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Chaalis Chauraasi
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| Chaalis Chauraasi | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Hriday Shetty |
| Written by | Yash Keshwani Vinay Kamath |
| Produced by | Sachin Awasthee Uday Shetty Anuya Mhaiskar |
| Starring | Naseeruddin Shah Kay Kay Menon Atul Kulkarni Ravi Kissen Manoj Pahwa |
| Cinematography | Najeeb Khan |
| Edited by | Vincent Fernandez |
| Music by | Lalit Pandit & Vishal Rajan |
Release date |
|
| Language | Hindi |
| Budget | 13.75 crore |
Chaalis Chauraasi (transl. Forty eighty-four), is a 2012 Indian Hindi-language crime comedy film directed by Hriday Shetty and starring Naseeruddin Shah, Atul Kulkarni, Kay Kay Menon and Ravi Kishan. Most of the film was shot in Mumbai. It was released on 13 January 2012.[citation needed]
Cast
[edit]- Naseeruddin Shah as Pankaj Purushottam Suri (Sir)
- Kay Kay Menon as Albert Pinto a.k.a. Pinto
- Atul Kulkarni as Bhaskar Sardesai a.k.a. Bobby
- Ravi Kishan as Shakti Chinappa a.k.a. Shakti
- Rupsha Guha
- Rajesh Sharma as Mahesh Naik
- Shweta Bhardwaj as Madhu, also appears in the song 'Setting Zala'
- Zakir Hussain as Tony Bisleri
- Manoj Pahwa as Tilak Shetty
- Arbaaz Ali Khan
- Yuri Suri as Haryanvi Shethi a.k.a. Tau
- Jeet Upendra
- Neelima Uttarwar as Gauri Shetty, wife of Tilak
- D. Santosh as Chandu
- Shital Kohok as bar male singer
- Rupsha Guha as bride
- Shuvendru Sood as groom
- Yashshree Gupta as receptionist, Ad agency
- Partha Akerkar as Vivek, Creative Head, Ad agency
- Jahangir Karkaria as old Parsi man
- Nargis Dastoor as old Parsi woman
- Navin Talreja as Husband (HC; Happy couple)
- Sonal Joshi as Wife (HC; Happy couple)
- Sagar Juneja as Parsi son
- Virendra Pandey as watchman in Parsis's bungalow
- Chandrakant Dani as Ambulance attendant
- Birendra Gupta as Tilak Shetty's accountant
- Digvijay Rohidas as Inspector Kalsekar
- Jageshwar as Hanif
- Amruta Sant as Hanif's girlfriend
- Sadat Shamshi as Hotel Dwarka receptionist
- Vinay Apte as Sheikh saab
- Reetu Jain as 'Badmast' item girl
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]In its first weekend, the film netted around 1.75 crore.[1]
Critical response
[edit]Mayank Shekhar from Hindustan Times gave the film three stars out of five, writing, "This one manages to for most of the while. A sense of fun is never lost. It’s the actors, no doubt, who make the ridiculous believable. Hence, you truly enjoy this ride for most of the part. Which is saying a lot."[2] Conversely, Taran Adarsh from Bollywood Hungama gave the film 2 stars out of 5, noting that while it had an attention-grabbing premise and some truly wonderful scenes, the writing lacked the energy and dynamism to keep the viewer hooked, and another reason the film stumbled was the inclusion of songs in the narrative, barring Hawa Hawa.[3] Shubhra Gupta from The Indian Express gave the film one star out of five, writing, "What we get is capable actors floundering, and a film that grows ever more incoherent and tedious as it lurches along among fellows pretending to be cops, bent policemen, mobsters hiding out in seedy hotel rooms, guns going rat-a-tat."[4]
Soundtrack
[edit]| Chaalis Chauraasi (4084) | |
|---|---|
| Soundtrack album by | |
| Released | December 2011 |
| Genre | Film soundtrack |
| Length | 20:29 |
| Label | T-Series |
The songs of the film were composed by Lalit Pandit whereas the title song was sung and composed by Vishal Rajan. The music rights were sold to T-Series and released in December 2011. The rights of the song "Hawa Hawa" were acquired from Pakistani Singer Hasan Jahangir. The film song was sung in two versions, originally sung by Hasan Jahangir. The background score was composed by Sanjoy Chowdhury.
| No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Setting Zaala" | Sandeep Shrivastav | Sonu Nigam, Amit Kumar, Yashita Yashpal | 5:07 |
| 2. | "Badmast" | Kashinath Kashyap | Daler Mehndi, Mamta Sharma | 5:09 |
| 3. | "Hawa Hawa (Remix)" | Hasan Jahangir | Hasan Jahangir, Neeraj Shridhar, Amitabh Narayan, Aniruddh | 3:23 |
| 4. | "Chaalis Chauraasi (4084) (Theme)" | Vishal Rajan Lyrics and music: Vishal Rajan | 3:25 | |
| 5. | "Hawa Hawa (Original)" | Hasan Jahangir Lyrics: Hasan Jahangir | 3:23 | |
| Total length: | 20:29 | |||
References
[edit]- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 January 2012. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Shekhar, Mayank (14 January 2012). "Mayank Shekhar's review: Chaalis Chaurasi". Hindustan Times. Mumbai. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
- ^ "Chaalis Chauraasi Movie Review: CHAALIS CHAURAASI is inconsistent. It could've done with a better script!". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 13 January 2012.
- ^ Gupta, Shubhra (13 January 2012). "Chaalis Chaurasi". The Indian Express. New Delhi. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
- ^ "Buy Chaalis Chauraasi (4084) Music On Nokia Music".
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
External links
[edit]Chaalis Chauraasi
View on GrokipediaSynopsis
Plot
The film Chaalis Chauraasi centers on four friends with petty criminal backgrounds—Pankaj Suri, known as Sir (an ex-convict and driver for a hawala operator); Albert Pinto, known as Pinto (a car thief); Bhaskar Sardesai, known as Bobby (an aspiring singer turned pimp); and Shakti Chinappa, known as Shakti (a drug peddler)—who steal a police van bearing the number MH-02-A-4084 to impersonate officers.[4] They receive a tip about a warehouse on the outskirts of Mumbai containing 20 crore rupees in real currency, intended as payment for a fake currency racket operated by underworld elements.[4] Seizing the opportunity, Sir devises an impersonation heist: the group plans to pose as higher-ranking officers to access the unguarded site and steal the cash, using their stolen van as cover for the operation.[4][5] As the night unfolds, complications arise when the group encounters Inspector Mahesh Nayak (played by Rajesh Sharma), a real encounter specialist, during their drive through Mumbai's dark alleys.[4] Nayak, suspicious of their van and uniforms, intercepts them and forces the imposters to assist in a high-stakes operation to apprehend gangster Tony Bisleri, revealing that he knows they are not legitimate cops but leveraging the situation to his advantage.[4] What follows is a chaotic intersection of plans: the friends reluctantly join Nayak's mission, leading to a series of chases through the city's underworld, betrayals among the group as loyalties shift, and comedic mishaps such as botched arrests and narrow escapes from rival gangsters who are connected to the fake currency scheme.[4][6] The heist spirals as the racketeers pursue them, blurring the lines between their criminal intent and Nayak's lawful but ruthless pursuit.[4] The climax erupts in a warehouse shootout where the protagonists confront the full extent of the gangster network guarding the money, uncovering that the 20 crore rupees are tied to a larger hawala operation involving influential underworld figures.[4] Revelations about betrayals within the group and Nayak's true motives surface amid the gunfire, forcing the friends to improvise desperately to survive.[4] In the resolution, the fates of Sir, Pinto, Bobby, and Shakti diverge amid the violence: some escape with portions of the loot, while others face capture or worse, leaving the ultimate possession of the money ambiguous among the survivors, the inspector, and the gangsters.[4] The title Chaalis Chauraasi derives from the van's registration number 4084—"chaalis" for 40 and "chauraasi" for 84—symbolizing the van as the chaotic epicenter of the night's events.[4][7]Cast
The film features an ensemble cast led by Naseeruddin Shah portraying the scheming leader Pankaj Purushottam Suri, known as "Sir."[5] The core group consists of four friends with criminal backgrounds, whose interactions drive the story's chaotic night of crime and comedy, highlighting their camaraderie and individual flaws.[8]| Actor | Character | Role Description |
|---|---|---|
| Naseeruddin Shah | Pankaj Purushottam Suri (Sir) | The authoritative leader and ex-convict who unites the group for a high-stakes robbery, drawing on his experience to manipulate events.[5][8] |
| Kay Kay Menon | Albert Pinto (Pinto) | The impulsive and hot-headed car thief, whose quick temper often escalates situations within the group's botched schemes.[8][9] |
| Atul Kulkarni | Bhaskar Sardesai (Bobby) | The loyal friend and pimp with an aspiring singer background, providing steadfast support to the group while navigating moral conflicts.[8][10] |
| Ravi Kishan | Shakti Chinappa (Shakti) | The brute enforcer and drug peddler, relying on physical strength to handle confrontations in the heist's muscle role.[8][11] |
Production
Development
Chaalis Chauraasi marked the directorial debut of Hriday Shetty, who helmed the project as a crime comedy blending thriller elements set over a single night in Mumbai.[1] The screenplay was penned by Yash Keshwani and Vinay Kamath, who crafted a narrative revolving around a police van as the central element.[14] The concept originated from Shetty's observation of a police van frequently parked outside his residence, bearing the registration number MH-02-CA-4084, which inspired the film's title—Chaalis Chauraasi—translating to "forty eighty-four" and serving as a motif for the story's heist-like plot.[7] This quirky real-life detail influenced the scripting to fuse humor with tense encounters involving corrupt cops and a high-stakes robbery.[15] The film was produced by Sachin Awasthee, Uday Shetty, and Anuya Mhaiskar under the banners of Maask Entertainment Pvt. Ltd. in association with Filament Glo (India) Pvt. Ltd.[14] With a budget of 9.25 crore rupees, the production emphasized a tight, ensemble-driven script to balance comedic timing with action sequences.[3]Filming
Principal photography for Chaalis Chauraasi commenced in 2011 and took place predominantly in Mumbai, capturing the city's nocturnal urban landscape to align with the film's patrol-centric narrative. The production utilized a real police van to enhance authenticity in sequences involving the vehicle's interior dynamics.[16] The first shooting schedule wrapped up in just 18 days, defying persistent monsoon rains that plagued other Mumbai productions at the time; director Hriday Shetty was playfully dubbed the "Rain Man" by the cast for his ability to film exteriors precisely when the weather cleared. Night shoots were a staple, emphasizing gritty street chases and heist preparations amid the city's dimly lit environs.[17] Cinematographer Najeeb Khan adeptly managed low-light conditions during the urban pursuit scenes, rendering Mumbai's nightscape as stark and immersive. Editor Bunty Nagi focused on tight pacing to underscore the film's comedic beats within the action-comedy framework. Action sequences, including car chases and shootouts, presented logistical hurdles due to the rainy conditions and real-location demands, though specific improvisations by actors like Kay Kay Menon contributed to the on-set energy.[18][4]Music
Soundtrack
The soundtrack album for Chaalis Chauraasi was released in December 2011 by T-Series, comprising five tracks with a total runtime of 20:29 minutes. The songs were primarily composed by Lalit Pandit, while the title theme was composed, written, and performed by Vishal Rajan; recreations of the track "Hawa Hawa" were also handled by Lalit Pandit. Lyrics were contributed by Sandeep Srivastava, Kashinath Kashyap, and Hassan Jahangir.[19][20]| No. | Title | Singers | Lyricist | Composer | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Setting Zaala | Sonu Nigam, Amit Kumar, Yashita | Sandeep Srivastava | Lalit Pandit | 5:07 |
| 2 | Badmast | Daler Mehndi, Mamta Sharma | Kashinath Kashyap | Lalit Pandit | 5:09 |
| 3 | Hawa Hawa - 1 | Neeraj Shridhar, Amitabh Narayan | Hassan Jahangir | Lalit Pandit (recreation) | 3:25 |
| 4 | Chaalis Chauraasi (4084) Theme | Vishal Rajan | Vishal Rajan | Vishal Rajan | 3:25 |
| 5 | Hawa Hawa - 2 | Hassan Jahangir | Hassan Jahangir | Lalit Pandit (recreation) | 3:23 |
