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IMDbPro

Kabul Express

  • 2006
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
Kabul Express (2006)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:56
1 Video
20 Photos
Road TripSatireAdventureComedyDramaThrillerWar

A thrilling story spanning 48 hours of five individuals linked by hate and fear but brought together by fate to finally recognize each other.A thrilling story spanning 48 hours of five individuals linked by hate and fear but brought together by fate to finally recognize each other.A thrilling story spanning 48 hours of five individuals linked by hate and fear but brought together by fate to finally recognize each other.

  • Director
    • Kabir Khan
  • Writers
    • Kabir Khan
    • Sandeep Shrivastava
  • Stars
    • John Abraham
    • Arshad Warsi
    • Salman Shahid
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kabir Khan
    • Writers
      • Kabir Khan
      • Sandeep Shrivastava
    • Stars
      • John Abraham
      • Arshad Warsi
      • Salman Shahid
    • 38User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:56
    Trailer

    Photos19

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    John Abraham
    John Abraham
    • Suhel Khan
    Arshad Warsi
    Arshad Warsi
    • Jai Kapoor
    Salman Shahid
    • Imran 'Talib' Khan Afridi…
    Hanif Hum Ghum
    • Khyber
    Linda Arsenio
    • Jessica Beckham
    Wali-o Qhab
    • Mujahidin at pick-up truck
    Khader Arya
    • Mujahidin at pick-up truck
    Haji Gul Aser
    • Mujahidin at pick-up truck
    Abdul Basir Mujahid
    • Mujahidin at pick-up truck
    Saeed Meeran Farhad
    • Mujahidin at pick-up truck
    Raziq Zargar
    • Mujahidin at pick-up truck
    Farooq Baraki
    • Mujahidin commander
    Anjamuddin
    • Crippled boy
    Hashmatullah Fanai
    • Kibabchi at kibabchani
    Sunil Godse
    • Pakistani soldier
    Shaikh Nasiruddin
    • Pakistani soldier
    Captain Diwekar
    • Pakistani soldier
    Porter Barron
    • American special forces
    • (as Potter Baron)
    • Director
      • Kabir Khan
    • Writers
      • Kabir Khan
      • Sandeep Shrivastava
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews38

    6.83.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7danzs

    Different and Worth a Watch

    Different… Humorous… Poignant … that's what this ride called 'Kabul Express,' is about and a good experimental effort by the production house of Adi Chopra known more for his romantic tear-jerker's. This time he breaks away from the regular mould and delivers something that is more realistic.

    It has it flaws, like two reporters Suhel (John) and Jai (Arshad) who have gone to Afghanistan on their rookie assignment but seem to be surprised at the scenario and way of life there. Come on guys, didn't anyone back at office brief you on what's happening in a war torn country or don't you watch the news. Any Johnny today knows from the news and literature available how life in Afghanistan stands. Knows enough than to be taken aback by a kid without a leg or a hotel in ruins.

    John at times seems a bit out of sorts but Arshad makes hay while the Afghan sun shines and draws a chuckle from the audience. With his spontaneity and natural comic timing he delivers his dialogues to maximum effect :) Linda Arsenio as a Reuter's reporter is quite wasted. Anyone could have done that role which requires a bare minimum display of acting talents. But she sure does serve her purpose of eye candy amidst the dilapidated Afghan countryside.

    The cinematography of the barren landscape and rugged terrain is quite breathtaking and so is the background music. Comes as a relief that there are no song and dance items included which have no place in the script from the beginning.

    A few more slickly edited action sequences would have added positively to the 'thriller,' element in the movie cause at times it leaves you with an empty feeling with nothing to look forward to in the next scene. Towards the end of it one could sum this one up as a drama with comic relief moments.

    And for some reason I am quite confused about the message the movie tried to deliver. Was it about Indo-Afghan friendship, or the difference between Indian and Pakistani mindset. Perhaps it's about drawing parallels across a cross section of culturally different nations.

    Feel free to draw your own conclusion but after you have seen this one……… cause its different and worth a watch.
    8vipuldhingra1990

    Watched this in 2021 and liked it

    In purview of the recent developments in Afghanistan with Taliban taking over the entire country this movie just showed up in my recommendations on Amazon prime and I had to watch it. I was really surprised how good the movie is and it tells a good story of what happened in Afghanistan. I guess nothing has changed in the last 20 years and the movie is still relevant today. It's really unfortunate that Afghanistan has not developed at all and the future also looks disappointing. :(
    7indu9

    first Bollywood movie on some International Problem

    & really awesome one !!! Bollywood doesn't really make lots of movies on theme other than family drama or love or comedy. The maximum deviation that you can find is a very few movies based on domestic terrorism movies. This one definitely stood out than the rest in that regard. A very simple story, yet strong enough to capture the audience till the end. light comedy yet depicting the horror of Afganistan during the Taliban regime, mostly through dialogs. Most of the shootings as per one John Abraham's comment as done in Afganistan, that could justify why there is no Bollywood Actress and hence no typical Hindi songs. Everyone's role is competitive and justifiable. The director could do a better job in showing (through video not narration) of the horrifying past. Most of the shooting appeared to involve very few people in/around a very small mountain range. But hey, this is the first Indian movie as such in this category, so no complain there either :)
    8Sweta_B

    Bold Comedy

    I will not bother to recap the story, I'll go straight into my opinion. Everyone takes this subject matter so seriously (as they should) because it is happening at present, but this film dares to add comedy at the most unexpected times, to the most unexpected situations, while still being informative and paying respect to the subject matter. Is worth at least one viewing. At the Toronto Film Festival, people seem to really enjoy this film, if that means anything. I was a little surprised to hear Arshad Warsi refer to this film as a Bollywood film, although I guess it is, even though it does not resonate as one. This appears (according to IMDb) to be Kabir Khan's first narrative film, I must applaud him for a job well done. The only thing that needed major adjusting, is Linda Arsenio's acting. It ruins a great deal of the film. I could hear the people behind me saying exactly what I was thinking, "she's so bad!" This almost seems to be a trend in Bollywood films, Western people's acting is rarely believable. All in all, very good, watch it!
    8Chris_Docker

    Probably tells you more than most documentaries

    I remember many, many years ago, someone said to me, "I don't think Andy's coming - do you want his place?" Before even the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, before the middle east became a constant war-ground, a number of my friends would follow the 'hippy trail' - overland to India through the strange and wonderful lands on the way like Afghanistan. I didn't go. I often dreamt of the strange civilisations of Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, lands of jinn, ancient cultures, strange customs. Today, visiting Afghanistan for a Westerner is almost unthinkable - travelling there overland probably suicidal. Understanding the country through anything but a western political lens almost impossible.

    How refreshing to see a film made there with care and attention to authenticity. A film that is half thriller, half comedy. And one that conveys some of the complex attitudes of a warring people for whom it is the only home they ever know or want.

    Indian director Kabir Khan, although with considerable security, is able to come and go much easier than any Westerner could. I can't imagine even Mel Gibson going out to Kabul to make a motion picture right now. Khan's actors are all cast according to their nationality.

    Two Indian rookie reporters make the strangest roadtrip ever - trying to get an exclusive story on the Taliban following 9/11. They meet up with an Afghan driver, a gorgeous American Reuters photographer, and a Pakistani 'Talib' who by turns holds them hostage or doesn't. They are waylaid by police, bandits and mujahedin as they make a treacherous trip across a vivid no-man's-land through breathtaking scenery to the border. On the way they discover much about the complexities underlying Afghanistan as well as about themselves and each other.

    Kabul Express is the first feature film to be shot extensively in Kabul after the official end of the Taliban's reign and demonstrates the director's love of the country and its people, as well as an incredible sense of humour that both accurately portrays and caricatures all the various races involved.

    The film seems to have no particular political agenda, and if the Taliban and Pakistan probably come off a bit worse than anybody else, the locals who reinstate fairly barbaric time-honoured sports and customs are not a picture of civilised thinking either. The different reactions of our travellers to a game involving tearing an animal to bits, or beating a couple of Talibs to death with bare hands, speak volumes.

    In one particularly moving scene, the extremely resourceful Taliban fighter is re-united with his daughter. I found the moment where she only lifts her burka (veil) secretly watching him depart particularly heart-wrenching.

    Kabul Express is a film made by an Indian company and not totally divorced of bias - there's no love lost between India and the Taliban over Kashmir, for instance - but as it's not the bias we are used to in the West it is nevertheless a invigorating look into a country that has become almost unintelligible. It may be uncomfortable or even disjointed viewing for anyone emotionally locked into a politicised and over-simplified picture of Afghanistan, but if you can put that aside for an hour or so it is truly an eye-opener.

    While not exactly a blockbuster, the film comes across as warm, genuine, exciting and displays a range of humour I've rarely come across. I am also indebted to several Indian members of the audience without whose laughter I would have missed several subtle and very Indian-type jokes.

    Kabul Express is a rare film experience and I strongly recommend it.

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    Related interests

    Sasha Lane in American Honey (2016)
    Road Trip
    Peter Sellers in Dr. Folamour ou : comment j'ai appris à ne plus m'en faire et à aimer la bombe (1964)
    Satire
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    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first feature film to be shot extensively in Kabul, Afghanistan, after the end of the Taliban's reign. The producers thought director Kabir Khan was mad to shoot a film in such a place. However, Khan, a former war correspondent, insisted on doing so on the grounds that Kabul was a major element and character in the film; that he himself had been to Afghanistan no less than ten times and came back in one piece every time; that he had a soft spot for the country, having shot his first film in it; and that he would be betraying all his Afghan friends who had helped him during his trips to their country not to shoot such a film in their own land.
    • Quotes

      Imran Khan Afridi: Suhel Khan, You're a Muslim, aren't you? Aren't you gonna offer 'namaz'? Hell, you're an Indian Muslim, what do you know about Islam?

      Suhel Khan: Indeed! It's you guys who're the pillars of Islam: offering 'namaz' with an AK-56 at your side.

    • Soundtracks
      Kabul Fiza
      Sung and Composed by Raghav Sachar

      Lyrics by Aditya Dhar

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Kabul Express?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 15, 2006 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • India
    • Official site
      • Yash Raj Films
    • Languages
      • Hindi
      • Dari
      • English
      • Urdu
    • Also known as
      • Кабульский экспресс
    • Filming locations
      • Afghanistan
    • Production company
      • Yash Raj Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $302,458
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $142,591
      • Dec 17, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,091,289
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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