Blood Brothers (2007 Indian film) explained

Blood Brothers
Starring:Siddharth
Ayesha Takia
Pankaj Kapur
Pavan Malhotra
Director:Vishal Bhardwaj
Producer:Bill Gates Foundation
Mira Nair
Cinematography:Guillermo Navarro
Editing:Dattaraya Godhodke
Meghana Manchanda Sen
Country:India
Language:Hindi
Runtime:13 minutes

Blood Brothers is a 2007 short film on HIV-AIDS directed by Vishal Bhardwaj. The film, written by Matthew Robbins, is one of the short films made on HIV-AIDS on behalf of the Bill Gates foundation.[1] [2] It was released as one of the four segments of the anthology film AIDS JaaGo (AIDS Awake), with Positive (2007 film).[3] [4]

Blood Brothers features Siddharth,[5] Pavan Malhotra and Ayesha Takia in lead roles. Vishal chose cinematographer Guillermo Navarro to shoot his film. The movie premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.[6]

Plot

The film revolves around a successful advertising campaign manager named Arjun Dutt. During a routine medical check-up, he discovers that he is HIV positive. He is totally devastated. Instead of accepting the truth and informing his pregnant wife and son, he runs away from his home and job.

While wandering like a beggar through the trains, he is robbed by a group of thugs who beat him up and leave him for dead. Then a doctor takes him to his hospital. After coming to his senses, Siddharth tries to leave but is stopped by the doctor. The doctor conducts another test to find that Siddharth is, actually, HIV negative.

Siddharth returns to his family and while searching through his doctor's records discovers that another patient, also named Arjun Dutt, is HIV positive while he has always been HIV negative. He is now faced with the dilemma of revealing the truth to the blissfully unaware man, or remaining silent.

Cast

Reception

A review for the Indian Journal for Medical Ethics stated, "There are sensitive portrayals by the lead actors, and Pankaj Kapur is a delight in a brief role as the gruff, straight-talking doctor."[7]

Notes and References

  1. News: Democratisation of cinema brings best films to India. 8 May 2012. Sunday Guardian. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151208121800/https://www.sunday-guardian.com/masala-art/democratisation-of-cinema-brings-best-films-to-india. 8 December 2015.
  2. Web site: Actors we missed this year. Rediff. 2011-10-23.
  3. Web site: World AIDS Day 2022: Must-watch Bollywood movies that raised AIDS awareness . 2024-11-01 . Free Press Journal . en.
  4. Web site: 2022-12-01 . On World AIDS Day, Here’re 4 Bollywood Movies That Raised Awareness About HIV AIDS . 2024-11-01 . iDiva . en-IN.
  5. Web site: 5 Bollywood films and one anthology that dealt with HIV/AIDS with great sensitivity .
  6. Book: The Hollywood Reporter. 2007. Hollywood Reporter Inc.. 401.
  7. Web site: A wake-up call on HIV . 2024-11-01 . Indian Journal of Medical Ethics . en.