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Manoj Sharma
Manoj Sharma
from Wikipedia

Manoj Sharma (born 19 October 1973) is an Indian film director, film writer, screenwriter and editor.[1]

Key Information

As a screenplay writer and director, he is noted for Bin Phere Free Me Ttere, Sparsh-the touch, Mai ka Bitwa and Swaha: Life Beyond Superstition.[2] He encountered a major controversy over his movie Swaha.[3]

He has directed more than 150 music albums with over one thousand music videos as an in-house writer and director with Venus Audio Visual. As an assistant editor and assistant director, he advanced movies such as Tahalka (1992), Maa and Policewala Gunda (1995)

As a television director, he made serials such as Sab Ka Maalik Ek Hai (DD National), Bikhre Panne (DD National), Kashmir - Ek Jannat (DD National).

Prakash Electronics, Sting Operation.com and Chal Guru Ho Ja Shuru[4] are upcoming projects. Guru Ho Ja Shuru, starring Hemant Pandey, Chandrachur Singh, Manoj Pahwa and Sanjay Mishra, is based on fake spiritual guru.[5][6]

Early life

[edit]

Sharma was born at Khurja district Bulandshahr in Uttar Pradesh. He attended for one year and then moved to Delhi to learn the textile trade from his brother-in-law during his vacations. He later moved to Mumbai. After watching film shooting, he decided to try acting, supported by his brother-in-law for a trial period of three months.

After watching one of his audition videos, he decided to give up acting and try his hand in some other stream of filmmaking.

Career

[edit]

Manoj Sharma started his career as an assistant editor and assistant director to many directors.

His first film as a director was Sparsh-The Touch (2005). His second was Mai ka Bitwa (2008), starring Inder Kumar, which was a major hit of that year. He directed videos of Indian songs such as Tum to thehre pardesi, Yaaron maine panga le liya, Awara hawa ka jhonka hoon, Agar tum mil jao, and Pardesiya Re. He directed many comedy videos for Raju Shrivastav during his early days.

He got his first break as independent television director for the serial Sabka Malik ek hai from the 13th episode of the show.

Filmography

[edit]
Year Film Notes
1992 Tahalka (2003 film) Asst. Director and Asst Editor
1992 Maa (1992 film) Asst. Director and Asst Editor
1995 Policewala Gunda (1995 film) Asst. Director and Asst Editor
2005 Sparsh-The Touch (2003 film) Writer and Director
2008 Mai Ka Bitwa (2008 Bhojpuri film) Writer and Director
2010 Swaha: Life Beyond Superstition (2010 film) Writer and Director
2013 Bin Phere Free Me Ttere Writer and Director
2015 Chal Guru Ho Jaa Shuru Write rand Director
2016 Yeh Hai Lollipop Writer and Director
2017 Prakash Electronic Writer and Director
2021 Dehati Disco Writer Director and Screenplay

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Manoj Kumar (born 3 July 1975) is an officer of the 2005 batch, cadre, currently serving as for the in . Born in the village of in , , to a facing financial hardships, failed his class 12 examinations but pursued higher education and attempted the multiple times, ultimately securing the 121st rank to enter the IPS. His perseverance through odd jobs such as peon, auto-rickshaw driver, and watchman while preparing for the examination has made him a symbol of determination, with his life story inspiring the 2023 12th Fail, directed by . is married to Shraddha Joshi, an officer, and has been recognized for his firm yet fair approach in policing roles, including as Additional Commissioner of Mumbai Police.

Early life

Upbringing and initial pursuits

Manoj Sharma was born on October 19, 1973, in , , , . Details regarding his family background and childhood education remain undocumented in available sources. His early professional endeavors centered on music video production, where he directed nearly 1,000 alongside over 150 music albums, establishing a foundation in visual and within the Hindi and Bhojpuri entertainment sectors prior to transitioning to feature films.

Entry into filmmaking

Assistant roles and industry apprenticeship

Sharma entered the Hindi film industry in the early , initially taking on roles as an assistant editor and to gain hands-on experience in production processes. His credited assistant work included the action thriller (1992), directed by , the family drama Maa (1992), directed by Kalpataru, and the crime film (1995), directed by Sikander Bharti. These positions involved supporting directors in coordinating shoots, managing continuity, and assisting with , which were standard entry points for aspiring in India's commercial cinema at the time. Through these apprenticeships under established directors, Sharma honed skills in narrative structuring and technical execution, contributing to low-to-mid-budget B-grade films typical of the era's output. The experience spanned multiple projects, exposing him to the logistical challenges of on-set operations and the collaborative dynamics of Bollywood's pre-digital workflow, before transitioning to independent direction in the late . This foundational phase lasted approximately five years, laying the groundwork for his eventual shift to feature directing.

Directorial career

Debut and early directorial works (2005–2010)

Sharma's directorial debut came with the independent film Sparsh: The Touch in 2005, marking his transition from assistant roles to helming his own project. The film represented an early exploration of narrative storytelling, though specific production details and reception remain sparsely documented in available records. In 2008, Sharma directed Mai Ka Bitwa, a Bhojpuri-language drama released on October 9, starring alongside Sangeeta Roy and . Produced under a presentation by Champak Jain and Kanchan Kotwani, with music by , the film achieved notable commercial success within the Bhojpuri industry, drawing audiences through its regional appeal and cast. Sharma concluded this period with Swaha: Life Beyond in 2010, a social drama released on March 12 that addressed themes of through a lens. Starring Rikkee , the film ran for approximately 2 hours and received mixed audience ratings, averaging 3.6 out of 10 based on limited reviews. These early works established Sharma's versatility across and regional , blending independent and commercial elements.

Mid-period films and social themes (2013–2017)

During this phase, Manoj Sharma directed Bin Phere Free Me Ttere (2013), a exploring class disparities and familial resistance to inter-class romance. The narrative centers on Dildaar, a young man from a modest background, who falls in love with Sunita from a poorer ; their union faces opposition from both sides due to socioeconomic differences, leading Dildaar to resort to exaggerated antics to gain approval. Released on May 3, 2013, the film critiques traditional marriage norms in Indian , highlighting how economic status often overrides personal compatibility, though it received mixed reviews for its formulaic humor and underperformed commercially as a box-office disaster with minimal opening collections. In 2015, Sharma helmed Chal Guru Ho Ja Shuru, a satirical targeting the proliferation of fraudulent spiritual leaders and public toward godmen. The plot follows unemployed theater artists Hariya and Birju, who impersonate babas to exploit devotees, drawing loose inspiration from real-life scandals like the Bapu case involving allegations of abuse and financial exploitation. Premiering on January 30, 2015, the film underscores causal links between economic desperation, blind faith, and the commodification of religion, portraying how charlatans thrive on societal vulnerabilities without institutional checks; it earned a modest 4.7/10 rating but failed to resonate widely at the box office. Sharma's Prakash Electronic (2017) addressed generational orthodoxy and evolving romantic expectations through the lens of a middle-aged infatuated with a younger woman in his housing society. The story depicts Prakash's between his conservative upbringing—emphasizing arranged marriages and familial —and his desire for personal fulfillment, complicated by societal judgments on age gaps and . Released on January 6, 2017, it lampoons rigid social customs that stifle individual agency, garnering a 4.9/10 on but criticized for uneven execution and negligible commercial success. These works collectively reflect Sharma's shift toward low-budget satires on contemporary Indian social pathologies, prioritizing critique of superstition, class rigidity, and pseudoreligiosity over mainstream appeal, though empirical box-office data indicates limited audience engagement.

Recent projects (2021 onward)

Sharma directed , a Hindi-language comedy-musical released on May 27, 2022, focusing on the story of Bhola (played by ) and his son Bheema (Saksham Sharma), who navigate social prejudices through dance to highlight its cultural significance in rural . The features Manoj Joshi and in supporting roles and emphasizes an anti-caste message amid elements of action and emotion. Later in 2022, Sharma wrote and directed Khalli Balli, a comedy-horror released on September 16, starring Mini Bansal as aspiring actress Sanjana, alongside Akash Srivastava, , and veteran Govardhan Asrani. The plot follows Sanjana's misadventures in pursuit of Bollywood fame, blending humor with elements. In 2023, Sharma helmed Hello Hello Whats-Up, a family comedy released digitally on June 7 via , centered on the Sharma clan's internal conflicts erupting after the patriarch's death, with extended relatives vying for inheritance. The film stars , Chirag Thakkar, and Kaashvi Kanchan, exploring themes of familial discord and reconciliation through satirical lens.

Themes and style

Recurring motifs in Sharma's films

Sharma's films often incorporate motifs of or inexplicable forces disrupting ordinary lives, blending horror and fantasy to probe psychological and societal vulnerabilities. In Sparsh: The Touch (), a young woman perceives a constant, inhuman presence that embraces her even in isolation, evoking themes of unseen attachments and the blurring of with the ethereal. Similarly, Swaha: Life Beyond () centers on a holy man's visit to a devotee's home triggering eerie events, using thriller elements to dissect blind faith and collective delusions fabricated by societal beliefs. These narratives underscore a recurring toward unverified spiritual claims, portraying them as potential sources of manipulation rather than solace. Romantic entanglements clashing with entrenched social norms form another persistent motif, typically resolved through comedic exaggeration of familial resistance. Bin Phere Free Me Ttere (2013) follows lovers Dildaar and Sunita navigating parental opposition via absurd schemes to secure approval, highlighting the rigidity of traditions. This pattern recurs in Prakash Electronic (2017), where a middle-aged grapples with his orthodox mindset while pursuing a younger woman in his community, exposing generational and attitudinal barriers to personal agency. Such depictions emphasize causal chains of cultural expectations impeding individual choice, often critiqued through relatable, everyday protagonists. Later works extend these motifs into lighter, celebratory contexts while retaining social observation, as in (2022), which celebrates rural youth's affinity for dance amid communal bonds, contrasting earlier tensions with escapist joy. Across his oeuvre, Sharma deploys genre hybrids—comedy with horror or romance—to illuminate empirical frictions in Indian familial and belief systems, prioritizing narrative realism over idealized resolutions.

Critical reception and impact

Sharma's directorial works have garnered limited critical attention, primarily due to their independent and regional focus, with audience ratings on reflecting modest reception. Sparsh: The Touch (2003) holds a 7.8/10 rating from 10 users, suggesting niche appreciation for its exploration of interpersonal themes, though professional reviews remain scarce. In contrast, Mai Ka Bitwa (2008), a Bhojpuri , lacks documented critical discourse, indicative of its constrained distribution. Swaha: Life Beyond Superstition (2010) stands as Sharma's most polarizing effort, earning a 3.6/10 rating from 29 users and facing outright rejection from India's , which banned its release on grounds of denigrating Hindu religious practices. The controversy stemmed from its portrayal of a holy man's unsettling encounter with elements, interpreted by censors and Hindu groups as offensive to faith traditions, thereby curtailing theatrical exposure and commercial viability. This backlash underscored tensions between artistic critique of and cultural sensitivities in Indian filmmaking, though it failed to generate broader discourse or acclaim. Sharma's oeuvre has had negligible measurable impact on mainstream cinema, with no major awards or box-office successes recorded, reflecting the challenges for low-budget social-themed films in a market dominated by commercial blockbusters. His emphasis on motifs like familial bonds in Bin Phere Free Me Ttere and superstition in Swaha aligns with traditions but has not influenced wider trends or sparked sustained critical engagement, as evidenced by sparse coverage in film journalism. Later works, including Chal Guru Ho Ja Shuru, similarly evade prominent review, suggesting persistent marginalization within the industry.

Controversies

Backlash against Swaha: Life Beyond Superstition

"Swaha: Life Beyond Superstition," a 2010 film directed and written by Manoj Sharma, drew sharp for its depiction of spiritual gurus and practices associated with , with content centered on controversies surrounding Bapu, a prominent self-proclaimed . The movie's narrative challenged exploitative elements in certain religious institutions, prompting immediate backlash from Asaram's supporters who viewed it as defamatory and an attack on their faith. This opposition escalated into legal proceedings, including injunctions and claims filed by Asaram's organization, which delayed the film's theatrical release for an extended period. Courts eventually permitted its distribution following prolonged litigation, allowing "Swaha" to premiere amid ongoing protests from devotees who argued it misrepresented spiritual traditions and incited communal tensions. The controversy highlighted tensions between artistic critique of superstition and protections for religious sentiments in Indian cinema, with Sharma later referencing the legal hurdles in discussions of his subsequent Asaram-themed project.

Filmography

As director and writer

YearTitleLanguage/Notes
2008Mai Ka BitwaBhojpuri film
2010Swaha: Life Beyond Superstition
2013Bin Phere Free Me Ttere
2017Prakash Electronic
2019Sharmaji Ki Lag Gai
2022Khalli Balli, Comedy-Horror
2022, Comedy-Musical
Sharma also contributed as director and to other projects, though specific details on additional credits are limited in available records.

As editor and assistant director

Manoj Sharma entered the Hindi film industry in the early 1990s, serving as both assistant editor and on multiple productions. His credits include the action thriller Tahalka (1992), which featured in the lead role and involved themes of and intervention. In this capacity, Sharma assisted in editing and on-set coordination during filming. Sharma also contributed to Maa (1992), a family-oriented drama directed by V.M. Vyas, where he handled similar assistant responsibilities in editing and direction. This project marked another early collaboration in the genre of maternal sentiment films common to the era's Bollywood output. By 1995, Sharma worked on Policewala Gunda, an action film starring Mithun Chakraborty, again as assistant editor and assistant director, supporting the assembly of sequences involving crime and vigilante justice narratives. These roles provided foundational experience in film workflow before his transition to directing feature films in the mid-2000s.

References

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