Bhoot (film)

For other uses, see Bhoot (disambiguation).
Bhoot
Directed by Ram Gopal Varma
Produced by Nitin Manmohan
Starring Ajay Devgan
Urmila Matondkar
Fardeen Khan
Rekha
Nana Patekar
Seema Biswas
Victor Banerjee
Music by Salim-Sulaiman
Cinematography Vishal Sinha
Release dates
30 May 2003 (2003-05-30)
Running time
119 minutes
Country India
Language Hindi

Bhoot (English: Ghost) is a 2003 Indian supernatural horror film. It was directed by Ram Gopal Varma and stars Ajay Devgan and Urmila Matondkar. It was perceived to be different from a typical Bollywood movie as it did not contain songs. It was later dubbed in Telugu as 12 Va Anthasthu and remade in Tamil as Shock. The film was box office hit.[1] Urmila won several accolades and awards for her performance as a ghost possessed wife. Verma made a sequel called Bhoot Returns which was released on 12 October 2012.[2]

Plot

The story is about Vishal (Ajay Devgn) who is married to Swati (Urmila Matondkar). The couple buy a high rise apartment at a ridiculously low price. The caretaker of the apartment, Mr Thakkar (Amar Talwar) explains to Vishal that a widow named Manjeet Khosla (Barkha Madan), the previous resident, committed suicide after killing her own son. Vishal hides this fact from Swati, as she will object to buying such a residence. But Mr.Thakkar accidentally slips in the secret.

Swati is livid at Vishal, although he disbelieves the notions of ghosts and bad luck. Then, Swati starts behaving strangely. Vishal consults Dr Rajan (Victor Banerjee). But soon enough, Vishal witnesses Swati killing the watchman of the apartment in a supernatural way, and his skepticism is rudely challenged. Inspector Qureshi(Nana Patekar), who reaches the apartment to investigate the death, becomes suspicious of the duo and their strange behaviour. He follows Vishal and Dr. Rajan.

Vishal's maid witnesses Swathi shouting and throwing Vishal away. She helps him tie her. She tells him that Swathi was shouting like Manjeet and tells him that an exorcist can help her but not doctors. Finally, Vishal's maid calls an exorcist named Sarita (Rekha). Sarita sees the ghosts of Manjeet and her son. She advises Vishal to meet Manjeet's mother (Tanuja), since she can placate her daughter's spirit. Vishal complies and meets Manjeet's mother. He learns from Manjeet's mother that Manjeet was not the type of woman who would commit suicide. He explains the situation to her and asks her help. She comes with him and somehow placates Manjeet's spirit. They come to know that Mr.Thakkar's son, Sanjay tries to molest Manjeet and when she resists she accidentally falls off the balcony and dies. Hence, Sarita advises Vishal to call him. Vishal makes an unknown call to Sanjay and tells him that his father is sick. When Sanjay arrives, Vishal cleverly tells Mr. Thakkar and Sanjay to help him take Swathi to the hospital.

It is then revealed that many years ago, Sanjay came to visit his father and got his heart on Manjeet as he saw her in the apartment. He broke into her house, and had developed a lust for her, but when she rejected him, he pushed her and she accidentally fell off the balcony and died. But Manjeet's son saw the murder, upon which Sanjay hired the watchman to kill him. Manjeet, who has still occupied Swati's body, sees Sanjay and chases him. Qureshi tries to stop her, having no idea of the real story. Swathi tries to kill Sanjay by strangulating him. But, Sarita asks Manjeet to leave him as the blame will come upon Swathi.

Sanjay escapes, only to find himself surrounded by Vishal, Sarita, Manjeet and Qureshi who now knows the truth. A terrified Sanjay confesses to the crimes, upon which Manjeet's mother urges her to stop. Sanjay is arrested by Inspector Qureshi, and thrown into jail. Manjeet leaves Swati's body, and Vishal and Swati live a good life in the apartment. Meanwhile, in the lockup, Qureshi tells Sanjay that death sentences are light penalties for a criminal like him. He wishes that Sanjay gets a bigger punishment. After Qureshi leaves the darkened cell, Sanjay finds himself face to face with Manjeet. He starts begging for mercy, but his voice soon fades out as Manjeet draws closer; it is heavily implied that she kills Sanjay.

Cast

Soundtrack

The soundtrack[3] is under the label T-Series. The music of the film was composed by Salim-Sulaiman. It consists of 7 songs, 1 remix and an instrumental. The whole soundtrack is not used in the movie, except the song "Ghor Andhere" for the ending credits.

Track listing

Song Singer(s) Duration
"Bhoot Hai Yahan Koi" Asha Bhosle 4:57
"Bhoot Hai Yahan Koi - II" Gayatri Iyer 4:11
"Bhoot Hoon Main" Sunidhi Chauhan, Vijay Prakash & Salim Merchant 3:57
"Bhoot Hoon Main - Remix" Sunidhi Chauhan, Vijay Prakash & Salim Merchant 3:35
"Dead But Not Asleep" Asha Bhosle 2:26
"Din Hai Na Yeh Raat" Usha Uthup 3:36
"Ghor Andhere" Sunidhi Chauhan, Vijay Prakash, Clinton Cerejo & Salim Merchant 5:08
"Yeh Sard" Gayatri Iyer & Anand Raj Anand (Uncredited) 5:22
"Yeh Sard - Instrumental" 5:22

Critical reception

Taran Adarsh wrote about her performance, "...the film clearly belongs to Urmila Matondkar all the way. To state that she is excellent would be doing gross injustice to her work. Sequences when she is possessed are simply astounding. If this performance doesn't deserve an award, no other performance should. It beats all competition hollow."[4] Deepa Gumaste of Rediff.com mentioned that Bhoot gave her the same experience of terror as in Cape Fear (1991) and said: "I wondered if I'd get out of the cinema hall alive. Already, the sleek title sequence, with its astonishing visual effects and stunning background score, had me trembling with trepidation."[5] Anita Gates of The New York Times called "..at some point the overdone scary music becomes part of the fun."[6]

Awards

Bollywood Movie Awards
Filmfare Awards
Star Screen Awards
Zee Cine Awards

References

  1. "Boxofficeindia.com". Boxofficeindia.com. Retrieved 2011-12-07.
  2. "RGV uses optical illusion in ‘Bhoot Returns’ poster". Worldsnap News. 2012-09-04. Retrieved 2012-09-04.
  3. "Soundtracks for Bhoot (2003), IMDb". Retrieved 2012-11-03.
  4. Adarsh, Taran (28 May 2003). "Bhoot". Bollywood Hungama.
  5. Gumaste, Deepa (30 May 2003). "Numbed by fear?". Rediff.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  6. Gates, Anita (30 May 2003). "FILM IN REVIEW; 'Bhoot'". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 January 2016.

External links

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