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Aakrosh

  • 2010
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 26m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
Bipasha Basu, Ajay Devgn, Akshaye Khanna, Paresh Rawal, and Reema Sen in Aakrosh (2010)
The Central Bureau of Investigation deputes two officers to investigate the disappearance of three medical students, which they believe to be an incident of 'honour killing' in a small, closed community.
Play trailer2:27
1 Video
47 Photos
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

The Central Bureau of Investigation deputes two officers to investigate the disappearance of three medical students, which they believe to be an incident of 'honour killing' in a small, clos... Read allThe Central Bureau of Investigation deputes two officers to investigate the disappearance of three medical students, which they believe to be an incident of 'honour killing' in a small, closed community.The Central Bureau of Investigation deputes two officers to investigate the disappearance of three medical students, which they believe to be an incident of 'honour killing' in a small, closed community.

  • Director
    • Priyadarshan
  • Writers
    • Robin Bhatt
    • Aditya Dhar
    • Irshad Kamil
  • Stars
    • Ajay Devgn
    • Akshaye Khanna
    • Bipasha Basu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    4.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Priyadarshan
    • Writers
      • Robin Bhatt
      • Aditya Dhar
      • Irshad Kamil
    • Stars
      • Ajay Devgn
      • Akshaye Khanna
      • Bipasha Basu
    • 37User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Aakrosh (2010) Trailer
    Trailer 2:27
    Aakrosh (2010) Trailer

    Photos47

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    + 43
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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Ajay Devgn
    Ajay Devgn
    • Pratap Kumar
    Akshaye Khanna
    Akshaye Khanna
    • Siddhant Chaturvedi
    Bipasha Basu
    Bipasha Basu
    • Geeta
    Paresh Rawal
    Paresh Rawal
    • Inspector Azad Shatru
    Reema Sen
    Reema Sen
    • Jamuniya
    Amita Pathak
    • Roshni
    Sameera Reddy
    Sameera Reddy
    • Dancer (Paresh House)
    Rajendra Gupta
    Rajendra Gupta
    • Father of Bipasha Basu
    Atul Tiwari
    Atul Tiwari
    • Thakur Omkar Sukul (Bahubali)
    • (as Atul Tiwary)
    Jaideep Ahlawat
    Jaideep Ahlawat
    • Pappu
    Rajesh Bakshi
    • Home Minister
    Raymond D'Souza
    • Gang member
    Abhishek Singh Er
    • Dhiresh
    Jayant Gadekar
    Jayant Gadekar
    • Panchanan Shukla
    Bharat Ganeshpure
    Bharat Ganeshpure
    • CBI Inspector Rakesh
    Ashraf Ul Haq
    • Rukamal
    Ashutosh Jha
    • Ramesh Jain
    Swapnil kotriwar
    Swapnil kotriwar
    • Dinu
    • (as a different name)
    • Director
      • Priyadarshan
    • Writers
      • Robin Bhatt
      • Aditya Dhar
      • Irshad Kamil
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    7.04.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8naman-avastol

    Simply Brilliant!!

    First of all, a warm welcome to Priyadarshan and Akshaye Khanna. Priyadarshan had stopped making good films years ago, he was busy making guaranteed super flops with Mr. Kumar. Akshaye Khanna had disappeared from films long time ago. Both have made a good comeback with Aakrosh. And, after a long, long time, bollywood has come up with a brilliant and meaningful movie. Aakrosh deals with the honor killing that has been prominent in a few villages for the past few years. The movie also discloses the actual truth behind these alleged honor killings and the real culprits behind them.

    Three students from New Delhi are found missing from the village called Jhaanjhar for the last two months. Two CBI officers ( Ajay Devgn and Akshaye Khanna ) team up to find out the truth behind their disappearance. The Jhaanjhar village, crowded with numerous corrupt politicians is terrified with the attacks going on and the police force under the Superintendent officer( Paresh Rawal) does nothing. The CBI officers have had time doing the investigation as no one in the whole village is gutsy enough to speak against the attacks and the one who tries to open his mouth is abducted by those groups. Ajay Devgn, the hot blooded, loses his cool and takes some strong actions and Akshaye Khanna, the man with the brain, takes his chances and gambles. Hard work pays off well in the end and the truth finally comes out and the village then rests in peace.

    The movie has taken its inspirations from the recent cases of honor killing but on the whole it's a work of fiction.

    Acting Department is ruled by Ajay Devgn and Paresh Rawal. Both are in top form in this movie. Both are trying to outdo each other with their strong expressions and dialogue delivery. Akshaye Khanna, too has acted well but Ajay Devgn and Paresh Rawal are the show stealers. Reema Sen does well. Bipasha Basu is wasted. Action Sequences are top notch. The chasing scene between Ajay Devgn and a group leader is outstanding. Dialogues are awesome. A few of them even manage to bring a smile on your face and compel you to clap and praise! Cinematography is average. Editing could be better. Priyadarshan has directed the movie splendidly this time. He is sure to win many accolades this time. The only absurd part of the movie is the romantic song between Ajay Devgn and Bipasah Basu.

    To conclude, I would say go for it as finally a good Hindi movie has arrived (which actually is rare ) and for super strong performances of Ajay Devgn and Paresh Rawal.

    My Rating: 8/10 Thanks and Regards.
    8nabiabhinav

    A Hard Hitting Saga

    Aakrosh boasts of a very good star-cast. But in the past we have seen many movies falter despite having a great star-cast. The reason (very obvious)----Lack of a good Story Line. Well, its this aspect in which Aakrosh takes the lead from others. In India, the movies are made around the Interval. Its often that a movie builds its mood up-to the interval and then takes pace. But Aakrosh takes just initial 5 minutes in building the mood and manages (with aplomb)in keeping it up. The story is gripping. The action sequences are top-notch. The songs are few and well placed. The background score is terrific and the performances are fantastic. Though there is an excess of violence but it goes with the feel of the movie.

    Overall, a good movie which should not be missed.
    8DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Aakrosh

    Besides the usual disclaimer that precedes a film that all incidents, characters and similarities portrayed within are coincidental at best, Priyadarshan's Aakrish takes one extra step to reinforce this point, as it wants to tackle the real world issue of "honour killing" on film, cobbling together a series of faux pas newspaper articles and stamping them as "Fact", before hammering a full size "Fiction" inter-title across the screen prior to the commencement of the film proper. And up until the last frame did it dawn upon me that the narrative also took issue, besides caste, with that of corrupt cops and politicians who exploit an inherently weak justice system.

    The story is sufficient to make you seethe with rage as we follow the investigations into the disappearance of three students, whose final moments will get enacted in due course, but only as we gain a certain foothold and breakthrough as experienced by the police officers Sidhant Chaturvedi (Akshaye Khanna) and Pratap Kumar (Ajay Devgan). Arriving from Delhi under the orders of the central government under pressure by a demonstrating student group seeking answers, the two protagonist have to quickly learn and get comfortable with each other's working style to maintain a certain degree of sanity as they tackle an environment that is most hostile, and alien to Sidhant, whose by-the-book methods are in danger of collapsing anytime.

    This especially so when faced with an uncooperative local police force who cooks up possibly every reason available not to do work, and through their blatant obstruction of justice, may seem to suggest some involvement in the primary case as well. While on one hand providing unintentional comedy, I feel the investigating officers' pain when they hit a brick wall from within their own support group who more often than not seem to be on the other side of the fence.

    It's the culture of silence that is most deafening, and for the first hour before the interval, Aakrosh is quite frustrating to sit through not because of its relatively slow pace, but how we see how helpless our heroes can be given their operating within red tape, and letting others rip them apart because processes rightfully bound them from hitting out. Those who have information are also cowered by threats and an innate fear that it's best to keep one's mouth shut, otherwise punishment will come in the form of bodily harm, and even death as dished out by the masked militia of men who call themselves Shool's Army, intolerant individuals bandied together to bully others into submitting to their bigoted beliefs.

    For those not versed in the caste system, this film may give you an idea what it's about as it laments about the state of current affairs, and how there's so much room for improvement in terms of people's attitudes. Director Priyadarshan, whom I associate with comedies like Billu Barber and De Dana Dan, goes all serious and doesn't mince his words in Aakrosh's epilogue, as he crafts a somewhat bleak film with an ending that will raise some eyebrows, suggesting at times that you got to play fire with fire, and some of the techniques employed by the cops here may highlight certain (il)legal framework that many may not be familiar with for us outside India, but so long as it works (and a brilliant plan and execution I must add).

    The film works because of the great chemistry between the pairing of Aakshaye Khanna and Ajay Devgan as cops who have the potential to be the best of buddies, yet operating on different investigative philosophies that put them at loggerheads as well. They share some explosive charisma on screen that just chews up all the surrounding scenery, with magnetic qualities that help to tide through the less happening stages of the film, one of which I felt was overly long and probably unnecessary was the entire backstory song/dance routine for Ajay's Pratap and his one time lady love Geetha (Bipasha Basu), their relationship being a victim of caste hypocrisy.

    Despite being passed with an Adults only rating in India and suffering 2 cuts from a reported 30 planned by the censor board there, Aakrosh is still a hard hitting investigative thriller. While the trailer may suggest high octane action, these sequences are fairly limited in the film, with nothing that especially stands out to wow. There's a rooftop chase sequence with a fair bit of parkour, but it's more reminiscent of Hollywood's Bourne series which delivered the action scenes with a bit more of a refined flair, with this being a bit rough off the edges. However a ballsy story without mincing its themes make Aakrosh the winner here.
    7saadgkhan

    a good hard hitting movie which is quite suspenseful and hardcore.

    AAKROSH – CATCH IT ( B+ ) Aakrsoh is really hard core and hard hitting movie, it's dark and captivating. The movie presents the right cover up stories behind the honor killings. Aakrosh, most of the times become heavy and dramatic. Still it's a great attempt by Priya Darshan. Ajay Devgan again proves why people love him both in comedy and hard hitting cinema. He again brought a great social subject with utmost decency to on screen. Akshaye khanna, well I don't like his shouting in every other sequence, he seems like doing the same shouting in comedy, action or dramatic movies. Bipasha Basu is first rate and amazing as Paresh Rawal's victim wife. She really excels in every movie from comedy to hardcore cinema. Reema Sen is first class, for a single second she didn't look like a heroine she was so much in her character and whatever happened to Bipasha Basu and Reema Sen was pretty horrible in the movie. Paresh Rawal is outstanding, he is the king of comedies and villains too, another great performance by Mr.Paresh Rawal. Sameera Reddy's Hot item song was really fun to watch. Overall, a good hard hitting movie which is quite suspenseful and hardcore.
    8varghesejunior

    They should make an Aakrosh 2 !

    A reality based thriller, this film definitely deserves a sequel with the 2 lead actors.

    The film focuses on honor killings in north India and the evils still prevalent in society. A CBI officer and ex army officer are deputed to Jhanjhar where 3 college students were last seen to find out what happened to them and bring the culprits to book.

    The good - the acting, especially Akshaye Khanna and Paresh Rawal, the stunts and action sequences , the editing, the plot, the climax. The second half of the film is more intense than the first.

    The bad - one item song, but not an issue really . Does not spoil the essence of the film.

    All in all, worth a watch.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This movie is a scene-by-scene copy of 1988 Hollywood movie Mississippi Burning.
    • Quotes

      Siddhant Chaturvedi: Do you believe in God?

      Pratap Kumar: No.

      Siddhant Chaturvedi: God comes to our aid in various disguises. This time he came in the disguise of the chief engineer. The one who shut the water of this dam. The moment the water level receded... voilà! It exposed the roof of the car.

      Pratap Kumar: Then the name of this God is co-incidence.

    • Crazy credits
      During the rolling title credits, the sound of a moving train is heard as a continuation of the ending scene.
    • Alternate versions
      Originally, the film was given an A certificate with a few cuts. Later, when it was re-certified for television, it got a UA certificate with very minimal cuts.
    • Connections
      Remake of Mississippi Burning (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Isak Se Meetha Kuch Bhi
      Music by Pritam Chakraborty

      Lyrics by Irshad Kamil

      Performed by Ajay Jhingran, Kalpana Patowary

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 15, 2010 (India)
    • Country of origin
      • India
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • Hindi
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Anger
    • Filming locations
      • Diu, Daman and Diu, India
    • Production companies
      • Big Screen Entertainment
      • ZEE Motion Pictures
      • Big Screen Entertainer
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,424,574
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 26 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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    Bipasha Basu, Ajay Devgn, Akshaye Khanna, Paresh Rawal, and Reema Sen in Aakrosh (2010)
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