Sarkar Raj (Hindi: सरकार राज, translation: Reign of the Overlord) is a 2008 Indian dramatic thriller film set in the world of politics and crime. It was co-written and directed by Ram Gopal Varma. It is the sequel to Sarkar (2005).
The primary cast features three members of the Bachchan family - Amitabh Bachchan, Abhishek Bachchan (who reprise their roles from the original) and new entrant Aishwarya Rai Bachchan. Supriya Pathak, Tanisha Mukherjee and Ravi Kale also reappeared in their respective roles from Sarkar. The film released on 6 June 2008, was critically and commercially successful.[3][4]
The film has joined the long list of Indian films that have managed to procure a place for themselves in the prestigious Academy of Motion Pictures library. The script was there permanently for the reference of students of cinema.[5]
(The sequel is chronologically set two years after the original film.)
It opens with an assassination attempt against Shankar Nagre (Abhishek Bachchan) being busted by his lieutenant Chander (Ravi Kale). The assassination follows the 'chain of command' theory mentioned in The Godfather (novel) (the lower members or links of the chain were killed so that the planners could not be found). It was planned by Deputy Chief Minister of Maharashtra (a state in India), Karunesh Kaanga (Sayaji Shinde) and Hassan Qazi (Govind Namdeo).
Anita Rajan (Aishwarya Rai Bachchan), CEO of an international electrical power firm based in London, holds a meeting with Mike Rajan (Victor Banerjee), her father and boss and Hassan Qazi, as a seemingly shady adviser and facilitator; regarding an ambitious proposal to set up a multi-million dollar power plant in rural parts of the state of Maharashtra in India. Qazi states that this project will be impossible due to possible political entanglements. When Anita asks him for a solution, Qazi states that enlisting the support of Subhash Nagre (Amitabh Bachchan) (commonly referred to by his title of Sarkar), who he describes as a criminal in the garb of a popular and influential political leader, might help their cause.
Sarkar is shown greeting a massive crowd from the balcony of his palatial bungalow in Mumbai, Maharashtra. They have gathered to celebrate his 60th birthday. He addresses the crowd and states that he is proud of what his son, Shankar, has achieved as the heir of the Nagre clan. He then goes down to mingle with the rejoicing crowd.
Anita is accompanied by the Chief Minister of Maharastra, Kaanga, and Qazi to the Nagres's residence. They put forward the power plant proposal to Subhash and Shankar. Subhash angrily rebukes the CM, who had been brought to power thanks to Sarkar's influence; for agreeing to sponsor the power plant as the project involved resettlement of around 40,000 people from five villages surrounding the major rural vote bank of Thakerwadi. The CM apologizes and promises that something like this won't happen again.
After this failed meeting gets over, the dejected Anita tells Qazi that she doesn't think things will work out in this 'jungle-like' political scenario. Qazi however reassures her by saying that there is still some hope left as Shankar had not said a word during the meeting.
Shankar is trying to convince his father about the benefits of the plant and the tremendous progress it can spark in the power-hungry state of Maharashtra. He states that one should overlook a small loss in the present if there is a promise of a greater gain in the future. After some convincing, Subhash somewhat reluctantly agrees to support the project.
Father and son proceed to Thakerwadi, accompanied by Shankar's wife Avantika (Tanisha Mukherjee), their trusted lieutenant Chander (Ravi Kale) and bodyguards. They have gone to meet Rao Saab, Sarkar's wise mentor and a popular leader in the interns of Maharashtra; to seek blessings and advice for the project. He is initially reluctant about the idea and Shankar vehemently opposes his stance. However, he agrees to give his go-ahead to the project after Shankar convinces him that Sarkar believes in the project, although it is apparent that neither Rao Saab nor Subhash himself is entirely convinced.
During the meeting, Rao Saab's grandson, Sanjay Somji (debutante "Rajesh Shringarpure") storms in to complain about a matter and proposes a violent solution. Rao Saab promises to look into the matter and introduces him to the Nagres as a leader in the local farmers' union. He describes him as a short-tempered albeit good-natured man.
Anita and Shankar have a meeting, after which Qazi tries to bribe Shankar to let him embezzle money from the project; when Anita goes to attend a phone call from her father. However, the righteous Shankar informs Anita about the corrupt Qazi's plans. She informs her father who later fires him.
Shankar, along with Anita, visits the villages to mobilize support from the masses. During this campaign, Anita starts to admire Shankar and realizes her conversations with him sets a strong foundation for friendship with him. Shankar states that the power plant has become as much of a dream for him as it is for Anita, who relishes this opportunity as an opportunity to work independently from the constraints of her boss and estranged father. However, they face an obstacle in the form of Somji, who incites the people against the Nagres, calling them money-minded city-dwellers who don't care about the welfare of the rural public and are just out to grab tracts of their motherland. The fickle public react by protesting violently.
Kantilal Vora (Upendra Limaye), a businessman, approaches Sarkar with the proposal of shifting the project to the state of Gujarat, as the project was seemingly facing a dead end in Maharashtra. After his idea is unceremoniously rejected by the Nagres, he joins hands with Qazi and Kaanga (who is unhappy with Sarkar for making him deputy CM instead of CM) to make a plot against the Nagres.
Subhash mourns over the death of Vishnu (played by Kay Kay Menon in Sarkar), his erring son who was killed by Shankar for a murder attempt on his father. Later, Subhash tells his son that Kantilal Vora had come, in a manner that hints that he is a threat to their cause, but the seemingly overconfident Shankar brushes the matter aside and tells his father not to worry about anything as he would take care of whatever comes up.
Meanwhile Chander approaches Shankar with the idea of intimidating Somji, who is proving quite problematic. However, Shankar declares that he wishes to hold talks with Somji as he believes that both work for the benefit of Maharashtra and that Somji is merely uninformed about the project. He orders the bewildered and dismayed Chander to arrange for a meeting. With some difficulty, he succeeds in arranging a cell phone conversation just when Shankar is about to enter his car. As he is standing in the courtyard talking to Somji, the vehicle explodes. Avantika, two months pregnant was sitting inside the car waiting for Shankar, dies. Subhash, who rushes to the balcony on hearing the explosion, gets a heart attack on witnessing the scene.
Shankar fires Chander over the security breach that resulted in the explosion, without giving him a chance to prove himself. He appoints a deputy, Bala, as the new security officer.
Shankar, Anita and Pushpa (Supriya Pathak), Shankar’s mother, visit Subhash in the hospital. Here, Subhash consoles Shankar and tells him to forget the incident for a while and to keep going with the project. Shankar responds by asking his father how he could forget the loss of his beloved wife and unborn child.
Unknown assailants kidnap Somji as he is on his way to a rally. Media speculation and general opinion point to Shankar as the culprit. As Subhash watches the news with Kaanga, he notices by Kaanga’s speech and behavior that he could possibly be a perpetrator.
Shankar attends a party hosted by Anita for those involved in the project. Here, Mike tells Anita that he is giving the project to the business-minded Vora, as he is fed up of the problems faced by it in Maharashtra and also of Shankar’s idealistic approach to them. When Anita tells him that this would be wrong, as their promises to the rural public of Maharashtra would be broken; Mike remarks that she shouldn’t be moralistic and should think of profits. Anita replies that Shankar would not allow this, to which Mike ominously retorts that Shankar would be ‘taken care of’, thus arousing Anita’s suspicions. Her father then introduces her to Vora, and the two men go off to discuss the business.
Meanwhile at the party, Shankar receives a phone call from Chander, who in an attempt to redeem himself, has found out that Somji is being held captive by Qazi in a house in a forested region. Shankar leaves the party with Bala, rushes to the spot in a jeep and picks up Chander on the way, who leads them to the secluded hideout in the middle of a forested area. They wish to settle scores with Qazi and free Somji so as to shatter kidnapping allegations against them. Shankar purposely crashes the jeep into an electrical generator. This causes a forest fire, and all the guards rush outside and make efforts to stop it. Hence they become easy and unsuspecting targets for the trio. Shankar enters the house and shoots down Qazi as he rushes out about to escape. A terrified Somji is also freed.
The indebted Somji becomes an aide to the Nagres. Rao Saab calls Shankar and thanks him for bringing a positive change in his grandson, something he himself could not do. Meanwhile, Kaanga and Vora hire an assassin, apparently to kill Shankar. Shankar and Somji hold a joint press conference where they announce their alliance. Somji says that he is now a supporter of the project, a statement that brings some ire from one of the apparent supporters of his previous stance, who is present at the conference. The assassin is also present there.
Anita and Shankar are having a conversation over tea at a secluded balcony. Anita tells him that the project is being taken to Gujarat, to which he replies that only efforts are being made to take it there, and he won’t let that happen. He says that the two main threats, Qazi and Somji, have been taken care of, and now the going will be a lot smoother. Anita relays Mike’s statement that he would ‘take care of’ Shankar. But Shankar says that she is having irrational fears. The two face a few uneasy moments, realizing the extent of their feelings for each other, until an unseen assassin enters the scene, and shoots Shankar multiple times causing to his crucial death.
After this, Subhash begins on a path of bloody revenge. He asks Anita who was present with her dad at the party, and on being told that it was Vora, instructs Bala that he wants to see him "now". Vora is abducted and tortured at the Nagre’s mansion for information about the others involved, and presumably killed later. Kaanga is knifed at his office while Bala bludgeons the assassin to death with a rifle’s butt. Chander is also shown as one of the traitors. He was the one who informed the assassin about Shankar’s location. He was also angry that Shankar had fired him and chosen to trust a rookie (Bala). He says that he had been loyal to Subhash for twenty years as he respected him and his way of functioning, but could not digest the way Shankar worked as the Sarkar. Subhash tells him if after twenty years he couldn't understand, there was nothing to explain then. As Subhash turns to take a phone call Bala shoots Chander in the head.
Subhash goes up to Anita and informs her that her dad, Mike, had been shot dead by one of his men in London. She sheds a stray tear as Subhash tells her about the conspiracy to kill Shankar. Vora wanted to handle the profitable venture himself, while Qazi wanted to embezzle a few hundred crores from the multi-million dollar project. Both realized that Shankar’s presence would not allow them to do what they wanted and hence bumped him off. Kaanga meanwhile wanted to overthrow the ruling party so that he could enjoy the powers of being the Chief Minister of Maharashtra, but realized that the support given by the Nagres to the ruling party would prevent him from doing so. Killing Shankar was probably intended to weaken the Nagres’ hold over Maharashtrian politics. Meanwhile, Chander thought he would succeed Subhash as the next Sarkar but the unexpected arrival of Shankar on the scene (in the first movie Sarkar) dismayed him.
However, Subhash then states that he has discovered that this whole setup was actually a cover-up for an elaborate and dirty political conspiracy in which Qazi, Kaanga, Vora, Chander, Mike and the killer were merely pawns. When Anita asks him who the mastermind behind it was, Subhash unexpectedly replies that it was Rao Saab. The conspiracy was to make Somji the new ‘Sarkar’. He was the one who instructed the trio of Qazi, Kaanga and Vora about everything. The bomb that was planted in Shankar’s car was merely a distraction and was not meant to kill Shankar, as would have been thought (as Shankar would have been in the car had it not been for Somji’s phone call). Shankar was not bumped off at this stage because then the public perceived Somji and him to be enemies, and Shankar’s death would arouse his supporters suspicion against Somji and make them turn against him, thus defeating the entire purpose of the conspiracy. To achieve this end, Rao Saab orchestrated Somji’s kidnapping and sacrificed Qazi. Hence when Shankar saved Somji and Somji joined the Nagres’ campaign, the public perceived him to be a younger brother to Shankar. Thus when Shankar would be killed, the public would automatically consider his ‘brother’ Somji to be his successor. On hearing about the complete conspiracy, a stunned Anita asks Subhash what would happen next. Subhash talks about who would now take his son's place and she replies "You". Subhash replies that Rao Saab would be coming to his residence the next day.
The next day as Rao Saab arrives, he sits down with Subhash and shows feigned grief over Shankar’s death. He then asks Subhash who would be able to take on Shankar’s mantle. Subhash points behind Rao Saab, who turns to see the bloody corpse of his grandson Somji and is visibly terrified as to what Subhash would do to him now that his plot has been uncovered. Subhash asks Rao Saab what he should do now. Subhash stands up and walks out of the room, what finally happens to Rao Saab is not shown.
Subhash is shown lamenting that his son had to pay the price of his actions. He goes and sits on his son’s desk, symbolizing that he has reclaimed the title of ‘Sarkar’ himself after Shankar’s death. He calls out to his wife Pushpa and tells her to call his daughter-in-law Amrita (the wife of the deceased Vishnu Nagre, played by Kay Kay Menon in the prequel Sarkar) and tell her to send his grandson Chiku from the city of Nagpur to their house in Mumbai.
In the closing shots of the movie, Anita is shown at the Nagres’ residence holding a meeting, she turns and casually and comfortably asks for a cup of tea implying that she had decided taken up Shankar's position.
The film mostly garnered a positive critical reception. Critic Taran Adarsh from Bollywood Hungama gave the film four stars out of five and noted "Besides its strong content, Sarkar Raj has been filmed exceptionally well with superb performances. Amitabh Bachchan, expectedly, comes up with a terrific performance. He's as ferocious as a wounded tiger in the finale and takes the film to great heights. Abhishek Bachchan is cast opposite the finest actor of this country, yet he sparkles in every sequence. Aishwarya Rai Bachchan is fabulous and delivers her career-best performance."[6] Sify gave a two-star rating and said, "The only reason you might want to catch this is the performance level and the relatively good ending. Amitabh Bachchan is dependably good. Abhishek holds his own, though with a more filled-out character, he could have taken it to another level. Aishwarya is superb in the emotional scenes, but again, is let down by the unforgivably simplistic character sketching."[7] Rediff which also gave a two-star rating noted "This is a watchable".[8]
The Economic Times gave a three star rating out of five and said "Sarkar Raj clearly gains major marks for its clever culmination, which was so much lacking from recent RGV products. The considerately and crisply penned dialogues by Prashant Pandey add a lot of insight to the scenes and depth to the characterizations."[9] Anupama Chopra from NDTV stated "What works here are the performances. The Bachchans-all three of them are in fine form. Despite wonderful performances and nicely done dramatic moments, Sarkar Raj doesn't pack the visceral punch of Sarkar".[10]
Nikhat Kazmi of The Times Of India rated the film with three and a half stars and applauded the lead performances saying "This film carries the sequel forward without losing out on the gritty feel and retains the charisma of the central characters".[11] Critic Nathan Southern of MSN gave four stars citing that "Sarkar Raj thrives on its narrative cliffhangers, that the film never once fails to engage the audience; the premise and its characters are rock-solid, its dialogue convincing, and its suspense palpable. Varma and scriptwriter Prashant Pandey pack such unusual twists and double-crosses into the tale that even the most hardened and seasoned moviegoer will find the conclusion impossible to foresee".[12]
Sarkar Raj grossed almost 34 crores in India[13] and over $1 million in the USA. The Filmfare Magazine (August 2008 issue) and other media declared it to be among the only four hits in the first half of 2008 (along with Race, Jodhaa Akbar and Jannat).
The producers reported that the movie had earned more than the entire grossings of its hit prequel in its first two weeks itself. According to the year end report of the The Free Trade Journal, Sarkar Raj was the seventh highest all-India grosser of the year after (in order) Ghajini, Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi, Golmaal Returns, Singh Is Kinng, Dostana and Race. The trade magazine also reported high international collections. It was declared a super hit grosser at the box office.
Nominated
- Screen Award for Best Film (2009)
- Screen Award for Best Director (2009)- Ram Gopal Varma
- Screen Award for Best Actor (2009)- Amitabh Bachchan
- Screen Award for Best Actor In A Supporting Role (2009)- Abhishek Bachchan
- Screen Award for Best Actor In A Negative Role (Male/Female) (2009)- Dilip Prabhawalkar
- Screen Award for Best Background Music (2009)- Amar Mohile
Nominated
- Stardust Award for Star Of The Year - Male (2009)- Amitabh Bachchan
- Stardust Award for The New Menace (2009)- Rajesh Shringapure
- Stardust Award for Best Director (2009)- Ram Gopal Varma
- Stardust Award for Star Of The Year - Male (2009)- Abhishek Bachchan
- Stardust Award for Star Of The Year - Female (2009)- Aishwarya Rai
Nominated
- Filmfare Award for Best Actor In Supporting Role (2009)- Abhishek Bachchan
Nominated
- IIFA Award for Best Actor In Supporting Role (2009)- Abhishek Bachchan
The music is composed by Bapi and Tutul. Lyrics are penned by Sandeep Nath and Prashant Pandey.
|
1. |
"Chaah Bhanwar Trishna" |
Sandeep Nath |
Sunayana Sarkar Dasgupta |
3:30 |
2. |
"Jalte Rawan" |
Prashant Pandey |
Abhishek Nailwal |
3:02 |
3. |
"Jalwa Re Jalwa" |
Prashant Pandey |
Kailash Kher, Sunayana Sarkar Dasgupta |
4:37 |
4. |
"Jhini Jhini" |
Prashant Pandey |
Roop Kumar Rathod, Shweta Pandit |
4:04 |
5. |
"Saam Daam" |
Sandeep Nath |
Kailash Kher |
3:29 |
6. |
"Saher Saher Ke Hajharon Sawal" |
Sandeep Nath |
Arun Ingle, Bapi, Tutul |
2:49 |
7. |
"Subah" |
Prashant Pandey |
Pamela Jain |
3:43 |
8. |
"The Govinda - Chant" |
Sandeep Nath |
Kailash Kher, Bapi, Tutul |
2:59 |
9. |
"The Govinda - Groove" |
Sandeep Nath |
Bapi, Tutul, Jankee Parikh |
3:03 |
10. |
"The Govinda - Theme" |
Prashant Pandey |
Bapi, Tutul |
3:34 |
11. |
"The Govinda - Trance" |
Sandeep Nath |
Bapi, Tutul, Jankee Parikh |
3:25 |
12. |
"The Jalwa - Club Mix" |
Sandeep Nath |
Kailash Kher, Sunayana Sarkar Dasgupta |
4:47 |
Debutante Rajesh Shringarpore's character of Sanjay Somji was also reportedly based on Raj Thackeray, the estranged nephew of political leader Bal Thackeray; thus furthering the general viewpoint that the series is based on Bal Thackeray and his family. Apparently Ram Gopal Verma had even shown Raj Thackeray rushes of the film to allay his fears of being wrongly portrayed.[14]
In 2009 Ram Gopal Verma stated that he had no plans finalized for the third installment in the series and shelved Sarkar 3.[15] However in 2012 it was reported that the sequel would go ahead once again and currently is in the post production stage where the script is being written. The film is expected to go on floors at the end of 2012, primarily with the same cast of Amitabh and Abhishek Bachchan although his character dies at the end of this film and also Aishwarya Rai is to be left out.[16][17]
- ^ "Bachchans unplugged". India Today. http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/Bachchans+unplugged/1/9006.html. Retrieved May 29, 2008.
- ^ "Top Lifetime Grossers Worldwide (IND Rs)". Box Office India. http://www.boxofficeindia.com/showProd.php?itemCat=312&catName=TGlmZXRpbWU=. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ "Sarkar Raj : Box Office India". Bollywood Hungama. http://www.bollywoodhungama.com/movies/boxoffice/12651/index.html. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ IndiaFM (18 July 2008). "Apne dhandhe ki jaat hi aisi hai:RGV". Sify. http://www.sify.com/movies/apne-dhandhe-ki-jaat-hi-aisi-hai-rgv-news-bollywood-kkftuScabgc.html. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ "Sarkar Raj makes it to the Academy of Motion Pictures library". Bollywood Hungama. 2 August 2008. http://www.bollywoodhungama.com/news/2008/08/02/11750/index.html. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Adarsh, Taran (5 June 2008). "Sarkar Raj : Movie Review by Taran Adarsh". Bollywood Hungama. http://www.bollywoodhungama.com/movies/review/12651/index.html. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Chopra, Sonia. "Movie Review : Sarkar Raj (Review)". Sify. http://www.sify.com/movies/bollywood/review.php?id=14688419&ctid=5&cid=2425. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Sen, Raja (6 June 2008). "Sarkaricature Raj". Rediff. http://www.rediff.com/movies/2008/jun/06sarkarr.htm. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Malani, Gaurav (6 June 2008). "Sarkar Raj: Movie Review". The Economic Times. http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2008-06-06/news/28488082_1_ram-gopal-varma-abhishek-bachchan-ramu. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Chopra, Anupama (6 June 2008). "Movie Review: Sarkar Raj". NDTVMovies.com. http://movies.ndtv.com/movie_review.aspx?lang=hindi&id=312&moviename=+Sarkar+Raj. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Kazmi, Nikhat (6 June 2008). "Sarkar Raj". The Times of India. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/movie-reviews/hindi/Sarkar-Raj/moviereview/3107474.cms. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Southern, Nathan. "Sarkar Raj : Critics' Reviews". MSN Movies. http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-critic-reviews/sarkar-raj/. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ "All India 2008 (Figures in INR Crore)". Boxofficeindia.com. http://boxofficeindia.com/showProd.php?itemCat=218&catName=MjAwOA==. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ Shah, Kunal (2008-05-09). "Why Raj wants to see Sarkar...". Mumbai Mirror. http://www.mumbaimirror.com/net/mmpaper.aspx?page=article§id=30&contentid=20080509200805090206278538342fe46. Retrieved 2008-06-05.
- ^ Iyer, Meena (21 July 2009). "Sarkar 3 shelved!". The Times of India. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/bollywood/news-interviews/Sarkar-3-shelved/iplarticleshow/4801701.cms. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ "Amitabh, Abhishek to star in Sarkar 3". Times of India. 26 April 2012. http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-04-26/news-interviews/31399630. Retrieved 02 May 2012.
- ^ "'Sarkar 3' on cards, sans Aishwarya: Ram Gopal Varma". IBN Live. April 26 2012. http://ibnlive.in.com/news/sarkar-3-on-cards-sans-aishwarya-rgv/252284-8-66.html. Retrieved 02 May 2012.