Hindustan Ki Kasam (1999 film)

Hindustan Ki Kasam (Hindi: हिन्दुस्तान की कसम; Swear on India) is a 1999 Indian action film directed by Veeru Devgan and starring his son Ajay Devgn (in dual role), Amitabh Bachchan, Manisha Koirala and Sushmita Sen. The film was an average grosser, despite taking a bumper opening.[1] The movie broke the opening day record in India at the time of its release and managed to do average business at the box office .[2]

Hindustan Ki Kasam
Poster
Directed byVeeru Devgan
Produced byVeeru Devgan
Written byJanak-Hriday (script)
Tanveer Khan (dialogues)
Screenplay byVeeru Devgan
StarringAjay Devgn
Amitabh Bachchan
Manisha Koirala
Sushmita Sen
Shakti Kapoor
Music bySukhwinder Singh
CinematographyIshwar Bidri
Edited bySuresh Chaturvedi
Production
company
Devgan Films
Release date
  • 23 July 1999 (1999-07-23)
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Plot

A mother gives birth to twins. The twins' father was an Indian Army officer who died in war. Unfortunately, they are separated at the end of the war when their father was celebrating their recent success in a battle with Pakistan. One of the twins end up in the neighboring Pakistan and is brought up as a Muslim named Tauheed. He was brought up by a terrorist who told him that his mother had died in an attack of Indian army, while the other grows up as a Hindu named Ajay Malhotra. Ajay is a novelist.

The movie begins with a montage of India's diversity and the Wagah border ceremony, as a song describes India's agelessness, sanctity, patriotism, and the Partition of India.

A boy runs in a city with an Indian flag in his hand to celebrate India's 50th Independence Day. He gives it to his impatient father, who grabs the flag by the cloth. An old man kicks the flag off the father's hand, introduces himself as Kabira, and rebukes him for his lack of respect for India. He had lost his right arm. When the boy and several others applaud Kabira, Kabira tells them not to clap for him, but to be more active in loving their country and protecting it from attack. He asks them to say "Jai Hind", and they repeat and salute him.

An Indian commander discusses his strategy to several military officers to stop Pakistan's attacks, by suggesting that evidence for Pakistan's terrorist activities should be collected and presented before the United Nations Organisation, which will then condemn Pakistan as a terrorist state. Meanwhile, a soldier hijacks a Pakistani aeroplane and tells the pilot (Aziz Kashmiri, an intelligence officer) to give to him a floppy disk. He and the pilot fight, and the pilot parachutes out of his aeroplane. The soldier jumps out of the airplane, and continues fighting the pilot in mid-air. He kills the pilot, retrieves the floppy disk, and uses the pilot's parachute to glide his way to the ground.

The Indian commander later holds a meeting with his officers about the pilot's plane crash, and tells them to work prudently to expose whoever who was responsible. In an airport, Ajay has his picture taken by a photojournalist and permits him to publish his picture. A woman arrives and asks him to sign his autograph, as she is a fan of his novels. When she asks him about where did he get his ideas, Ajay said that it was a trade secret, and leaves. The photojournalist asks the fan to let her sign his autograph, but she refuses and leaves.

At home, Ajay's mother asks him about his conference, and the photojournalist asks for food, which Ajay's mother prepares for him. As the photojournalist eats his food, she receives a government pension from a postman. Ajay asks his mother on why did she take alms, but his father Kabira answers that she is not taking alms, but respect. Kabira then lectures him about the contributions of India's freedom fighters who fought against foreign rule, with Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose as an example of a patriot.

On a street, Priya asks Ajay to take her on his motorcycle to the airport to get to the Miss Universe competition, and he performs several stunts to navigate through traffic and he confesses his love for her, until he wakes up from his daydream. Ajay sees Priya (as Miss India) on television winning second place in the competition, and goes to an airport to congratulate Priya. They fall in love.

Two Indian officers snatch a copy of Ajay's novel, and give it to their commander as proof of the murder of one of their officers, Major Chawla in New York. The Indian commander asks them to bring Ajay to him for interrogation. After he promises his mother to bring Priya home, Ajay and the photojournalist depart by airplane to Srinagar for photography. The Indian officers visit Ajay's house and inform their commander about Ajay's location.

Pajirao Marathe films a terrorist base near Srinagar that sought to take over the Kashmir region, and fights an Ajay-lookalike. He is then stabbed by the Ajay-lookalike, who takes his film recording away. When the two Indian officers report this to their commander, their commander uses a film of his military training to show that Ajay had also received military training as a commando, but was rejected from being a soldier due to his poor eyesight, and that Ajay is also planning his own schemes.

The real Ajay and Priya dance at a New Year's party, and was seized by the officers. The commander interrogates him about Pajirao's murder, which Ajay denies any involvement, and tells him that the events of his stories (which resembled the murders) were inspired by his dreams. Priya returns to Ajay's home and informs his mother that he has gone missing. Ajay's mother later informs Kabira about Ajay's disappearance. After the commander orders Ajay to be tortured, one of the officers suggests that they use hypnosis to extract the origin of his novels' plots, and they send Ajay to Dr. Dastoor. During the session, Ajay recalls his childhood (where he recalls several children hiding from enemy soldiers), his shooting of a Pakistani army chief and his officer from his helicopter, and using that helicopter to kill the officer's truck. The commander then orders his officers to observe Ajay carefully.

Ajay returns home, and asks his mother about the "Aunt Geeta" that he had heard in his dreams. Ajay's mother shows him a photograph of their family, and recounts the Pakistani-led raid that took away his brother Raju and killed Aunt Geeta when the family visited an army base to celebrate the end of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. Kabira adds that he was also there when he lost his right arm to a grenade thrown by a Pakistani soldier, who also took Raju away before his very eyes. When the family visits Dr. Dastoor, he explains that Ajay and Raju have a sort of bond that affects both of them if one of them is affected. Dr. Dastoor also adds that the incidents that Ajay sees in his dreams are his brother's experiences, and Ajay requests that he should not tell his mother about his brother's shared experiences.

With the ongoing rivalry and hatred between the two countries, both find themselves on the opposite side, and must battle each other. The only way they can unite is by saving the life of the Prime Minister of Pakistan, who himself has become the target of terrorists. When

Cast

Soundtracks

# Title Singer(s) Length
1 "Jalwa Jalwa" Udit Narayan, Sukhwinder Singh, Jaspinder Narula 05:52
2 "Tere Dil Ke Paas" Sonu Nigam, Asha Bhosle 06:25
3 "Akhiyan Akhiyan" Udit Narayan, Alka Yagnik 05:00
4 "Tere Dil Mein" Sadhana Sargam 00:54
5 "Mera Dil Nai Lagda" Alka Yagnik 05:27
6 "Main Hindustan Hoon" Sukhwinder Singh 07:07
7 "Love Love" Abhijeet, Poornima 04:31
8 "Yaara Teri Ghoot" Sadhana Sargam 00:59
9 "Ranjhana Ve" Alka Yagnik 05:27
10 "Ishq Brandi" Sukhwinder Singh 03:38
11 "Is Paar Sarhad Ke" Anuradha Paudwal, Sukhwinder Singh 04:40

"Qadam Qadam Badaye Ja", the regimental quick march of the Indian National Army of Subhash Chandra Bose, is used in the segment where Bose makes his speech.

gollark: They should have just made kilograms be called "grams" and we could say milligrams for smaller amounts.
gollark: For SI, I mean.
gollark: Odd that kilogram is one of the base units and not gram, though.
gollark: !unitpedia furlong
gollark: It's one of the SI base units, even.

References

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