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Chittagong

  • 2012
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Chittagong (2012)
ActionDramaWar

School kids organize an armed revolt in the 1930s in British occupied Chittagong. There are casualties on both sides. Later, one of those kids successfully leads the peasants to regain their... Read allSchool kids organize an armed revolt in the 1930s in British occupied Chittagong. There are casualties on both sides. Later, one of those kids successfully leads the peasants to regain their food-grains earlier commandeered by the British.School kids organize an armed revolt in the 1930s in British occupied Chittagong. There are casualties on both sides. Later, one of those kids successfully leads the peasants to regain their food-grains earlier commandeered by the British.

  • Director
    • Bedabrata Pain
  • Writers
    • Bedabrata Pain
    • Shonali Bose
  • Stars
    • Manoj Bajpayee
    • Barry John
    • Delzad Hiwale
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bedabrata Pain
    • Writers
      • Bedabrata Pain
      • Shonali Bose
    • Stars
      • Manoj Bajpayee
      • Barry John
      • Delzad Hiwale
    • 26User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins total

    Photos14

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    Top cast40

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    Manoj Bajpayee
    Manoj Bajpayee
    • Surya Sen
    • (as Manoj Bajpai)
    Barry John
    • Wilkinson
    Delzad Hiwale
    • Jhunku Roy
    Vega Tamotia
    Vega Tamotia
    • Pritilata Waddedar
    Nawazuddin Siddiqui
    Nawazuddin Siddiqui
    • Nirmal Sen
    Rajkummar Rao
    Rajkummar Rao
    • Lokenath Bal
    • (as Raj Kumar Yadav)
    Jaideep Ahlawat
    Jaideep Ahlawat
    • Anant Singh
    Vijay Varma
    Vijay Varma
    • Jhunku Roy
    Dibyendu Bhattacharya
    Dibyendu Bhattacharya
    • Ambika
    Vishal Vijay
    • Ganesh Ghosh
    Alexx O'Nell
    Alexx O'Nell
    • Charles Johnson
    Anurag Arora
    Anurag Arora
    • Ahsanullah
    Sauraseni Maitra
    Sauraseni Maitra
    • Aparna
    Chaiti Ghosh
    • Aparna
    Paritosh Sand
    Paritosh Sand
    • Nilesh Roy
    Tanaji Dasgupta
    • Rajat Sen
    Arindol Bagchi
    • Bhavani Lal
    • (as Arindoi Bagchi)
    Sayan Banerjee
    • Subhash
    • Director
      • Bedabrata Pain
    • Writers
      • Bedabrata Pain
      • Shonali Bose
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    7.31.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7bobbysing

    A different take on the subject earlier used by Ashutosh, which somehow generates the same impact.

    A few years back, Ashutosh Gowariker also chose the same subject for his movie "Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Se" in which he majorly failed due to his faulty casting more than his own direction. Ashutosh tried to bring in some commercial value in the project by casting Abhishek Bachchan and Deepika Padukone in the lead which actually fell flat, resulting in a film standing in the mid-way. Thankfully, the mistake is not repeated by Bedabrata Pain in his Chittagong, which has the same story told from a different angle and is a better film too if compared to KHJJS in a broader sense.

    In Bedarbrata's CHITTAGONG the incident is narrated by "Jhunku", a participant of the revolt himself, giving you a first-hand experience of the brave & tragic chapter of 1930s. The film is executed well with some note-worthy cinematography, a fine background score, a well composed song "Bolo Na" and brilliant performances from the entire cast featuring Manoj Bajpayee, Delzad Hiwale, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Raj Kumar Yadav, Barry John, Vijay Varma, Sauraseni Maitra, Chaiti Ghosh and more. Though the proceedings become slow post intermission when the after effects of the heroic revolt are being shown. Still it successfully keeps your interest alive through some new viewpoints added towards the climax, which eventually help CHITTAGONG to become a different movie as compared to Ashutosh's KHJJS in totality.

    But at the same time, that doesn't mean that KHJJS had nothing good in it justifying the important subject. On the contrary, there were certain scenes in CHITTAGONG where I strongly felt that KHJJS had something superior as mentioned below.

    1. It was quite strange to see that where in KHJJS, the young school boys are chosen & used due to their own self confessed desire, fighting spirit & fearlessness, CHITTAGONG uses them just because they have white cards, which is not a negative feature associated with their existence in the British Empire (unlike the Red Card given to others).

    2. Where in KHJJS, Ashutosh extensively shows you the selection, training and grooming of the young boys by their master in details, CHIITAGONG speeds up this important part by just showing them being trained in gun-shooting in few scenes only.

    3. In KHJJS the attacks on 3 different spots are shown in great length and details, whereas in CHITTAGONG the detailing is missing, probably because it later has to tell a lot more about "Jhunku", even after the hanging of Surjaya Sen (the end point of KHJJS). So where KHJJS focuses completely on giving the account of the zealous attacks made by the team on different key point of British operations, CHITTAGONG is majorly about these attacks plus its aftereffects years later.

    4. Lastly, there is one thing which I respected the most in KHJJS, when they showed the original pictures of all the young boys and their leaders along with the pictures of actors enacting them on the screen in their end credits. In CHITTAGONG too there is short interview of "Jhunku" which deservingly gets a standing ovation in the theater. But truly speaking, the impact of watching those original pictures was much more in KHJJS.

    On a concluding note, I am neither in favor of writing off Ashutosh's attempt completely nor in favor of praising Bedabrata's honest attempt whole heartedly. I deeply respect all the martyrs of this brave revolt of 1930s, have tremendous regards for the makers of both the films and salute their spirit behind their earnest efforts sincerely. But here I have to admit that may be I was expecting a lot more from the film as a second attempt.

    In short, CHITTAGONG is a simple and straight forward portrayal of that unbelievable kind of chapter from our own Indian History. It mainly scores higher due to its rich execution and polished realistic performances from a well chosen talented cast. But I really wish it was more powerful infusing new life into our blood revisiting that historical event again. In its present version, the experience of watching CHITTAGONG is just like reading a simple enlightening biography of a calm soul, remembering his young days of a freedom fighter with a divine smile on his old face like "Jhunku".
    7mukut-45725

    Master the Surja Sen

    Yes... You can find him in this movie but main focus is on Jhunku. So how call this movie as Chittagong I do not understand.
    7mahadyuti-adhikary

    It's like a ticking bomb that doesn't explode

    Chittagong is disappointing. It's an honest film but fails to transcend into a good film. The biggest disadvantage that plagues a period film based on real events is the predictability of the plot. So, to make the film more engaging, the director needs to indulge in a sort of retelling of history inculcating a healthy dosage of drama into it. This is precisely where Bedabrata Pain falls short. There's no building up of drama. Watching the film is like glancing through the pages of a history book. The narrative of the film is so simple that it is reduced to a textbook of chronological historical events. Hence, although it adheres to factual fidelity, it doesn't deliver what is expected from a celluloid drama. It will be cruel to say that the film is uninspiring because it does have a lot of heart and characters do evoke a genuine sense of empathy. It's more like a ticking bomb that doesn't explode. I'm not talking about the typical Bollywood exaggerated sentimentality, but Pain's maiden effort doesn't have that soul-stirring zing in it, it's not intense or emotionally compelling enough. I love simplistic minimalism and restrained performances, but the characters somehow are nipped in the bud and deliberately not allowed to grow and evolve, especially when the director had the luxury of a casting coup comprising the likes of Manoj Bajpai, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Jaideep Ahlawat and Dibyendu Bhattacharya. He fails to exploit the brilliance of such wonderful actors at his disposal. Even the background score is so disappointing and underwhelming, completely incompatible with the elegiac undertone of the film. The editing has rough edges with loose disconnected parts. The only rewarding aspect of the film is Eric Zimmerman's breathtaking cinematography.
    8ridi-arahan

    Revolution starts from the ground level, and is limitless on its scope and its influences

    What worked: What made this movie special is the content the movie presents; a pre independence times in India, lead by the group of school students. This true story makes its impact fully when the movie ends because that's when the real revolution became a reality in Chittagong. Well written, acted and directed, also the scores are good. The lead Manoj, Rajkumar and Nawaasuddhin shine as always. What did not work: If I were the makers,maybe I would put some more time depicting the psyche of the revels, especially the leader and also introspective reflections so that the intend became inevitable. Final verdict: recommended
    7SHSandh

    Worth a watch; Based on true events; Well crafted; Bit hurried in the end; Background crooning was jarring

    The movie narrates true events. It deals with the armed revolt in the 1930s, against the British rulers in Chittagong, executed by a master with the participation of school boys. Subsequently, there was also a peasant uprising in the same town, led by one of the school boys, against these British rulers.

    The movie is not jerky, awkward, hurried or too slow.

    However, it has taken up disproportionately more time in narrating the armed revolt and its aftermath; less time has been given to the later peasant uprising which happened in order to regain the food-grains forcibly commandeered by the Britishers.

    This 'peaceful' peasant uprising was equally interesting and should have been detailed better. There are no scenes of how much has been commandeered by the British, what was the layout map of their location vis-a-vis the food-grains godown, how they planned the tunnel routes, how they planned the digging teams, how the teams actually dug the tunnels, the travails of digging the tunnels secretly, time frames involved, the general heroism of it all. The narrative was cursory here.

    There was an immediate reason for the peasants to rise against the Britishers as their lands, crops and food-grains had been forcibly commandeered by them. However, it is not clear what particular events triggered the master in Chittagong to plan a revolt. The movie could have shed some light on that. If there were no particular events which triggered, then the movie could have explored how a widespread wave of resistance to the Britishers was building up in the entire country, and how the Chittagong folks were not unaffected.

    Delzad Hiwale (as the young Jhunku) has acted very well. Nawazuddin Siddique, Manoj Bajpayee and Rajkummar Rao are well known actors and did well in this movie. However, a common observation for all these four actors (and particularly Manoj Bajpayee) is that their facial expressions were not so nuanced.

    Vega Tamotia (as Pritilata Waddedar) acted well and also used facial expressions more.

    All the actors in the movie have acted well. There was no amateurishness anywhere.

    The good costumes did a lot in creating the period story effect in the movie. Apparently, a lot of care has been taken here. This whole thing was quite pleasing. Kudos to the Costume Designer Nilanjana Ghose.

    The film location was apt, with the villages, the rural folk, the thick jungle, the rocky terrain, the single railway line and the deserted road lined with thick foliage.

    This is a film production of high calibre, with good homework all around. The movie has mostly Indian actors and Indians in key non-acting roles. Only the Cinematographer and the Editor appear to be non-Indians.

    It was a bit incredulous to see two bicycling policemen approaching the secret training ground inside the forest, where training to fire a rifle was being given to the school boys, and not hear the noise of the firing.

    The music (songs) composing team of Shankar-Ehsan-Loy is quite popular in Bollywood. But, their extensive crooning in the background was inconsequential and jarring. This was a put-down and gave a Bollywood-like effect to an otherwise well crafted movie.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      At that time, Anurag Kashyap in a Facebook post had alleged that it was Amitabh Bachchan who stalled the release of Chittagong to save his son Abhishek Bachchan's career. He stated " See Chittagong, a far superior film made on the same subject as Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey.. At 1/8 th the cost, far superior actors and immense passion... Producers decided to sit on it, because of a phone call from someone, because that someone was trying desperately to save his son's career... welcome to Bollywood, where whose son you are outshines all the hard work and passion and potential and talent. KHJJS came and went, now what?".
    • Connections
      Featured in SGNL by Sony: Industry Leaders Talk 4K and Filmmaking at Cinequest 2013 (2013)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 12, 2012 (India)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • India
      • Bangladesh
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • Hindi
      • Bengali
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Читтaгонг
    • Filming locations
      • Lataguri, West Bengal, India
    • Production company
      • Jonai Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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