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IMDbPro

Khamoshi: The Musical

  • 1996
  • Not Rated
  • 2 h 40 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
4,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Khamoshi: The Musical (1996)
DramaMusicalRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe daughter of deaf-mute parents seeks their understanding when she discovers a love for music.The daughter of deaf-mute parents seeks their understanding when she discovers a love for music.The daughter of deaf-mute parents seeks their understanding when she discovers a love for music.

  • Direção
    • Sanjay Leela Bhansali
  • Roteiristas
    • Sanjay Leela Bhansali
    • Sutapa Sikdar
  • Artistas
    • Manisha Koirala
    • Nana Patekar
    • Salman Khan
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,4/10
    4,9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Sanjay Leela Bhansali
    • Roteiristas
      • Sanjay Leela Bhansali
      • Sutapa Sikdar
    • Artistas
      • Manisha Koirala
      • Nana Patekar
      • Salman Khan
    • 17Avaliações de usuários
    • 3Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 6 vitórias e 4 indicações no total

    Fotos14

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    Elenco principal19

    Editar
    Manisha Koirala
    Manisha Koirala
    • Annie
    Nana Patekar
    Nana Patekar
    • Joseph
    Salman Khan
    Salman Khan
    • Raj
    Seema Biswas
    Seema Biswas
    • Flavy
    Raghubir Yadav
    Raghubir Yadav
    • Willy
    • (as Raghuveer Yadav)
    Priya Parulekar
    • Annie Jr.
    Pratik Gala
    • Sam
    Himani Shivpuri
    Himani Shivpuri
    • Raj's Mother
    Sunil Shende
    Sunil Shende
    • Raj's Father
    • (as Sunil Shinde)
    Anil Mehta
    Anil Mehta
    • Priest
    Helen
    Helen
    • Maria
    Ashok Lokhande
    • Fredricks (Shopkeeper)
    Sunil Rege
    Sunil Rege
    Hargurjeet Singh
      Sanjay Jha
      Jaywant Patekar
      Varna
      Asif
      • Direção
        • Sanjay Leela Bhansali
      • Roteiristas
        • Sanjay Leela Bhansali
        • Sutapa Sikdar
      • Elenco e equipe completos
      • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

      Avaliações de usuários17

      7,44.8K
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      Avaliações em destaque

      10SanDhuBoy05

      Either you turn it off after 20mins, or you fall in love and remember it your whole life

      This is a beautiful film. But you have to watch it with an open mind and willingness to grasp whatever and wherever the story takes you. Its the story of a deaf and mute couple who give birth to girl who can listen n speak and later to a boy whose normal too. Its a progression of their story. But yeah this movie isn't for your normal Joe's who just want commercial entertainment as the narrative is slow to build. I can say its a film of emotions. Metaphorically and otherwise, as the couple's disability makes them converse through emotions. Its the type of film either you fell in love with, or you switch it off after 20mins or so. I belong to the former as this movie is so close to my heart as a film and also coz it gives me that nostalgic feeling of childhood as I was very young when it came. 'Aankhon mein kya, is dil se poocho zara'
      8HeadleyLamarr

      music transcends silence..

      Kahmoshi The Musical, is Sanjay Leela Bhansali's first directorial venture - a sensitive, introspective film about a deaf mute Catholic couple living in Goa. The world of Joseph (Nana Patekar) and Flavy (Seema Biswas) is a silent one and into this world in born their first child Annie (Manisha) who can speak and hear & loves music. She is trained in music by her grandmother Maria (Helen) but the family is so poor they have to sell many cherished belongings including their piano. Annie's younger brother dies tragically leaving the family stunned and music is banished from their lives. Into Annie's world walks in the dashing Raj (Salman Khan) a budding musician. Raj falls for Annie and wants her to sing his songs. Annie's father hates Raj - the usual confrontations, despair follow. Annie's meeting up with Raj is followed by a catastrophe and we wait for the outcome while the story is told to us in flashback.

      The musical is naturally full of music - some of it is hauntingly beautiful - songs like Bahon ke Darmiyan, Jaana suno hum tumpe marte hain, Yeh Dil Sun Raha Hai and extremely touching in the film. But there is just too much music. After about an hour I was cowering at the thought of yet another number as the hero and heroine would run up and down the steps of the lighthouse. Some songs are just fillers and do not add to or move the story forward in any way. With some crisp editing, and a few fewer songs, Khamoshi would have clocked at 2 hours and been a perfect film. The marriage of music and the serious content of the material also jarred at times.

      The acting: Manisha steals the show utterly and absolutely. Is there anything she cannot do? Her break down when her father throws her out of the house is a virtuoso performance. Salman is the best he will ever be, handsome, no overt gimmicky moves or gestures, just plain and simple acting - after seeing Khamoshi I can see what people saw in Salman. But even Mr. Bhansali could not keep his restrained for ever and we got Samir in HDDCS! Nana Patekar was okay - actually he was the biggest disappointment - his acting was sort of repetitive and he did not age at all in the span of 20 years showed in the film. Seema Biswas was awesome - seeing her I felt all the anguish and pain a mute person would feel at their inability to communicate. She blew me away as the film opened and she put her ear to the big speaker and "felt" the music. Helen was excellent - a great role for her too - one of her better ones where she was required to act. The little girl who played the young Annie was amazing.

      The story is simple yet very effective, the direction is deft but Bhansali shows his self indulgence even in this minimal film. There is a monologue by Nana Patekar (being 'translated' by Salman) that tell us the whole story all over again - is it necessary? But overall this is an excellent directorial debut and a movie worth watching. Be warned that this is serious fare and will require patience.
      7kaushigaiv

      A Cinematic Masterpiece

      This film is a true masterpiece. Though it may seem slow-paced at first, especially for our fast-paced times, it profoundly touched my heart. It goes beyond just entertainment; the performances of these remarkable actors speak directly to the soul.

      Nana Patekar's portrayal is extraordinary, immersing himself so completely in the role that his expressions alone convey deep emotion. Manisha Koirala is equally impressive, bringing her character to life with grace and emotional depth. While I may not rewatch this film often due to my selective taste, its one-time magic and lasting impact make it a genuine work of art.
      9GypsiB

      Poignant and Heartwarming

      In this award-winning drama, Annie (Manisha Koirala) is the hearing daughter of a deaf couple, and finds herself divided between two worlds. When Raj (Salman Khan) arrives bringing romance and music, her life takes a new direction, and she is torn between her new love for Raj and her duty towards her parents.

      This is poignant and heartwarming film, with a strong message of faith and family. Some of the songs are particularly lovely. While both Koirala and Khan were good in their roles, the supporting cast of Helen, Nana Patekar, and Seema Biswas were fantastic. I highly recommend this lovely movie
      7SAMTHEBESTEST

      Silences more than half of Sanjay Leela Bhansali's filmography.

      Khamoshi: The Musical (1996) : Movie Review -

      Silences more than half of Sanjay Leela Bhansali's filmography. SLB's career will always be divided into two categories: content-driven cinema and larger-than-life spectacles. The content category will have Khamoshi, Black, and Guzaarish, while the likes of HDDCS, Devdas, Bajirao Mastani, and Padmaavat will lie in the second category. Khamoshi has to be his most close-to-tragedy conflict coming from a human angle because I feel that situations like Black, and Guzaarish are quite rare to find (that's what makes them better, actually). The metaphor in Khamoshi is pretty clear to everyone who's watching it, but SLB didn't present it verbally. "Beyond Silence" too suffered from the same problem, I guess. Having a normal child is the happiest thing for deaf and mute parents, but that can be the saddest thing too, because it separates her/him from their problematic world. So, sometimes it is better to have a disabled child because he/she can at least be with you forever, and they can carry on with life with the same problems. Khamoshi uses music and love/marriage to highlight the same issue, just like Beyond Silence; otherwise, it's a totally different and much more diverse movie than the OG German film. Indian films should always be superior because the use of songs gives them an edge. For instance, Hollywood and Bollywood can both make visual grandeurs. Let's say Hollywood has Ben-Hur (1959) and we have "Mughal-e-Azam" (1960). Both are huge, but MEA has evergreen music and video songs that Ben-Hur didn't have. That's one thing where we are ahead. With the right use of it, we can overtake any original film with a remake. Beyond Silence could use nudity, and Khamoshi couldn't. That's not my issue, anyway. The problem is that a film like Khamoshi, a story, which is set in a small village/beach/house, shouldn't go big with its scale. Now, that vision of SLB spoils the generalism and reliability of Khamoshi. The best scenes in the film don't have any big scales or sets. The musical touch boosts the metaphor further because it's a very sensitive human conflict perfectly matched with parental issues. The daughter wants to make a career in music because she is normal, but sadly, her parents can never hear her music. The idea of romance is quite different in Khamoshi than what we saw in Beyond Silence. This one's pure and slightly misjudged romance, and that too because we have such dramatic situations. Whatever flaws it has are covered by the emotional segments in the film-there are four major emotionally engaging scenes in this film, and that Nana's speech in the church in the climax surpasses them all. It's a genius idea to have the speech verbally delivered by another man. It can never create the same emotional impact when the character himself narrates it. What's overdone is the pregnancy routine of the girl, which has been too dated for Hindi movies. "Mujhse galti ho gayi.. Bachcha gira do." I mean, that stuff has been pushed even before Bhansali was born. Nana Patekar gives another striking performance. Nothing much challenging was left for him after the kind of films and roles he had done before Khamoshi, but still, he discovered a new soft side of him as an actor. Koirala is superb in those emotionally challenging scenes, while Seema Biswas did make me believe that she was deaf and mute. Salman looked young and handsome in a typical chocolate boy role, but somehow he got that one of the most important emotional scenes at the end of the film. SLB should work with talents like Nana, Seema, and Raghubir again instead of working with today's mediocre bunch of supporting actors, and he should also go back into that content-cinema zone again, even though his last three such films didn't do well at the box office. That's sheer bad luck, man. Let him earn money with big-scale movies with mediocre content so that he can save money to spend them on such high quality projects. I am always there, silently waiting for him to come back.

      RATING - 7/10*

      By - #samthebestest.

      Enredo

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      Você sabia?

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      • Curiosidades
        Nana Patekar plays Manisha Koirala's father in Khamoshi: The Musical. That same year, he played Manisha's husband in Agni Sakshi.
      • Citações

        Raj: [to Annie about her parents] They will not be able to hear you, but they will be able to feel you.

      • Conexões
        Referenced in Comedy Circus Ke Ajoobe: Imagination Special (2013)
      • Trilhas sonoras
        Aaj Main Upar
        Written by Majrooh Sultanpuri

        Composed by Jatin Pandit and Lalit Pandit

        Performed by Kumar Sanu and Kavita Krishnamurthy

        Courtesy of PolyGram Music India

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      Perguntas frequentes15

      • How long is Khamoshi the Musical?Fornecido pela Alexa

      Detalhes

      Editar
      • Data de lançamento
        • 9 de agosto de 1996 (Índia)
      • País de origem
        • Índia
      • Idioma
        • Hindi
      • Também conhecido como
        • Khamoshi the Musical
      • Locações de filme
        • Goa, Índia
      • Empresa de produção
        • Polygram Filmed Entertainment
      • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

      Especificações técnicas

      Editar
      • Tempo de duração
        • 2 h 40 min(160 min)
      • Cor
        • Color
      • Mixagem de som
        • Mono

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