2], the Raj Kapoor classic Shree 420 (1955) and Anari (1959). The rights to this film are owned by Khan's Red Chillies Entertainment.
At the 38th Filmfare Awards, Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman won Best Screenplay (Mirza and Lalwani), in addition to a Best Supporting Actor nomination for Patekar.
Plot
[edit]Raj Mathur is a young Diploma holder in civil engineering from Darjeeling who comes to Bombay with only one ambition — to become a big engineer. In Bombay, he arrives in a lower-middle-class locality in search of a distant relative, only to discover he has left years before. He spends the night at a temple, where he meets a philosophical streetside performer Jai, who becomes a close friend and gives him a place to stay.
With no connections and no experience, he finds it hard to get a job in the city until a beautiful girl Renu, finds him a job as a trainee with the construction company where she works as a secretary to Chabbria. They eventually fall in love with each other.
As he becomes successful he gets the attention of Chhabria's daughter Sapna. They spend more and more time together and he soon gets caught up in the rich and glamorous lifestyle. Sapna has fallen in love with Raju, but when she finds out that he loves Renu, she is heartbroken.
In the meantime, Raju's enemies are conspiring against him and they collapse a bridge which was under Raju's supervision. He gets the blame and soon realizes that the glamorous world of the rich is not what he wants. In the end, Raju decides to leave. Most people were asking Jai when Raju would come back. Jai told them when he turns his head around and looks at Renu, he will have no choice but to come back. Just a second earlier, Jai says "Palat" (meaning turn) then Raju turns and looks at Renu. He and Renu finally get reunited again.
Cast
[edit]- Nana Patekar as Jai
- Shahrukh Khan as Raj "Raju" Mathur
- Amrita Singh as Sapna L. Chhabria
- Juhi Chawla as Renu Singh
- Navin Nischol as Lalkishan Chhabria
- Sameer Chitre as Deepak Malhotra
- Achyut Potdar as Joshi
- Neeraj Vora as Abdul
- Ajit Vachani as Malhotra
- Anjan Srivastav as Saxena
- Amrit Patel as Gullu Dada
- Lalit Tiwari as Rafique
- Vivek Vaswani as Lovechand Kukreja
- Ravi Patwardhan as Prosecuting Lawyer
- Pramod Moutho
Soundtrack
[edit]The entire composition and background score was composed by Jatin–Lalit. Audio is available on Tips Music Films. The music of this album was a hit with songs like "Loveria Hua", "Dil Hai Mera Deewana" and "Seene Mein Dil Hai". The film's soundtrack album sold 1.8 million units in India, making it the eleven top-selling Bollywood music album of 1992. Most of the songs are sung by Kumar Sanu, along with Alka Yagnik, Sudesh Bhonsle, Sadhana Sargam and Jolly Mukherjee.
# | Title | Singer(s) |
---|---|---|
1 | "Kya Hua-Loveria Hua" | Kumar Sanu, Jolly Mukherjee, Alka Yagnik |
2 | "Dil Hai Mera Deewana" | Kumar Sanu |
3 | "Kehti Hai Dil Ki Lagi" | Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik |
4 | "Seene Mein Dil Hai" | Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik |
5 | "Tu Mere Saath Saath" | Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik |
6 | "Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman" | Kumar Sanu, Jolly Mukherjee, Sudesh Bhonsle, Sadhana Sargam |
7 | "Tham Tham Tham" | Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik |
8 | "Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman" (Sad) | Sadhana Sargam |
Production
[edit]G. P. Sippy initially wanted to cast a better-known actor than Shah Rukh Khan who was still a newcomer at the time. But the co-producer Vivek Vaswani eventually convinced him. However, Sippy decided to cap the budget of the film at only ₹0.6 crore. Vaswani talked to Juhi Chawla into playing the female lead. Chawla was an established actress at the time. Vaswani convinced her to take the role by promising that Khan was the "next Aamir Khan". Chawla had heard of Khan but had never met or seen him. She was taken aback by his skinny frame and untidy hair when they first met on the sets. That night, she called Vaswani and yelled, "Eeek! Is this the next Aamir?!"[3]
Khan got married during the making of the film. Still struggling financially, he borrowed suits from the film's costume department for the wedding. Aziz Mirza and Vaswani attended the ceremony.[3]
Box office
[edit]In India, the film grossed ₹3.44 crore. This made it 1992's 22nd highest-grossing film in India.[4]
Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman was released in Japan on 17 May 1997. While Indian parallel cinema, including Satyajit Ray's Bengali films such as The Apu Trilogy, was known in Japan, Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman introduced the commercial masala film style, which was well received by Japanese audiences, with the film becoming a commercial success in the country. This sparked a short-lived boom in Indian films released in Japan, for the next two years, paving the way for the Japanese success of Rajinikanth's Muthu (1995) in 1998.[5]
Awards
[edit]Won
- Best Screenplay – Aziz Mirza and Manoj Lalwani
Nominated
References
[edit]- ^ "Happy birthday, Shahrukh Khan: His 5 most iconic roles of all times". Hindustan Times. 11 November 2014. Archived from the original on 7 August 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
- ^ "Michael J Fox Birthday: How the 'Back to the Future' Actor's Films Inspired Shah Rukh Khan, Akshay Kumar, Mohanlal, Suriya Movies! (LatesLY Exclusive)". 9 June 2021.
- ^ a b Chopra, Anupama (2007). King of Bollywood: Shah Rukh Khan and the Seductive World of Indian Cinema (1st ed.). Grand Central Publishing.
- ^ "Box Office 1992". Box Office India. Archived from the original on 31 January 2009. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- ^ Matsuoka, Tamaki (2008). Asia to Watch, Asia to Present: The Promotion of Asian/Indian Cinema in Japan (PDF). Senri Ethnological Studies, Reitaku University. p. 246. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2011.