Ghulam-E-Mustafa
Ghulam-E-Mustafa is a 1997 Bollywood action crime-drama film directed by Partho Ghosh, Starring Nana Patekar and Raveena Tandon in the lead roles, it was produced by P.G. Shrikanth and Dinesh Gandhi under the S.G.S. Cinearts International and Eros International banners. Set in early 1996, Ghulam-e-Mustafa is an action, crime and sad-love story centering on the turbulent and tragic relationship between Gangster Mustafa and Dancer Kavita, a relationship which come to an end with the death of Kavita due to his field. The film was a remake of the Tamil film Musthaffaa (1996).[1] This film was also remade in Bangladesh as Abbajan (Father), starring Manna, Sathi (Miss Bangladesh) and Wasimul Bari Rajib in lead roles.[2]
Ghulam-E-Musthafa | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Partho Ghosh |
Produced by | P.G. Shrikanth Dinesh Gandhi |
Screenplay by | Prasanna Kumar Mangesh Kulkarni Imtiaz Hussain |
Story by | Prasanna Kumar |
Starring | Nana Patekar Raveena Tandon Paresh Rawal Aruna Irani Mohnish Bahl Shivaji Satham Mohan Joshi |
Music by | Amar Haldipur Rajesh Roshan |
Cinematography | K.V. Rammana |
Edited by | R. Rajendran |
Production company | S.G.S. Cinearts International Eros International |
Distributed by | Audio Time D. S. Mittal & Sons Eros International |
Release date |
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Running time | 140 minutes (2 Hours and 20 Minutes) |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹5.5 million (US$77,000) |
Box office | ₹14.5 million (US$200,000) |
Plot
The film revolves around a gangster named Mustafa (Nana Patekar), who is a contract killer, can go to any length to please his superiors and offers 5 times Namaz (obeisance). He was adopted by a powerful don Shanta Prasad (Paresh Rawal) when he was a child. He calls Shanta as Abba (an Urdu term for father). Abba taught him the crime tactics and made Mustafa his weapon for his illicit goals. Mustafa's only aide is Sudama, his childhood best friend. Abba shares enmity with the Verma brothers Mahesh and Rohan (Pradhan and Joshi), who want to kill Abba. Meanwhile, a dancer Kavita (Raveena Tandon) works in Verma's dance club. Mustafa falls for her, which heats up the enmity of the Vermas and Mustafa. Kavita meets Mustafa and he tells his life's history, to which Kavita develops a soft core for Mustafa. He marries her and starts to live a peaceful life. But this happiness does not last long as Kavita gets killed in a car blast (a plan hatched by the Vermas to kill Abba instead). Her death made Mustafa realise his mistakes and he wants to give up crime. He kills Mahesh's son by planting a bomb on his forehead. He goes to Dixit's house, where he is disliked by them, but his heart warming nature wins the Dixit family's heart. Abba is happy that Mustafa is recovering from his trauma and helps Vikram (Joshi) for his education and job, bails out Dayanand Dixit (Satam) who was jailed in a fake bribery case by Bipin (Bahl) and helps Vidya to marry Arun (Behl). Meanwhile, Bipin's lustful eyes falls on Vidya and teams up with the Vermas to exact revenge on Mustafa. During elections, Mustafa gets involved in a brawl where he kills Mahesh and his brother in a bomb blast and helps the politician Imtiaz to win. Mustafa now wants to surrender himself to police and refuses to work for Imtiaz and Abba anymore. Imtiaz orders Abba to kill Mustafa in fear that in future he will confess the crimes of Imtiaz and Abba. On the wedding night, Bipin enters the house and tries to rape Vidya, but Mustafa slits him with a mirror piece. Police arrive and Mustafa is about to surrender, but first, he wants the marriage ceremony to be completed. Abba arrives and offers Mustafa to continue his work again, but he refuses. Mustafa offers Namaz for thanking Allah. Helpless, Abba has no other option but to obey the orders of Imtiaz and finally orders his men to shoot Mustafa and kill him. A heartbroken and angered Sudama then kills Abba.[2]
Cast
- Nana Patekar as Ghulam-E-Mustafa
- Raveena Tandon as Kavita
- Paresh Rawal as Shanta Prasad/Abba
- Aruna Irani as Bhagya Laxmi (Mrs. Dixit)
- Shivaji Satam as Dayanand Dixit
- Swapnil Joshi as Vikram Dixit
- Keerthi Chawla as Vidya Dixit
- Mohnish Bahl as Bipin Verma
- Mohan Joshi as Mahesh (Club Owner)
- Sulabha Deshpande as Kavita's Mother (uncredited)
- Vishwajeet Pradhan as Rohan (Mahesh's Brother)
- Imtiyaz Husain as Minister Imtiyaz
- Ashwin Kaushal as Ashwini Kaushal (Mahesh's Son)
- Ravi Behl as Arun
- Dev Malhotra
- Asha Sharma as Arun's mother
- Brijesh Tiwari
- Jayant Sawarkar
- Muzafar shah
- Tiku Talsania as Qawwali singer
- Satish Shah as Qawwali singer
Production
Development
In early 1996 P.G Srikanth and Dinesh decided to make the film, on the script which is given by Tamil writer Prasanna Kumar. Before that, Subhash Ghai was approached to direct the film, but later on, due to unknown reasons Partho signed for directing the film, under the banners of Dinesh Gandhi's, S.G.S. Cinearts international studio and with the collaboration of marketing partner Eros International production house.[2]
Casting
As things were clear, both producers hunt for an actor for the character of Ghulam-e-Mustafa, many options were on the list, but both of them decided to take the role of Mustafa to Nana Patekar without any screen test, first Juhi Chawla was approached for the role of Kavita, but Juhi walked out due to her already lined up filming schedules, later on Raveena gave the screen test for Kavita and got the role.[2]
Filming
Principal photography for the film began in January 1997 with film's lead cast. The film was shot in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, at studios Film City, Goregaon, Mumbai, Maharashtra, Kamalistan Studios, Andheri, Mumbai, Najabhai Jewellers, Mumbai, Polachi, Kerala, Vauhini Studios, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, Vijaya Studios, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. Although due to bombing and explosive shooting scenes the film was shot in an abandoned area, of Tamil Nadu. The film was only shot in South India due to the South Indian cast and crew of the film. It was also dubbed in Tamil and Telugu for South Indian audiences.[2]
Soundtrack
Ghulam-E-Mustafa | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 25 September 1997 | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Length | 29:07 | |||
Label | Time Audio | |||
Producer | P.G. Shrikanth Dinesh Gandhi | |||
Amar Haldipur chronology | ||||
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Rajesh Roshan chronology | ||||
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The music of the movie was released under the label Time Audio. Rajesh Roshan composed the music for the film and Background Score was given by Amar Haldipur, with lyrics by Anand Bakshi.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Singer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Dum Dum Danke Pe Chot Padi" | Anand Bakshi | Rajesh Roshan, Amar Haldipur | Alka Yagnik, Udit Narayan | 5:12 |
2. | "Ho Mubarak Tujhe (Qawali)" | Anand Bakshi | Rajesh Roshan | Iqbal Sabri, Afzal Sabri | 6:53 |
3. | "Ladke Idher Bhi" | Anand Bakshi | Rajesh Roshan, Amar Haldippur | Udit Narayan, Preeti Uttam Singh | 6:34 |
4. | "Sara Shehar Aaj Jaagega" | Anand Bakshi | Amar Haldipur | Sunita Rao | 5:06 |
5. | "Tera Ghum Mera Ghum" | Anannd Bakshi | Rajesh Roshan Amar Haldipur | Kavita Krishnamurthy, Hariharan | 5:05 |
6. | "Tera Ghum Mera Ghum (Sad)" | Anannd Bakshi | Rajesh Roshan, Amar Haldipur | Kavita Krishnamurthy, Hariharan | 1:17 |
Reception
Ghulam-e-Mustafa was a commercial success and received mixed to positive reviews, Bollywood Hungama rate the film with 6 points out 10, while on Rotten Tomatoes film aggregate is 55% and on IMDb film earns 6.4 rating based on 201 critics.[2]
Remakes
Musthaffaa (1996) (Tamil) | Ghulam-E-Mustafa (1997) (Hindi) | Rehmat Ali (2010) (Bengali) |
Napoleon Duraisamy | Nana Patekar | Mithun Chakraborty |
Ranjitha | Raveena Tandon | Rituparna Sengupta |
Sooriya | Paresh Rawal | Rajatava Dutta |
References
- "Ghulam-E-Musthafa Movie: Showtimes, Review, Trailer, Posters, News & Videos | eTimes". Retrieved 30 July 2020.
- "Man of TODAY - Indian Express". archive.indianexpress.com. Retrieved 30 July 2020.