Race 2 | |
Director: | Abbas–Mustan |
Producer: | Ramesh S. Taurani |
Starring: | Saif Ali Khan John Abraham Deepika Padukone Anil Kapoor Jacqueline Fernandez Ameesha Patel Bipasha Basu |
Narrator: | Anil Kapoor |
Music: | Songs: Pritam Yo Yo Honey Singh Background Score: Salim–Sulaiman |
Cinematography: | Ravi Yadav |
Editing: | Hussain A. Burmawala |
Studio: | Tips Industries |
Distributor: | UTV Motion Pictures |
Runtime: | 150 minutes |
Country: | India Turkey |
Language: | Hindi |
Budget: | ₹94 crore |
Gross: | ₹173.36 crore[1] |
Race 2 is a 2013 Indian Hindi-language neo-noir action crime film directed by Abbas–Mustan and written by Kiran Kotrial and Shiraz Ahmed. The film was produced by Ramesh S. Taurani under the Tips Industries banner, with UTV Motion Pictures serving as distributor and presenter. A sequel to the 2008 film, Race and the second and penultimate installment of the Race film series, the film stars Saif Ali Khan, John Abraham, Deepika Padukone, Anil Kapoor, Jacqueline Fernandez, Bipasha Basu and Ameesha Patel. The music of the film is composed by Pritam, Yo Yo Honey Singh and Salim–Sulaiman. The film was dubbed in Tamil and Telugu.
Made on a budget of,[2] Race 2 was released on 25 January (India) and 26 January (Worldwide). The film received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics and the audience. It grossed ₹173.36 crore worldwide.
In Cyprus, a contract killer blasts a yellow Lamborghini Gallardo by shooting its fuel tank.
Few months later, a robbery takes place and European printing plates are stolen. Crooked businessman Ranvir Singh meets a casino owner, Vikram Thapar, claiming he stole the plates. He offers Thapar €1500 million in counterfeit currency in exchange for €500 million in real banknotes. Thapar agrees and borrows €500 million from his friend Armaan Malik, who is a powerful don and the leader of the powerful Turkish mafia. It is then revealed that Ranvir never stole the plates, and cheated Thapar. Unable to return Armaan's money, Thapar is forced to give control of his five casinos to him.
Ranvir and Armaan planned the whole scam. They met through Ranveer's childhood friend retired police inspector Robert "RD" D'Costa. Ranvir delivers Thapar's casinos for €500 million to Armaan by taking 10% from it. Ranvir meets Armaan's younger sister Aleena, and gradually becomes attracted to her.
Ranvir sees a picture of his deceased wife Sonia in Armaan's girlfriend Omisha's wallet and begins to woo her in order to gain her confidence. Ranvir reveals to RD that he is trying to bankrupt Armaan because Armaan and Thapar were responsible for Sonia's death.
In a flashback, Ranvir and a pregnant Sonia are in Cyprus. Sonia's sister Tanya calls them to meet her in Bangkok. On the way, Ranvir tells Sonia that he wants to transfer some savings from the bank. Unaware of an assassin lurking around, Ranvir asks her to sit in the car as he heads to the bank. The assassin successfully shoots the car's fuel tank (the Lamborghini blasting scene at the beginning of the film), and Sonia dies. Ranvir chased the assassin and killed him. Omisha tells him that she is Sonia's sister, Tanya Martin. It is revealed she is not Sonia's sister but Armaan's girlfriend and it was a ploy by Armaan who knew Ranvir's true intentions.
Ranvir schemes to steal the Shroud of Turin and sell it to Armaan. After that, he will steal both the shroud and Armaan's wealth. However, RD, who is afraid of Armaan, betrays Ranvir and tells the truth to Armaan. Armaan gives 15 billion euros to his old friend, godfather Anza, as an investment.
Aleena reveals Armaan planted a bomb in her car to kill her, and decides to help Ranvir. Ranvir steals the shroud. During the celebration, Aleena poisons Ranvir. As he slowly dies, Armaan reveals he knew his plan and Aleena was never on Ranvir's side. After Ranvir dies, Armaan and Omisha retrieve the shroud and leave in their private jet. Armaan points his gun at Aleena, revealing that he had been planning to kill her to take her share of their combined wealth. Unexpectedly, Ranvir crashes through the wall; Aleena never poisoned him. Aleena tells Armaan that she was helping Ranvir, and knew about Armaan's intention to eliminate her. Ranvir reveals that RD never betrayed him and it was a ploy to trick Armaan into thinking he was ahead of Ranvir.
Ranvir and Armaan fight in the aircraft. Armaan tells Ranvir that he killed Sonia because she fled away with his money. He shoots the pilot and escapes with Omisha through a parachute, leaving Ranvir and Aleena to die in the resulting plane crash. However, they manage to escape by using Armaan's car, which has four attached parachutes. Armaan and Omisha hand over the shroud to Anza. On inspection, it is revealed to be fake. When Anza asks for his bearer bonds, they are also fake. Ranvir calls Armaan and taunts him that he was penniless now. It is also revealed that Anza is secretly helping Ranvir and Armaan is forced to hand over his properties, while Omisha dumps him for Anza. Armaan vows vengeance on Ranvir.
Ranvir visits Sonia's grave with Aleena and gives RD his share of money. When RD asks about the real shroud, he reveals that he never stole the shroud; it is still in the church. Aleena had switched the real bearer bonds while he and Armaan were fighting on the plane. RD admits that he does not want to risk his life again and makes Ranvir promise in jest to never meet him again.
Ranvir and Aleena leave Turkey for an unknown location.
Portrait | Name | Portrayed by | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ranvir Singh "Ronny" | A crooked businessman, who want to take revenge on Armaan for killing his wife Sonia. The main protagonist | |||
Alina Malik | Armaan's sister and Ranvir's girlfriend | |||
Armaan Malik | A powerful Turkish don, who killed Ranvir's wife Sonia. The main antagonist | |||
Omisha | Armaan's girlfriend (voice dubbed by Mona Ghosh Shetty) | |||
Inspector Robert D Costa "RD" | Ranvir's childhood friend | |||
Cherry | Ameesha Patel | RD's girlfriend | ||
Anza | Aditya Pancholi | Godfather |
After the success of Race (2008), Ramesh Taurani registered Race 2 as a title and Abbas–Mustan said that they would go ahead with a sequel "if we get a script in place which is even better than the original."[3] The screenplay and story was written by Shiraz Ahmed and Kiran Kotrial who also wrote Race. Saif Ali Khan and Anil Kapoor were the first to sign on in November 2009 and were reported to be the only returning cast members from the first film.[4] In June 2010, John Abraham was signed on to play the antagonist and Kareena Kapoor and Priyanka Chopra were approached to co-star opposite Khan and Abraham respectively.[5] [6] However, Kapoor turned down the role as she didn't want her pairing with Khan to get repetitive; Chopra opted out due to scheduling conflicts.[7] It was also rumoured that Asin Thottumkal had been shortlisted to star alongside Khan; however Padukone was cast.[8] In December 2010, Sonakshi Sinha was cast as a replacement for Priyanka.[9] Chitrangda Singh was approached for a role opposite Anil Kapoor in May 2011 but eventually dropped out for unspecified reasons.[10] Ameesha Patel and Mallika Sherawat were considered for that same role, but it ultimately went to Patel.[11] [12]
The film's shooting was set to begin on 5 October 2011 but was postponed to accommodate Deepika Padukone's dates causing scheduling conflicts with Sonakshi Sinha.[13] Sinha's dates conflicted with her filming schedule for Dabangg 2 (2012), forcing her to drop out. In October 2011, Jacqueline Fernandez who had opted out of Krrish 3 (2013) and Raaz 3 (2012) was cast as a replacement for Sinha.[14] Shortly afterwards, it was announced that Bipasha Basu would be reprising her role as Sonia in a cameo appearance and continuing to be role of Khan's wife. Despite rumours suggesting that Bipasha would be sharing screen space with ex-boyfriend John Abraham for the first time after their break-up, but John denied this. Reports have said that after this statement was said Abraham then told Saif that he didn't want to work with Bipasha in the first place.[15] [16] [17] Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind, the largest of Sunni clerics in India, urged PM Manmohan Singh to stop their publication and display of Race 2 posters that featured verses from the Quran.[18]
The first Indian schedule began on 5 November 2011 in Mumbai for 15 days, wrapping up on 20 November.[19] Meanwhile, Sanjay Dutt was in talks to join the cast, but he dropped out due to scheduling conflicts.[20] [21] The second schedule commenced on 23 January 2012 in Mumbai. Padukone dropped out within six days because the film was always being rescheduled.[22]
Race 2s producer Ramesh Taurani released a statement to the media deeming Padukone's behaviour as "unethical, unprofessional and unacceptable".[23] Also, it was reported that Asin was offered the role to replace Padukone, although it has been rumoured that she declined the offer, thus avoiding any controversies regarding her and Kapoor.[24] However, Padukone and Taurani agreed on a settlement after much negotiation and the filming continued as planned.[25] Fernandez, Abraham and Padukone joined the cast in May at Istanbul for the third schedule. On 7 October 2012, the shooting was completed. The Mardan Palace in Turkey was the setting for many scenes where it was shown as the home of Padukone and Abraham's characters.[26]
The soundtrack of Race 2 which is composed by Pritam and Yo Yo Honey Singh features 10 tracks, with four remix versions an unplugged version and a mashup of all the tracks. It was released on 10 November 2012. The film score is composed by Salim–Sulaiman.
The songs "Lat Lag Gayee", "Be Intehaan," and "Party on My Mind" became extremely popular and were declared as chartbusters. The song "Lat Lag Gayee" was choreographed by Karishma Chavan.
The soundtrack received positive critical reception. IBN Live gave it 4/5 stars saying, "Race 2
Race 2 was released in 3200 screens in India; it is the third biggest release ever for a Hindi film after Ek Tha Tiger (2012) (3300 screens) and Dabangg 2 (2012) (3700 screens).[28] [29] Race 2 was released in more than 50 countries, including US, UK, Gulf, Australia, Pakistan as well as non-traditional markets like Maldives, East Timor, Myanmar, Morocco and Vietnam (with as many as seven screens).[30] The film had a simultaneous release in Morocco in four to five screens, including theatres in Casablanca and Marrakech.[31] Race 2 is subtitled in Arabic, Thai, Indonesian, Malay, Vietnamese, and Dutch.[32] [33]
Race 2 received mixed to positive reviews from critics and audience. While its cast performance, cinematography, visualisation, technical aspects, songs, background scores and direction received critical acclaim, its writing, plot and humours received criticism and most of the critics states that it is not that much as its first part.
Madhureeta Mukherjee of The Times of India rated the film 3 out of 5, while commenting, "Mass dialogue delivery, heists, fully anti-hero characters, glamorous and sexy heroines, roulette, luxury and exotic cars, gizmos, and gangs – Director duo, Abbas-Mustan have thrown in everything with pompous grandeur, save for a riveting plot that shocks or stuns."[34] Rubina A Khan of The First Post gave it 3 out of 5 stars, adding, "Race 2 delivers what it promises – good looking and anti hero ensemble cast, exotic locations, luxurious cars, bomb squads, revenge, lust and love, a couple of good and preppy style music tracks and, most importantly, a plot which opens a thrilling pace."[35] Shivesh Kumar of IndiaWeekly awarded the movie 3.8 out of 5 stars.[36]
Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama gave 4 out of 5 stars and said "The writing isn't watertight, the film lacks a hit score, the climax is far from effective and overall, Race 2 pales in comparison to Race."[37] Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN awarded it a score of 3.5 out of 5 while commenting "The film has no intellectual pretensions; its only ambition is to offer a good time. In that, it mostly succeeds."[38] Anupama Chopra of Hindustantimes gave 4.8 out of 5, reviewing, "Race 2 is essentially a big-budget film in which coolness is all. The director duo Abbas–Mustan have no pretensions about what they are making – full-on masala with a dash of revenge, a slice of heist and characters who are either strutting their chiseled bodies in slow motion or betraying each other."[39] Saibal Chatterjee of NDTV gave it a score of 4.5 out of 5 and feels "This is a movie strictly for action who might be looking for a feverish two-and-a-half-hour ride that is far more giddy than heady."[40]
Race 2 had what Box Office India called a "solid opening" at multiplexes and single screens with occupancy of around 60%–70%. The film had a very good opening day, netting . It showed good growth in its second day, collecting approximately nett and on third day. Race 2 did well on its first weekend by collecting around nett.
The film managed to do well and netted around in its first week. Race 2 went on to collect a total gross of in India with a worldwide gross business of .
Race 2 had a good opening in overseas with approximately the opening weekend.[41] Race 2 grossed approximately $5.5 million overseas in ten days.[42] After grossing $6 million in 17 days overseas, the film was declared a hit by Box Office India.[43] Race 2 recorded similar figures in overseas markets like its prequel.[44] Moreover, it recorded the highest ever collection in Pakistan for any Bollywood film with an amount of $775,000 beating Don 2 which netted $675,000. Its final business in the overseas market is around $6.5 million.[45] [46]
Race 2, a racing mobile video game developed by Gameshastra was released along with the 2013 film.[47]
See main article: Race 3. After making two successful films, makers planned the third Installment of this series, which is unrelated to the first two films and will feature a whole new star cast, with the exception of Anil Kapoor and Jacqueline Fernandez. Salman Khan, Bobby Deol, and Daisy Shah were some of the new faces in the series and Remo D'Souza replaced Abbas–Mustan as the director of Race 3. But, the film, which was released on 15 June 2018, received highly negative reviews from critics and audiences and is considered one of Bollywood's worst films.