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Rahul Dholakia
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Rahul Dholakia is an Indian film director-producer-screenwriter, most known for his National Film Award-winning film, Parzania (Heaven & Hell On Earth) (2005),[1][2] prior to which he also made documentaries like Teenage Parents and New York Taxi Drivers.
Key Information
Early life and education
[edit]Born in Mumbai, to Raksha and Parry Dholakia, an advertising professional, Rahul also has an elder sister Moha. After completing his schooling from Campion School, Mumbai and Jamnabai Narsee School in Mumbai, he went on to do his Bachelors in Science from St. Xavier's College, Mumbai. He is an Indian.[3]
Career
[edit]While still in college he started working in his father's advertising agency, Mora Ava. He also worked with producer Babla Sen, for project for Channel 4, London, as production assistant and 10 documentaries later became a producer himself. Later, he started working with Everest Advertising in Mumbai as an assistant, growing up to become a producer.
Thereafter, he moved to New York City in 1990, where, he did his master's degree in filmmaking from the New York Institute of Technology, and has been in India and Corona, California, United States ever since.[4][5] After making a couple of documentaries and commercials, and even running TV station, called 'TV Asia' for a while,[6] he made his feature film debut with the Hindi-English bilingual, Kehtaa Hai Dil Baar Baar (2002), starring Paresh Rawal and Jimmy Shergill. His next film based on a real-life story of 10-year-old Parsi boy, Azhar Mody, known as Parzan, who disappeared during the 28 February 2002 Gulbarg Society massacre, which took place during communal riots in Gujarat in 2002, Parzania won him the National Film Award for 2006.[2]
After shooting in Kashmir, his next film Lamhaa, where Sanjay Dutt and Bipasha Basu played the leads in a story based in Kashmir, was released to mixed reviews.[7][8] he has directed the film Raees, which was released on 25 January 2017 and received positive reviews. Dholakia's upcoming film Agni is set to release in 2024.[9]
Filmography
[edit]| Year | Film | Director | Producer | Writer | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Kehtaa Hai Dil Baar Baar | Yes | No | No | |
| 2007 | Parzania[10] | Yes | Yes | Yes | National Film Award for Best Direction |
| 2008 | Mumbai Cutting | Yes | No | Yes | segment "Bombay Mumbai Same Shit" |
| 2010 | Lamhaa | Yes | No | Yes | |
| 2017 | Raees | Yes | No | Yes | |
| 2024 | Agni | Yes | No | Yes |
Awards and honours
[edit]| Year | Award | Film | Category | Result | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | National Film Awards | Parzania | Best Director | Won | [11] |
| 2008 | Filmfare Awards | Best Story | Nominated | [citation needed] | |
| Best Screenplay | Nominated | ||||
| Screen Awards | Ramnath Goenka Memorial Award | Won | [citation needed] |
References
[edit]- ^ And the award goes to... The Times of India, 9 August 2007
- ^ a b In India, Showing Sectarian Pain to Eyes That Are Closed The New York Times, 20 February 2007.
- ^ Jhunjhunwala, Jhunjhunwala (16 January 2017). "Actors want to play gangsters because of the characters' sex appeal: Rahul Dholakia". Mint. Retrieved 8 February 2018.
- ^ "About IMI - Faculty". Institute of Moving Images. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
- ^ director-turned-distributor Rahul Dholakia[dead link] The Indian Express.
- ^ Parzania director: 2006's National award winner Rediff.com, 30 August 2006.
- ^ 'Lamha' Interview[permanent dead link] entertainment.in.msn.com.
- ^ Kazmi, Nikhat (15 July 2010). "Lamhaa: Movie Review". Times of India.
- ^ "Farhan Akhtar, Ritesh Sidhwani Update Excel Slate, 'Don 3,' 'Jee Le Zara' (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety.
- ^ Rahul Dholakia The New York Times.
- ^ "53rd National Film Awards – 2006". Directorate of Film Festivals. p. 30. Archived from the original on 15 August 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2012.
External links
[edit]Rahul Dholakia
View on GrokipediaRahul Dholakia is an Indian film director, producer, and screenwriter based in Mumbai, recognized for his directorial works that often address socio-political issues in India.[1][2] After completing schooling at Campion School and Jamnabai Narsee School in Mumbai, followed by a Bachelor of Science degree from St. Xavier's College, Mumbai, and a master's in filmmaking from the New York Institute of Technology, Dholakia entered the industry with his debut feature Kehtaa Hai Dil Baar Baar in 2002.[3][4] His breakthrough came with Parzania (2005), a drama depicting the impact of the 2002 Gujarat riots on a Parsi family, which earned him the National Film Award for Best Director in 2007.[5] Subsequent films include Lamhaa (2010), exploring the Kashmir insurgency, and the commercially successful crime drama Raees (2017) starring Shah Rukh Khan as a bootlegger inspired by real-life figures.[1][6] Dholakia's recent project, Agni (2024), focuses on firefighters and received endorsement from Shah Rukh Khan.[7] His filmmaking style emphasizes grounded narratives drawn from real events, though works like Parzania faced distribution challenges in Gujarat due to the sensitive subject matter.[8]
Early life and education
Childhood and family background
Rahul Dholakia was born in Mumbai, Maharashtra, to parents Raksha Dholakia and Parry Dholakia, with the latter working as an advertising professional.[9][2] He has one elder sister, Moha.[9][10] Though born in Mumbai, Dholakia identifies as a native of Gujarat.[11] Dholakia's paternal family has deep roots in Gujarat's political and cultural history. His grandfather contributed to the state's separation from Bombay State, chaired Ahmedabad's Hindu Maha Sabha, and hosted figures such as Shyama Prasad Mukherji and musician Bismillah Khan.[12] His father, Parry Dholakia, participated as a prominent activist in the 1942 Student Movement against British rule; Dholakia has recalled that, despite Ahmedabad being a hub of the Muslim League, "there was never hatred; Political ideologies never affected Social lives."[12] Additionally, his uncle's father was the noted Gujarati author Ramanlal Vasantlal Desai, whose works captured regional ethos.[12] The family's multi-generational involvement spans Gujarat's social, cultural, and political domains, influencing Dholakia's perspective on communal dynamics in the region.[12]Film training and influences
Prior to formal film education, Dholakia gained practical experience in India by producing and directing advertising films and public service announcements.[13] In 1990, he relocated to New York to pursue a master's degree in filmmaking at the New York Institute of Technology, where he honed his skills in narrative construction and technical aspects of production.[9][2] Following his graduate studies, Dholakia directed short documentaries, including Teenage Parents and New York Taxi Drivers, which explored social realities through observational storytelling and emphasized authentic human experiences over scripted drama.[2] These early works reflected his shift toward issue-based narratives, bridging his advertising background—focused on concise messaging—with longer-form cinematic exploration.[14] Dholakia's influences include South Indian cinema, particularly Mani Ratnam's Nayagan (1987), which shaped the character arc and moral ambiguity in his 2017 film Raees, adapting elements of the Tamil classic's portrayal of a bootlegger's rise amid societal tensions.[15] His preference for real-life inspired stories, as seen in documentaries and later features, underscores a commitment to causal depictions of conflict and resilience, drawing from empirical observations rather than stylized fiction.[14]Professional career
Entry into filmmaking and debut
Dholakia entered filmmaking through documentary production and commercial work in the United States, where he directed shorts such as New York Taxi Drivers and Teenage Parents following his filmmaking studies.[9] He also managed operations at TV Asia, an ethnic media channel targeting Indian diaspora audiences, which provided practical experience in content creation and broadcasting before transitioning to narrative features.[4] His feature directorial debut came with the Hindi-English bilingual romantic comedy Kehtaa Hai Dil Baar Baar, released on November 15, 2002.[16] The film, starring Jimmy Shergill as a self-made food vendor pursuing love across class divides, Paresh Rawal as a wealthy hotelier, and Kim Sharma, marked the first Hindi production shot entirely in the USA, primarily in New York locations.[17] Despite its novel setting and cast, including comedic support from Johnny Lever, the movie underperformed commercially, failing to recover its budget and receiving mixed reviews for its uneven pacing and cultural disconnects.[18] This initial venture highlighted Dholakia's interest in diaspora themes but did not yield immediate recognition, paving the way for more issue-driven projects.[9]Parzania and thematic focus on riots
Parzania is a 2005 Indian drama film directed by Rahul Dholakia, co-written by him with Reshma Gandhi and based on true events surrounding the 2002 Gujarat riots.[19] The narrative centers on a Parsi family in Ahmedabad whose 13-year-old son, Parzan Mody (inspired by real-life Azhar Mody), vanishes during the communal violence that erupted after the Godhra train burning on February 27, 2002, in which 59 Hindu pilgrims died, triggering widespread retaliatory clashes resulting in over 1,000 deaths, predominantly Muslims, according to official records.[11][20] The film interweaves the family's desperate search for their son with depictions of the riots' chaos, including mob attacks on minority communities and the breakdown of law and order in affected neighborhoods.[21] Thematically, Parzania emphasizes the riots' human toll on neutral bystanders, portraying the Parsi family's ordeal as emblematic of innocence ensnared by sectarian fury. Dholakia draws from eyewitness accounts and the real Mody family's experience, highlighting causal chains of violence: the initial train arson leading to frenzied reprisals, with scenes of arson, looting, and targeted killings underscoring how rapid escalation overwhelmed state responses.[11][22] The film critiques the selective nature of communal targeting, showing how even non-partisan households like the Parsis—historically apolitical—suffered amid polarized Hindu-Muslim animosities, with the missing child serving as a motif for unresolved losses amid post-riot displacement and inadequate investigations. Empirical details, such as the family's sheltering in a relief camp and encounters with police inaction, ground the themes in documented riot patterns where over 150,000 people were internally displaced.[20][22] Dholakia's direction prioritizes raw realism over melodrama, using handheld cinematography to capture mob savagery and the psychological fracture of survivors, informed by his own observations of the events from afar in the United States, which he described as an "eye-opener" prompting reflection on India's secular fabric.[11] The riots' portrayal avoids broader political etiology, focusing instead on micro-level causal realism: how rumor-fueled assemblies devolved into atrocities, eroding trust in institutions and perpetuating cycles of grief, as evidenced by the real Azhar Mody's ongoing absence despite appeals.[21] This thematic lens positions the film as a testament to empirical tragedy, with the closing dedication to the missing boy underscoring unhealed wounds from the February-March 2002 violence.[22]Lamhaa and exploration of Kashmir conflict
Lamhaa, released on July 16, 2010, is an Indian Hindi-language action drama directed by Rahul Dholakia that delves into the Kashmir conflict through the lens of an undercover Indian Military Intelligence agent, Vikram Sabharwal (played by Sanjay Dutt), tasked with identifying the perpetrators of extremist attacks in the region.[23] [24] The narrative centers on Sabharwal's infiltration amid ongoing militancy, infiltration from across the border, and local identity crises, portraying the interplay of terrorism, survival struggles, and years of regional oppression without framing it as a simplistic documentary.[25] Dholakia emphasized that the film focuses on how ordinary Kashmiris and security forces confront terrorism on the ground, rather than indicting the government, aiming to convey unvarnished truths about the conflict's human cost.[26] [27] The film's exploration of the Kashmir issue traces elements of the insurgency's roots to 1989, highlighting persistent cycles of violence, external meddling—such as alleged Pakistani ISI orchestration—and internal dilemmas like forced recruitment into militancy and civilian alienation, while avoiding overt jingoism.[28] Sabharwal's journey, aided by Aziza (Bipasha Basu), a local woman tied to militant networks, underscores causal factors including cross-border terrorism and local survival tactics, presenting a restrained depiction of the Valley's realities during a period of heightened unrest.[29] Dholakia has stated his intent was not to provoke controversy but to illuminate overlooked aspects of the conflict, such as the psychological toll on residents and the futility of two decades of unresolved strife by 2010.[27] [30] Production occurred primarily on location in Kashmir during 2009–2010, under Governor's rule with no elected government, amid peak terrorist activity, curfews, and spontaneous protests, which Dholakia described as "playing with fire" to achieve authenticity—evidenced by incidents like being held by crowds of 8,000–10,000 people mistaking scripted scenes for real unrest, and cast members like Bipasha Basu reacting strongly to filming during unannounced curfews.[31] [32] [33] This on-ground approach lent empirical weight to the portrayal, capturing unscripted tensions that mirrored the conflict's volatility, though it risked crew safety and local backlash.[34] Critically, Lamhaa received mixed assessments for its Kashmir focus: some praised its honest restraint in depicting a non-magnified Valley intense with militancy's grip, avoiding propagandistic excess, while others critiqued it for failing to fully unearth the "untold story," leaving deeper causal nuances—like comprehensive civilian perspectives—unresolved despite the ambition.[35] [29] In later reflections, Dholakia expressed concerns over potential accusations of being "anti-national" for the film's contradictory elements, reflecting broader narrative sensitivities around Kashmir portrayals in Indian cinema, where balanced views risk misinterpretation amid polarized discourses.[36] The work stands as Dholakia's attempt at causal realism in cinema, prioritizing ground-level evidence over ideological conformity, though its commercial underperformance limited wider discourse on the conflict's entrenched dynamics.[30]Commercial shift with Raees
Raees, released on January 25, 2017, represented a significant pivot for Dholakia from the intimate, issue-driven narratives of Parzania (2007) and Lamhaa (2010)—films that earned critical acclaim and a National Award for the former but achieved limited commercial reach—to a high-stakes mainstream Bollywood action drama.[37] Produced by Red Chillies Entertainment and Excel Entertainment, the film starred Shah Rukh Khan as Raees Alam, a bootlegger in 1980s Gujarat inspired by the real-life criminal Abdul Latif, with Nawazuddin Siddiqui as the antagonist police officer Majmudar.[37] Drawing from two-and-a-half years of research into Gujarat's illicit liquor trade and prohibition-era border villages, the screenplay by journalists Niraj Shukla, Harit Mehta, and Ashish Vashi incorporated realism amid commercial elements like action sequences and song-dance routines.[37] This shift allowed Dholakia to collaborate with a superstar lead, which he credited to bolder young producers enabling larger-scale projects, while aiming to infuse substance into the masala framework: "Agar katne ka darr hota na, toh patang nahi chadhata, firki pakadta" (If there was fear of getting cut, one wouldn't fly the kite but hold the spool).[37] Unlike his prior works' focus on riots and militancy, Dholakia intentionally crafted Raees as a "non-controversial" entertainer to avoid the backlash faced by Parzania, emphasizing a protagonist who is "a good guy who does bad things" within a fictionalized Gujarat setting.[38] The film grossed ₹137.51 crore nett in India and ₹281.44 crore worldwide, qualifying as a super hit and validating the commercial viability of Dholakia's hybrid approach, which blended Khan's mass appeal with grounded storytelling.[39] Critics noted it as a rare Bollywood entry merging artistic daring with box-office success, distinct from the niche intimacy of his earlier directorials.[37][40]Recent works and digital ventures
Following the commercial success of Raees in 2017, Dholakia took a seven-year hiatus from directing feature films before returning with Agni, a drama centered on the challenges faced by firefighters and their families.[41][42] Produced by Excel Entertainment and starring Farhan Akhtar, the film marked Dholakia's entry into over-the-top (OTT) streaming platforms with its release on Amazon Prime Video in late 2024.[8][43] The project explores themes of heroism and sacrifice, drawing from real-life inspirations of urban fire services, and represents a shift toward smaller-scale, character-driven narratives after the large-budget action of Raees.[41] In 2021, Dholakia announced plans for his debut digital series, inspired by participation in the 'Police Unity Tour' event, though no such project has been publicly released or detailed as of 2025.[44] This foray into episodic content aligns with broader industry trends toward serialized storytelling on digital platforms, but Agni stands as his primary recent digital output, emphasizing grounded realism over prior commercial spectacles.[45]Public commentary and controversies
Backlash over Parzania's Gujarat riots portrayal
Parzania, directed by Rahul Dholakia and released on January 26, 2007, dramatizes the disappearance of a young Parsi boy amid the 2002 Gujarat riots, drawing from the real-life account of the Mody family whose son Parzan went missing during the violence following the Godhra train burning on February 27, 2002, which claimed 59 lives and precipitated widespread communal clashes resulting in over 1,000 deaths, predominantly Muslims.[46][47] The film's portrayal centers on the human cost to a minority family, including scenes of mob violence and institutional failures, but has been faulted by critics for omitting the incendiary context of the Godhra incident and for scenes depicting Hindu extremists armed with trishuls, which some viewed as inflammatory stereotyping.[48][49] In Gujarat, the film encountered an unofficial ban, with multiplex owners and distributors unanimously declining to screen it due to threats of violence from Hindu nationalist groups affiliated with organizations like the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP).[50][51] VHP leader Manubhai Patel argued that the depiction of Muslim suffering could incite fresh unrest, stating, "We are scared that after watching this movie, there may be violence."[51] State authorities, under the BJP-led government then headed by Chief Minister Narendra Modi, did not impose a formal prohibition but noted concerns over potential disruption to public peace, leading to postponed screenings.[52] Hindutva advocates further condemned the narrative as anti-Hindu propaganda that vilified Modi and ignored retaliatory dynamics rooted in the train arson, with some threatening to torch theaters that defied the boycott.[53][49][54] Dholakia responded to the backlash by expressing hurt and disappointment, emphasizing that the film sought to illuminate the shared trauma endured by Gujaratis across communities during the riots, without intent to provoke division.[55][51] He later reflected on the experience as deterring further politically charged projects, telling Reuters in August 2007, "I do not want to make another Parzania right now... From producing to directing to distribution, everything was denied."[55] Despite the controversy, Parzania received a National Film Award for Best Feature Film on National Integration in 2007, though its exclusion from Gujarat theaters underscored persistent sensitivities around riot representations.[38]Positions on Kashmir and criticism of The Kashmir Files
Dholakia has articulated positions on the Kashmir conflict that highlight political exploitation and the necessity of socioeconomic measures for resolution. In a July 2010 interview promoting Lamhaa, he attributed the persistence of the issue to a lack of genuine intent, stating, "I think we have not found a solution because nobody wants to solve the problem. Politicians have been using it for their benefit."[27] He proposed solutions centered on employment generation, trust-building among locals, and reduced military presence, expressing a wish for the armed forces' removal to provide "breathing space" and enable peace.[56] These views informed Lamhaa (2010), his thriller depicting ISI-orchestrated militancy, youth radicalization, and underlying grievances in Kashmir, filmed on location amid Governor's rule and heightened terrorism, including an incident where his crew was held hostage for four hours by locals while CRPF personnel fled.[57][31] In February 2019, Dholakia noted that Indian filmmakers often avoid nuanced Kashmir narratives due to fears of being labeled anti-national, reflecting a broader industry reluctance to explore perspectives beyond establishment lines.[58] He emphasized authentic portrayal over sensationalism, drawing from interactions with Kashmiri students who described the region as a "beautiful prison," which inspired Lamhaa's focus on systemic failures rather than binary victim-perpetrator dynamics.[59] Dholakia's criticism of The Kashmir Files (2022), a film documenting the 1990 exodus and targeted killings of Kashmiri Pandits amid Islamist insurgency, emerged in March 2022 via a tweet: "Hate sells. Love used to."[60] Issued during the film's box-office run, which grossed over ₹250 crore by highlighting empirical accounts of approximately 300–500 Pandit deaths and the displacement of 100,000–300,000 Hindus, the statement was interpreted as an indirect rebuke for prioritizing communal division over reconciliation.[60] In August 2022, while opposing boycott calls against Bollywood films perceived as anti-Hindu (such as Laal Singh Chaddha and Raksha Bandhan), he reiterated defenses of artistic freedom, contrasting them with what he viewed as exploitative hate-mongering in politically charged narratives like The Kashmir Files.[61] This positioned his approach—evident in Lamhaa's on-ground risks and balanced depiction of security forces' challenges alongside militant threats—as preferable to one-sided retellings.[36]Responses to film boycotts and industry debates
In August 2022, amid social media campaigns calling for boycotts of films such as Laal Singh Chaddha and Raksha Bandhan due to perceived anti-national statements by actors Aamir Khan and Akshay Kumar, Rahul Dholakia publicly opposed such actions. He argued on X (formerly Twitter) that targeting an entire film based on the ideology of individual cast or crew members was unfair to the hundreds of others who had invested effort in its production.[62][63] Dholakia extended this view to broader industry challenges, offering suggestions in response to the boycott trend and underperformance of Bollywood releases. On August 22, 2022, he tweeted recommendations including producing higher-quality films, reducing production costs and ticket prices, and avoiding arrogance toward audiences, positioning these as practical steps to regain public trust rather than engaging in ideological conflicts.[64] During the December 2022 controversy over Pathaan's song "Besharam Rang," where protests targeted Deepika Padukone's saffron-colored attire as disrespectful to Hindu sentiments, Dholakia defended Shah Rukh Khan, whom he had directed in Raees. He condemned ongoing "hate attacks" on Khan, urging the film industry to collectively denounce them and calling on "bigots" to cease interference.[65][66] In February 2023, he criticized Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) chief Prasoon Joshi for yielding to external pressures by demanding changes to the song, arguing that such censorship undermined creative autonomy and that costume choices were beyond actors' direct control.[67][68] Critics, including outlets highlighting perceived inconsistencies in Bollywood's political stances, noted Dholakia's opposition to boycotts contrasted with his prior criticism of The Kashmir Files, suggesting selective application of free-speech defenses favoring mainstream industry figures over films challenging established narratives on historical events like the Kashmir exodus.[61]Creative output and recognition
Filmography overview
Rahul Dholakia's directorial debut was the romantic drama Kehtaa Hai Dil Baar Baar, released on November 15, 2002, which featured Tusshar Kapoor and Jimmy Shergill in lead roles and focused on a love triangle narrative.[69] He followed this with Parzania in 2007, a docudrama portraying the impact of the 2002 Gujarat riots on a Parsi family, starring Sarika and Naseeruddin Shah, which premiered at international festivals before its Indian release on January 26, 2007.[69] In 2008, Dholakia contributed the segment "Ladies Special" to the anthology film Mumbai Cutting, exploring urban life in Mumbai.[70] His subsequent feature Lamhaa, released on July 16, 2010, delved into the Kashmir conflict with Sanjay Dutt and Bipasha Basu, addressing militancy and political unrest through a narrative spanning past and present.[69] Dholakia achieved commercial success with Raees in 2017, a crime drama starring Shah Rukh Khan as a bootlegger in 1980s Gujarat, released on January 25, 2017, which grossed over ₹307 crore worldwide despite mixed critical reception on its portrayal of criminal enterprise.[69] His most recent directorial effort, Agni, a action thriller released in 2024, features Pratik Gandhi and Divya Dutta, centering on a firefighter confronting systemic corruption.[1]| Year | Title | Key Cast | Genre/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Kehtaa Hai Dil Baar Baar | Tusshar Kapoor, Jimmy Shergill | Romantic drama; debut feature.[69] |
| 2007 | Parzania | Sarika, Naseeruddin Shah | Docudrama on Gujarat riots.[69] |
| 2008 | Mumbai Cutting (segment) | Various | Anthology; "Ladies Special" segment.[70] |
| 2010 | Lamhaa | Sanjay Dutt, Bipasha Basu | Political thriller on Kashmir.[69] |
| 2017 | Raees | Shah Rukh Khan, Mahira Khan | Crime drama; highest grossing.[69] |
| 2024 | Agni | Pratik Gandhi, Divya Dutta | Action thriller on firefighting.[1] |
Awards and nominations
Rahul Dholakia won the National Film Award for Best Director for Parzania (2005) at the 53rd National Film Awards, announced in 2006.[18] This recognition highlighted the film's portrayal of the 2002 Gujarat riots, with the award presented for direction amid its critical reception for thematic depth.[2] In 2025, Dholakia received two nominations at the International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) Digital Awards for the web series Agni (2024), in the categories of Best Director and Best Original Story.[71]| Year | Award | Work | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | National Film Awards, India | Parzania | Best Director | Won[18] |
| 2025 | IIFA Digital Awards | Agni | Best Director | Nominated[71] |
| 2025 | IIFA Digital Awards | Agni | Best Original Story | Nominated[71] |
