| Devdas | |
|---|---|
Movie poster |
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| Directed by | Sanjay Leela Bhansali |
| Produced by | Bharat Shah |
| Written by | Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay (novella) Sanjay Leela Bhansali (screenplay) |
| Starring | Shahrukh Khan Madhuri Dixit Aishwarya Rai |
| Music by | Ismail Darbar |
| Cinematography | Binod Pradhan |
| Editing by | Bela Segal |
| Distributed by | Eros International Ltd. (UK) |
| Release date(s) | 23 May 2002 (Cannes) 12 July 2002 (India) |
| Running time | 182 min. |
| Country | India |
| Language | Hindi |
| Budget | Rs 500,000,000 $12.7 Million (approximately) |
Devdas (Hindi: देवदास) is a 2002 hindi film based on the Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay novella Devdas. This is the third Bollywood (Hindi) version and the first colour film version of the story in Hindi. The film is directed by Sanjay Leela Bhansali and stars Shahrukh Khan, Aishwarya Rai, and Madhuri Dixit in the leading roles.
At the time of its release, it was the most expensive Bollywood film ever produced, with a reported budget of Rs 50 Crores
Aishwarya Rai's performance as the sensitive yet haughty Paro and Madhuri Dixit's as the dancer Chandramukhi were highly appreciated.[citation needed] Shahrukh Khan's performance as the rebellious alcoholic Devdas is often considered one of his best performances, garnering him a Filmfare Award. The song Dola re Dola became a hit with its unique dance duet between Aishwarya Rai and Madhuri Dixit. The video received significant airplay on MTV Asia.
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Sir Narayan Mukherjee (Vijay Crishna), a zamindar, and his wife Kaushalya (Smita Jaykar) have heard that their younger son, Devdas (Shahrukh Khan), is coming home from a law school in England to their mansion in Tal Sonapur, Bengal. On the day of his return, Kaushalya insists everyone in the family close their eyes so that she will be the first person to see him. Her plan backfires, however, when instead of coming straight home, Devdas goes to see Parvati "Paro" Chakraborty (Aishwarya Rai), his childhood sweetheart, first. This incident ignites Kaushalya's dislike of Paro.
Paro is Devdas's neighbour and childhood friend. The years apart turned their friendship into love. When he was sent to England at the age of ten, she (though a child herself) lit a lamp for him, which she carefully tended to over the years and never allowed to extinguish.
It seems to everyone, including Paro's mother Sumitra (Kirron Kher), that Devdas and Paro will get married, but Devdas's vindictive sister-in-law Kumud (Ananya Khare) reminds Kaushalya of Paro's maternal lineage, which consists of dancers. When Sumitra announces her desire for Devdas and Paro to marry, Kaushalya rejects and humiliates her in public. In retaliation, Sumitra vows to ensure that Paro will get an even better marriage, and soon arranges for Paro to marry Thakur Bhuvan Chaudhry (Vijayendra Ghatge), a forty-year-old widowed aristocrat with three grown children.
Paro still loves Devdas, but after he gets into a fight with his father about his relationship with Paro, he flees to a brothel alongside his college friend Chunnibabu (Jackie Shroff) and leaves a letter for her stating that love had never existed between them. At the brothel Devdas meets a good-hearted tawaif (courtesan) named Chandramukhi (Madhuri Dixit), who falls in love with him. After staying at the brothel for a while, however, Devdas realizes his error.
Devdas returns to Paro at the time of her wedding to Bhuvan Chaudhry and asks her to elope with him. Paro refuses, remembering the way he had discarded her so easily. Devdas is heartbroken from losing both Paro and his family's love, and he moves to Chandramukhi's brothel permanently and becomes an alcoholic. He eventually becomes so sick that the slightest dose of alcohol could kill him. Chandramukhi, who cares deeply for Devdas, tries to get Paro to convince him to stop drinking; Paro attempts to persuade him, but she does not succeed. However, Devdas promises Paro that before he dies, he will come to see her one last time and let her care for him.
Paro invites Chandramukhi, whom she has befriended, to a celebration at her husband's home and introduces Chandramukhi to her in-laws without revealing her profession. However, Bhuvan's ill-natured son-in-law Kalibabu (Milind Gunaji), who used to visit Chandramukhi's brothel on a regular basis, reveals her background and humiliates her in front of Bhuvan and the guests. He also tells Bhuvan of Paro's relationship with Devdas. As a result, Bhuvan punishes Paro by permanently forbidding her from leaving the mansion.
Meanwhile, Devdas tells Chandramukhi that he loves her, but that she must let him go. He decides to travel the country, and takes Dharamdas (Tiku Talsania), a trusted servant, with him. While on a train, he meets his old friend Chunnibabu, who offers him a glass of wine. Devdas accepts it deliberately, knowing that it will be fatal, and becomes desperately sick.
On the verge of death, Devdas remembers his promise to see Paro one last time and travels to her house, collapsing in front of the main gate. Paro learns of his presence, and, screaming his name, runs out of the house and attempts to reach him. Bhuvan sees this and orders the servants to close the gates. Devdas sees a blurred image of Paro running to him, but the gates close before she can reach him and Devdas dies. At the same time, the lamp that Paro had lit for him flickers out.
| Actor/Actress | Role |
|---|---|
| Shahrukh Khan | Devdas Mukherjee |
| Aishwarya Rai | Parvati "Paro" Chakraborty |
| Madhuri Dixit | Chandramukhi |
| Jackie Shroff | Chunnilal ("Chunnibabu") |
| Smita Jaykar | Kaushalya Mukherjee |
| Manoj Joshi | Dwijdas Mukherjee |
| Ananya Khare | Kumud Mukherjee |
| Milind Gunaji | Kalibabu |
| Dina Pathak | Bhuvan's mother |
| Vijayendra Ghatge | Bhuvan Chaudhry |
| Kirron Kher | Sumitra Chakraborty |
| Tiku Talsania | Dharamdas |
| Ava Mukherji | Dev's Badi-ma |
| Jaya Bhattacharya | Manorama |
| Sunil Rege | Neelkanth Chakraborty |
| Vijay Crishna | Sir Narayan Mukherjee |
| Amardeep Jha | Kalibabu's mother |
| Apara Mehta | Badi Aapa |
| Muni Jha | Kaka |
| Radhika Singh | Yashomati |
| Devdas | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Ismail Darbar | |||||
| Released | 2002 | ||||
| Genre | Soundtrack/Filmi | ||||
| Ismail Darbar chronology | |||||
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The film soundtrack was predominately composed by Ismail Darbar and features playback singers Kavita Krishnamurthy (as Chandramukhi), Udit Narayan (as Devdas), and the debuting Shreya Ghoshal (as Parvati).
| Track # | Song | Performed by | Composition/Lyrics |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Silsila Ye Chaahat Ka | Shreya Ghoshal | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr |
| 2 | Maar Dala | Kavita Krishnamurthy & Kay Kay | Prakash Kapadia & Nusrat Badr |
| 3 | Bairi Piya | Udit Narayan & Shreya Ghoshal | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr |
| 4 | Kaahe Chhed Mohe | Pt. Birju Maharaj, Kavita Krishnamurthy & Madhuri Dixit | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr |
| 5 | Chalak Chalak | Udit Narayan, Vinod Rathod & Shreya Ghoshal | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr |
| 6 | Hamesha Tumko Chaha | Kavita Krishnamurthy & Udit Narayan | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr |
| 7 | Woh Chand Jaisi Ladki | Udit Narayan | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr |
| 8 | Morey Piya | Jaspinder Narula & Shreya Ghoshal | Sameer |
| 9 | Dev's Last Journey - The Theme | Rashmi Sharma, Supriya Raghav Chatterjee | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr - Music: Monty |
| 10 | Dola Re Dola | Kavita Krishnamurthy, Shreya Ghoshal & Kay Kay | Ismail Darbar & Nusrat Badr |
It won 10 awards at the 2002 Filmfare Awards:
| Awards | ||
|---|---|---|
| Filmfare Award | ||
| Preceded by Lagaan लगान لگان} |
Best Movie 2002 |
Succeeded by Koi... Mil Gaya कोई मिल गया کوئی مل گیا |
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