Dhol | |
Producer: | Shailendra Singh Sarita Patil Satish Kaushik[1] |
Story: | Suresh Krishnan |
Based On: | In Harihar Nagar by Siddique-Lal |
Starring: | Tusshar Kapoor Sharman Joshi Kunal Khemu Rajpal Yadav Tanushree Dutta Arbaaz Khan Om Puri Murali Sharma Tiku Talsania Asrani |
Music: | Songs: Pritam Score: Gopi Sunder |
Cinematography: | Piyush Shah |
Editing: | N. Gopalakrishnan Arun Kumar |
Studio: | Percept Picture Company |
Distributor: | Adlabs |
Runtime: | 145 minutes |
Country: | India |
Language: | Hindi |
Budget: | 14 crore[2] |
Gross: | 23.27 crore |
Dhol (Drum) is a 2007 Indian Hindi-language comedy thriller film directed by Priyadarshan and produced under the Percept Picture Company. A remake of the 1990 Malayalam film In Harihar Nagar,[3] which was already remade in Hindi in 1992 as Parda Hai Parda,[4] the film stars Tusshar Kapoor, Sharman Joshi, Kunal Khemu, Rajpal Yadav, Tanushree Dutta, and Om Puri in lead roles, whilst Arbaaz Khan, Abhimanyu Singh, Payal Rohatgi, Murli Sharma, Asrani and Tiku Talsania feature in supporting roles. Released on 21 September 2007, it received mixed responses from critics upon release.
Martand "Maru" Dhamdere, Pankaj "Pakya" Tiwari, Sameer "Sam" Arya and Gautam "Goti" Sisodia are roommates in Pune who are bound together by their ambition to make it big in life with the least effort possible. Each one tries his hand at finding a shortcut to success but ends up being in even deeper trouble. Things get worse when the four decide to take some desperate measures to end their misery once and for all. They take loans from Martand’s maternal uncle at very high interest so he always beats up Martand.
They believe that the only way to get rich without working hard is to marry a wealthy girl. As luck would have it, a rich girl Ritu arrives in their neighborhood with her grandparents. All four set out with their individual plans to marry her but end up discovering a shocking truth. Ritu came to the city to find out about her brother Rahul's killers.
All four of them try to impress Ritu but meanwhile, they discover that Rahul died along with his friend Jaishankar "Jai" Yadav. They try hard and finally Pankaj is decided to marry Ritu. Soon before marriage, Ritu finds the secret that Rahul and Jai were in contact with a notorious gang leader Zikomo. Also, Ritu finds that the four were bluffing all time just to impress her and so she starts avoiding them. One day Zikomo finds them and kidnaps Ritu and her grandparents. He reveals himself to be the true killer and he confesses about killing Rahul and Jai. He asks for them to hand over the Dhol if they wanted to see him alive, but Ritu's family members do not know about any Dhol. A fight ensues and Zikomo is killed in a self-explosion in the end. Ritu hands over the Dhol and the four of them find it filled with money, realizing that Zikomo was after the money and not the Dhol. They run behind Ritu's car after she leaves, as the film ends.
Most of the filming occurred at various locations in Pune, such as Koregaon Park, The Corinthians Resort and Club, and SGS Mall. [5]
Dhol | |
Type: | Soundtrack |
Artist: | Pritam |
Released: | 2007 (India) |
Recorded: | 2007 |
Genre: | Feature film soundtrack |
Label: | T-Series |
Producer: | Pritam |
Prev Title: | Life In A... Metro |
Prev Year: | 2007 |
Next Title: | Awarapan |
Next Year: | 2007 |
Track | Singer(s) | Duration | Lyrics | |
---|---|---|---|---|
"Oh Yaara Dhol Bajake" | Mika Singh & Labh Janjua[6] | 4:12 | Irshad Kamil | |
"Namakool Namakool" | 5:00 | Ashish Pandit | ||
"Dhol Bajake" (Version 2) | 4:28 | Irshad Kamil | ||
"Haadsa" | 5:11 | Irshad Kamil | ||
"Bheega Aasman" | 5:32 | Irshad Kamil | ||
"All Night Long" | 4:16 | Mayur Puri | ||
"Dil Liya Re" | 5:14 | Amitabh Verma | ||
"Dhol Bajake" (Version 3) | Soham Chakraborty & Suhail Kaul | 4:11 | Irshad Kamil |
Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama gave the film 3 stars out of 5, writing ″On the whole, DHOL is a decent entertainer that has some really funny comic moments. At the box-office, the Priyadarshan brand should ensure impressive footfalls at cineplexes despite the dull period and coupled with its moderate pricing, DHOL should find a place in the director's successful films.″[7] Syed Firdaus Ashraf of Rediff.com gave the film 2.5 stars out of 5 calling it ″funny in parts.″[8]
Rajeev Masand gave the film 1 star out of 5, writing ″I’m going with one out of five and a suggestion to stay far, far away from Priyadarshan’s Dhol. The one star is for the smattering of genuine comedy you’re likely to find here, the rest is just indifferent film-making, an insult to your intelligence. You know, every time I walk out of the cinema after watching a Priyadarshan film, I feel like he can’t make a film worse than this. And every single time, he surprises me by surpassing his previous achievement.″[9]