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Showing posts with label BOLLYWOOD GYAN HINDI MOVIES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BOLLYWOOD GYAN HINDI MOVIES. Show all posts

Friday 31 July 2015


Most lengthy hindi movies: Bollywood Masala: Bollwood Gyan
Our Hollywood cousins call their movies long when they stretch over the 90-minute mark. But here, in India, we're used to long films. Two-hour English extravaganzas are considered excessive, while the average Hindi flick regularly clocks in at about 3 hours, songs and all.

Sometimes though, even that isn't enough. Here's a look at some really, really long movies, stretching comfortably beyond the 200-minute mark, even nearing four hours.







List of longest films in India in Hindi by running time

S.No
NAME OF THE TITLE
RUNNING TIME
YEAR RELEASED
1

255 mins.
1970
2
255 mins.
2005
3
238 mins.
1964
4
228 mins.
1999
5
224 mins.
2001
6
Khatarnak
223 mins.
1990
7
222 mins.
2005
8
216 mins.
2000
9
216 mins.
2007
10
Narasimha
214 mins.
1991
11
213 mins.
1991
12
213 mins.
2008
13
211 mins.
1932
14
210 mins.
1976
15
210 mins.
2001

 Sangam (1964, 3 hours, 58 minutes)

Considered one of Raj Kapoor's finest films, Sangam stars the filmmaker in a love triangle with Vyajayantimala and Rajendra Kumar. The romantic drama of close friends torn apart by secret love and consequences remains one of the most memorable blockbusters of the sixties.

The length: While the four-hour duration is undeniably exhausting, the film boasts a truly compelling story and performances strong enough to keep the viewer going. With the plot including being drafted into the army, the assumption of death and ultimately a wedding, the length almost seems justified -- helping us feel Vyajantimala's eventual resignation.

Waqt (1965, 3 hours, 26 minutes)

Yash Chopra's 41-year old epic took its title literally as it told the story of three brothers -- Sunil Dutt, Raj Kumar and Shashi Kapoor -- separated by an earthquake as children and brought up in entirely different circumstances. A very well-crafted film.

The length: Thanks to the director's stylised finesse, length wasn't even an issue with Waqt. While time didn't fly, the film was impressively tight enough to stay right on track. The top-notch performances certainly helped.

Mera Naam Joker (1970, 4 hours, four minutes)

That Raj Kapoor liked his sagas long was no secret, but he outdid himself with this melodramatic story of a circus clown. Audiences at the time didn't buy into the two-interval film and it bombed. But, a few decades later, Mera Naam Joker is looked on with fond affection for the great showman.

The length: Like three films strung together back to back, the greasepaint tales of Raju the clown were always too long for a single shot. Add that it was a heartbreakingly tragic film and you get something that exhausts both handkerchiefs and viewers.

Sholay (1975, 3 hours, 24 minutes)

The most magnum of our opuses. It just stands to reason that the biggest Hindi film of all time also be one of its longest. Ramesh Sippy's immortal Western did it all, and sure took its own sweet time.

The length: The irrepressible Veeru. Cool Jai. Thakur, bitter and arm-less. Basanti and her conversation. Samba. A trick coin. A jailer who'd served under the English. And a villain called Gabbar. Nope, if there is any complaint to be made about the length of Sholay, it's just that we wistfully crave it were even longer.

Hum Aapke Hain Koun (1994, three hours, 26 minutes)

Who knew Indian audiences could do without a bad guy? Sooraj Barjatya did, and hit pay dirt with this mega-family hit, casting Madhuri Dixit and Salman Khan in our all-time greatest money-spinner. India was then reeling from an outbreak of the plague, but it didn't matter -- 'twas wedding season.

The length: A long film, but with a warm cast and a bunch of hit songs, Barjatya managed to authentically recreate the flavour of a North Indian wedding. The film left a lasting influence (10-day shaadis and purple sari knockoffs, among others) and managed to pull off the length quite nicely.

Lagaan (2001, three hours, 44 minutes)

Five years ago, Ashutosh Gowariker had the bright idea of combining India's two primary passions: Cricket and cinema. It wasn't as if it hadn't been done in the past, but this was the first good cricket film, liberally dosed with anti-colonial patriotism, and it starred Aamir rarely-seen Khan. The result? Millions, and an Oscar nod.

The length: That game has made patient morons out of us, honestly; we even sit up to watch 5-day test matches played in faraway lands. So, Lagaan was never going to be too much of a stretch, and it's fabulous XI-man ensemble had us cheering from the aisles.

LOC: Kargil (2003, 4 hours, 15 minutes)

After the success of JP Dutta's Border, most actors were dying to work with the patriotic director, and every star son in the industry readily signed on for this mammoth effort to document the Kargil battle.

The length: In an effort to give each cast member a back story, LOC:Kargil became a tedious, song-filled production with no real highlight -- except the dubious distinction of being the longest Hindi film ever. We say 'dubious' because it made every minute seem longer.

Swades (2004, 3 hours, 30 minutes)

After earning directorial credentials with Lagaan, Ashu Gowariker hit the village roads again with a mega-hyped film (Shah Rukh Khan starred, therefore...) about an Indian NASA engineer realising his country needs him more. SRK won acting plaudits, but the film sank like a stone, despite some positive reviews.

The length: A sincere, earnest project, this film had tremendous potential, but lazy pace and documentary-style realism needs a far tighter script to fly. Bollywood never required an editor more.

Bose: The Forgotten Hero (2005, 3 hours, 28 minutes)

Legendary director Shyam Benegal, now big-budget. With the mammoth Bose, he broached the powerful subject of Netaji Subhash Bose, an iconic freedom fighter mostly ignored by Bollywood. Sachin Khedekar looked good in the role and, given Benegal's track record of historical films, this was all set to be great. Sadly, it fell far short.

The length: Jokes aside, the basic problem with Bose is it actually looks unedited. Unfocussed scenes are pasted disjointedly together, and there is no attempt at restraint -- this must have made for a really clean cutting-room floor. Followers of Bose decried the historical inaccuracy, even as the rest of the audience stifled a yawn.

Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna (2006, 3 hours, 35 minutes)

With critics either savaging or loving Karan Johar's latest film, the jury's still out on whether audiences truly enjoyed KANK or were done in by all the hype. All we can say for sure is that the film, a drama about marriage and infidelity, sure takes its time getting to the point.

The length: Even the kindest of reviewers feel Johar went overboard with KANK's length. Also, considering it doesn't really have anything 'new' to offer -- with even the actors doing their 'usual' roles -- it ends up a marathon film that keeps making you look longingly at your wristwatch.