1975 (India)
Hindi
Action, Adventure, Comedy, Thriller
Sholay means fire. In this movie a Police Officer, who family was killed by a bandit named Gabbar Singh, decides to fight fire with fire and recruits two convicts, Jai and Veeru. He approaches them in jail, puts the proposal in front of them, and they agree to bring in Gabbar Singh alive - for a hefty price. After their discharge from jail, they travel by train to the village where the Police Officer lives - now with only his widowed daughter-in-law. The three band together to fight one of the most elusive and dreaded bandits of all time. Will the two ex-cons be able to bring Gabbar alive to the Police Officer?
as Veeru
as Thakur
as Jai
as Basanti
as Radha
as GABBAR
Director
Producer
Writer
Editor
songs recordist
playback
"THE PERFORMANCES ARE POLISHED"
Fully-rounded characters and a simple narrative make th …
"THE PERFORMANCES ARE POLISHED"
Fully-rounded characters and a simple narrative make three hours pass fairly quickly. The comedy cameos from Jagdeep and Asrani could be seen as unnecessary obstacles, though hardened fans of the movie will dispute this. All performances are polished but Amjad Khan's debut as the menacing Gabbar Singh deserves special mention, setting new standards for Bollywood villains.
It's a movie that you can watch again and again, and hardcore Bollywood fans do. But even if you just watch Sholay once, you won't be disappointed.
India's best-known "curry" Western combines elements of traditional and "spaghetti" Western epics in …
India's best-known "curry" Western combines elements of traditional and "spaghetti" Western epics in a film that was enormously successful in its time. When a former police chief Sanjeev Kumar vows to get revenge on the bandit Amjad Khan who gunned down his family, he hires two petty crooks Dharmendra, Amitabh Bachchan to carry out his plan. A milestone in Bollywood history, Sholay was India's first 70mm production.
