Prahaar is the story of Major Chauhan, a tough and stern soldier, trained to destroy the enemy. He can see the enemy on our borders but is unaware of the invisible enemy within ourselves. Wh... Read allPrahaar is the story of Major Chauhan, a tough and stern soldier, trained to destroy the enemy. He can see the enemy on our borders but is unaware of the invisible enemy within ourselves. When one of Major's Commandos - Peter D'Souza is killed, he is shown the harsh reality revol... Read allPrahaar is the story of Major Chauhan, a tough and stern soldier, trained to destroy the enemy. He can see the enemy on our borders but is unaware of the invisible enemy within ourselves. When one of Major's Commandos - Peter D'Souza is killed, he is shown the harsh reality revolving around us, the enemy is within ourselves. The battlefield changes and Major Chavan ma... Read all
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
- Local Goon
- (as Yagnesh Shetty)
- Playing violin in song dhadkan zara ruk gayi hai
- (as Adesh Shrivastava)
- Goon
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
A tight slap on Dusty Minded Society with right perception and Nana Patekar's stone-breaking characterization but with wrong objects. Prahaar is front loaded material if you're fan of 90s Nana Patekar films but somehow it tries to clean the dust of society which was too late by then. Mainly it comes with less action but solid characterization of almost every single artist present in the film. The film is about an Army officer who is outraged by the the muteness and deafness of the society against Evils. The officer takes law in hands to complete a revenge of his loving fella by giving it a name of his duty of cleaning enemies of country. The script seems bit offbeat and hard-hitting looking at it's period of early 90s when Bollywood was in relationship with mainstream action/romace films. Another offbeat or may i say new thing was to introduce Army training camp in Bollywood in strict manners. It was pleasing and interesting throughout the narrative and it was also shockingly acceptable in the climax when we realise the importance of Army Training. Now how much sense it made is a different topic to argue anyways because every brain has different definitions of Freedom and Independence that we have got. Nana Patekar as strict army officer is in sublime form and all his physical, endurance and training acts are real treat to watch. Rest of the cast don't get too much to show so i should say it's decent. Technically and cinematically there are few mistakes which are ignorable but some big falters in the writing must not be spared. This is the only thing which goes wrong with the film that it used the wrong objects to tell this overwhelming storyline. It should have came from a common man from the same dusty society rather than Decorated Army Officer. Overall, a Fantastic Social Drama.
RATING - 7/10*
By - #samthebestest
CLASSIC
10/10
Did you know
- TriviaDebut Directonal film of Nana Patekar.
- Quotes
Major Chauhan: I think army training should be compulsory for everybody. At least one year of your life should be given to the nation. Today people have no value of independence because it's free.
- SoundtracksWho's Gonna Love You Tonight
Written by David Foster (uncredited), John Bettis (uncredited) and Keith Diamond (uncredited)
Performed by David Foster
This is heard in the background when Shirley and Kiran meet Chauhan in the hotel room.
- How long is Prahaar: The Final Attack?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Судьба солдата
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 2h 31m(151 min)
- Color