Prince (2010 film)

Prince - It's Showtime!

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Kookie V Gulati
Produced by Kumar S. Taurani
Ramesh S. Taurani
Written by Mayur Puri (dialogue)
Screenplay by Rohit Jugraj
Story by Rensil D'Silva
Starring Vivek Oberoi
Nandana Sen
Aruna Shields
Neeru Bajwa
Music by Songs:
Sachin Gupta
Background Score:
Sandeep Shirodkar
Cinematography Vishnu Rao
Edited by Nicolas Trembasiewicz
Distributed by Tips Music Films
Release dates
  • April 9, 2010 (2010-04-09)
Running time
139 minutes
Country India
Language Hindi

Prince is a 2010 Indian action thriller film directed by Kookie V Gulati, produced by Kumar S Taurani and Ramesh S Taurani, and starring Vivek Oberoi and Aruna Shields in the lead roles.[1] The dialogues were written by Mayur Puri. The songs were composed by Sachin Gupta, with the lyrics penned by Sameer. The background score was composed by Sandeep Shirodkar. The film released on 9 April 2010 in Hindi, along with its dubbed versions in Tamil and Telugu. The film met mixed responses from critics and audiences, with most critics praising Vivek Oberoi's performance, but the film was unable to do well and was declared a Flop by the Box Office.[2]

Plot

Prince (Vivek Oberoi) is a sharp and intelligent burglar, but when he awakes one morning, he finds that he does not remember anything about his past. He goes to a club and meets a girl who claims to be his girlfriend Maya. The next day, he meets a second girl who claims to be his girlfriend named Maya. She also claims that they work for the police and are after a man named Sarang. She reveals that they must find a special coin and give it to Sarang, after which the cops will arrest him. This coin has a chip in it that can go into one's mind and change one's thoughts completely.

They find the coin inside Prince's shoe and give it to Sarang. Prince finds out that the second "Maya" is really a woman named Serena who works for Sarang. His servant P.K. works for Sarang along with her. The coin is revealed to be a fake. Just as Prince is trapped, the real Maya, who is in fact his girlfriend, saves him and tells him the actual story. The chip was put inside Prince so that he could work for Sarang. The two began running away. The chip made Prince's brain like a computer, so that once he woke up from sleep, he would forget everything.

Prince and Maya meet Sarang Chinea, who tells them a side effect: every morning when Prince wakes up, his brain crashes, which results in lot of pain. He has only six days to live as a result. This particular day was the last day. Prince and Maya find the coin, which can save Prince, and Serena goes after them, leading to a high-profile chase. Prince manages to keep the coin safe but faints. A mysterious car arrives, pulls him in, and flees. Shortly after, Maya gets a phone call, saying she must come to a certain location if she wants Prince alive. The caller is a friend of Prince's named Mike. It is revealed that the first Maya that Prince had met at the club, is actually named Priya. Then Maya calls the police.

Priya takes the coin and runs away with it, but Mike tells Maya that he has the real coin; the one Priya fled with is a fake. While they are fixing an unconscious Prince, Priya returns, begging to be saved, but gets shot by Sarang and his gang. Prince awakes from his deep sleep. Sarang and his gang escape, but Prince puts a tracking device on Sarang. They track him down, and Prince and Sarang engage in a brief fight. Prince ultimately gets the coin and Sarang falls off a waterfall to his death. While Prince and Maya are looking forward to a happily-ever-after, in a twist ending, Serena's eyes open, implying that she is still alive.

Cast

Revenue

India

In its opening weekend, the film netted about INR 110 million (Rs. 11 crores). It did well in few places and moderately at places primarily having single screens. Overall, the performance at the single screens (70–75%) was far better than its performance in the multiplexes (50–60%).[3]

Overseas

Overseas, Prince performed badly at countries such as the US, UK and Australia. In comparison to My Name Is Khan and 3 Idiots, Prince performed poorly and is unlikely to gross much money from overseas markets.[4]

Prince opened in the US in 54 screens and fetched US$89,047 in its opening weekend; it debuted at #36 at the US box office[5] making US$6,000,000.[6]

Critical reception

Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama rated it 3 out of 5 saying "Prince has all merits to strike a chord with the youth", praising Vivek Oberoi's 'bravura' performance, the film's 'Hollywood style' look and action sequences, as well as the music. Noyon Jyoti Parasara of AOL India gave 3 out of 5 saying, "once you are willing to let go off your beliefs and logic – like you really can’t jump off a cliff on your bike and remain unscratched – you would like the film."[7]

On the other hand, Omar Qureshi of Zoom rated Prince 2.5 out of 5 saying, "The film is over the top and unrealistic." Indiatimes.com rated it 2 out of 5 stars saying, "The film has taken the audience for granted, which shows us gadgets hard to believe and futuristic and that such futuristic shows should be limited to Hollywood.". Subhash K. Jha gave 2 out of 5 stars, and said, "Prince wears its super-cool shirt with the slogan ‘Come Watch Me’ with a little bit too much aggression. But if you love popcorn crunching adventure stories watch Vivek Oberoi play the hero from the hemisphere of hijinks." He praised Oberoi's acting and the action sequences, saying that "To his credit Oberoi carries off the ceaseless stint with the stunt with arresting aplomb[...]The expertly-executed stunts frequently see our hero jumping down high-rise buildings in breathtaking leaps of fate, with the camera pulling back in respectful awe."[8]

Soundtrack

The original songs of Prince are composed by Sachin Gupta and background score by Sandeep Shirodkar. The lyrics are written by Sameer. The audio comprises six original songs, one instrumental and nine types of remixes by DJ Suketu featuring Aks. The singles of the soundtrack are "O Mere Khuda," "Tere Liye" and "Kaun Hoon Main".

"Tere Liye" appears in as many as four versions in the soundtrack. The last (the unplugged version) is sung by the composer Gupta.

Ankit Ojha of Planet Bollywood, stated in his music review, that "this album is destined to remain on the charts for a very long time, just like Tips’ last musical hit Ajab Prem Ki Ghazab Kahani did." He rated the music 8 stars out of 10.[9]

Tracklist

No. TitleSingers Length
1. "O Mere Khuda"  Atif Aslam, Garima Jhingoon  
2. "Tere Liye"  Atif Aslam, Shreya Ghoshal  
3. "Kaun Hoon Main"  Atif Aslam  
4. "Aa Bhi Ja Sanam"  Atif Aslam  
5. "Jiyara Jiyara"  Alisha Chinoy, Hard Kaur  
6. "Ishq Mein"  Monali Thakur  
7. "Tere Liye" (Unplugged)Sachin Gupta  
8. "Tere Liye" (Dance Remix)Atif Aslam, Shreya Ghoshal  
9. "Tere Liye" (Hip-Hop Remix)Atif Aslam, Shreya Ghoshal  
10. "Aa Bhi Ja Sanam" (Dance Mix)Atif Aslam  
11. "Kaun Hoon Main" (Dance Mix)Atif Aslam  
12. "Kaun Hoon Main" (Lounge Mix)Atif Aslam  
13. "O Mere Khuda" (Dance Mix)Atif Aslam, Garima Jhingoon  
14. "Jiyara Jiyara" (Bhangra remix)Alisha Chinoy, Hard Kaur  
15. "Prince Theme" (Mega Mix)Atif Aslam, Shreya Ghoshal, Alisha Chinoy, Garima Jhingoon, Monali Thakur  
16. "Prince Theme" (Instrumental)   

References

External links

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