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Lagaan (लगान) 2001

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BannerAamir Khan Productions
DirectorAshutosh Gowariker
WriterAshutosh Gowariker
Producer Aamir Khan , Mansoor Khan
Production executiveNikhat Hegde
Music DirectorA.R. Rahman
CinematographyAnil Mehta
Film EditingBallu Saluja
Art DirectorNitin Desai
Camera OperatorRafey Mehmood, Sudhir Palsane
Assistant CameramenChandi Das, Rajesh Khale
Playback Singers Udit Narayan , Sukhwinder Singh, Alka Yagnik, Shankar Mahadevan, Shaan, Srinivas, Asha Bhosle, Vaishali Samant, Vasundhara Das, A.R. Rahman, Lata Mangeshkar, Sadhana Sargam, Anuradha Sriram
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CharacterActor/Actress
Bhuvan Aamir Khan
GauriGracy Singh
Elizabeth RussellRachel Shelley
Captain Andrew RussellPaul Blackthorne
YashodamaiSuhasini Mulay
Rajah Puran SinghKulbhushan Kharbanda
BhuraRaghuvir Yadav
MukhiyaRajendra Gupta
GuranRajesh Vivek
IshwarShri Vallabh Vyas
Ram SinghJaved Khan
IsmaiRajendranath Zutshi
ArjanAkhilendra Mishra
GoliDaya Shankar Pandey
LakhaYashpal Sharma
BaghaAmin Hajee
KachraAditya Lakhia
Shambukaka A.K. Hangal
Col. BoyerJohn Rowe
Maj. WarrenDavid Gant
Maj. CottonJeremy Child
Lt. SmithBen Nealon
NamdeoAnupam Shyam
RamprasadRaja Awasthi
HarikakaPramatesh Mehta
KaziBhim Vakani
TipuAmin Gazi
JigniAnu Ansari
KesaryaParveen Bano
YardleyChris England
BurtonHoward Lee
BrooksSimon Holmes
WillisRay Eves
NorthJon House
HarrissonNeil Patrick
WessonJamie Whitby Coles
BensonBarry Hart
FlynnAlex Shirtcliff
NarratorAmitabh Bachchan
SardarPradeep Singh Rawat
Lagaan takes place in the town of Champaner, now in the State of Gujarat, in western India during the height of the British Empire in India in 1893. Captain Andrew Russell (Paul Blackthorne), the commanding officer of the Champaner cantonment, has imposed high taxes ("lagaan") on people from the local villages which they are unable to pay due to a prolonged drought. Led by Bhuvan (Aamir Khan), the villagers beg Raja Puran Singh (Kulbhushan Kharbanda) to help them. He tells them that much to his regret, he is also bound by British law.

It is after their visit to the Raja that the people of the village first witness a cricket match. Bhuvan mocks the game and gets into a fight with one of the British officers. Taking an instant dislike to Bhuvan, Russell offers to cancel the taxes of the whole province for three years if the villagers can beat his men in a game of cricket. If the villagers lose, however, they will have to pay three times the amount of their normal taxes. Bhuvan accepts this wager on the behalf of all villages without their consent. When the other villagers find out about the bet, they are furious with Bhuvan. He argues that it is important for everyone to fight against British rule.

Bhuvan thus begins to prepare the villagers for the match. He initially finds only five people willing to join the team. He is aided in his efforts by Russell's sister Elizabeth (Rachel Shelley) who feels that her brother has mistreated the people in the villages. As she teaches them the rules of the game, she falls in love with Bhuvan, much to the anguish of Gauri (Gracy Singh) who is also in love with him. After Bhuvan reassures Gauri of his feelings for her, the woodcutter Lakha (Yashpal Sharma) becomes enraged as he is also in love with Gauri. In an attempt to discredit Bhuvan, Lakha offers himself as a spy for Russell and joins the villager's team in order to destroy it. Eventually, as the villagers realise that winning equals freedom, and as a few of them are insulted by the British, they join the team. Still short one player, Bhuvan also invites an untouchable, Kachra (Aditya Lakhia), who can bowl leg spin. The villagers, conditioned by longterm prejudice against untouchables, refuse to play if Kachra joins the team. Bhuvan chastises the villagers, leading them to accept Kachra.

The second half of the film focuses on the match itself. On the first day, Russell wins the toss and elects to bat, giving the British officers a strong start. Bhuvan brings Kachra into the match only to find that Kachra has lost his ability to spin the ball. In addition, as part of his agreement with Russell, Lakha deliberately drops many catches. During the evening, however, Elizabeth sees Lakha meeting with her brother. She races to the village and informs Bhuvan of Lakha's deception. Rather than allow the villagers to kill him, Bhuvan offers Lakha the chance to redeem himself.

The next day as part of his promise to Bhuvan, Lakha takes a diving one-handed catch. However the British score almost 300 runs, losing only three wickets by the lunch break. Kachra is brought back to bowl and takes a hat-trick which sparks the British batting collapse. The villagers soon start their innings. Bhuvan and Deva (a Sikh, who has played cricket earlier when he was a British sepoy) give their team a solid start. Deva misses out on his half-century when a straight-drive from Bhuvan ricochets off the bowler's hand onto the stumps at the non-striker's end, while Deva was backing up too far. When Lakha comes on to bat, he is hit by a bouncer on his head, and he falls on to his stumps. Other batsmen get out trying to score a boundary off each delivery. Ismail (Raj Zutshi), a good batsman, retires hurt as he is hit on his leg. The villager's team ends the day with 5 batsmen out of action with less than half of the required runs on board.

On the third and final day, Bhuvan passes his century, while most of the later wickets fall. Ismail returns to bat with the help of a runner and reduces the required runs to a gettable total. The game comes down to the last over with Kachra on strike. With one ball remaining and the team down 5 runs, Kachra knocks the ball a short distance, managing only a single. However, the umpire signals no ball and Bhuvan returns to bat, and swings extremely hard at the next ball. Captain Russell backpedals and catches the ball, leading him to believe the British team has won. However, Russell caught the ball beyond the boundary which gives 6 runs, and the win, to Bhuvan's team. At that moment, the drought ends as a rainstorm erupts.

Bhuvan's defeat of the British team leads to the disbanding of the humiliated cantonment. In addition, Russell is forced to pay the taxes for the whole province and is transferred to Central Africa. After realizing that Bhuvan loves Gauri, Elizabeth returns to London. Heartbroken, she remains unmarried for the rest of her life. Bhuvan marries Gauri.
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Release date15-June-2001
Budget₹ 25 crore
Revenue₹ 57.80 crore
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Main article: List of accolades received by Lagaan
Aamir Khan and Gowariker went to Los Angeles to generate publicity for the Academy Awards. Khan said, "We just started showing it to whoever we could, even the hotel staff." About India's official entry to the 2002 Oscars, The Daily Telegraph wrote, "A Bollywood film that portrays the British in India as ruthless sadists and Mafia-style crooks has been chosen as Delhi's official entry to the Academy Awards."[57] It added that the film was expected to win the nomination.

On 12 February 2002, Lagaan was nominated for the best foreign language film at the Academy Award nominations ceremony. After the nomination, Khan reacted by saying, "To see the name of the film and actually hear it being nominated was very satisfying". Post-nomination reactions poured in from several parts of the world. The USA Today wrote "Hooray for Bollywood, and India's Lagaan". With Sony Pictures Classics distributing the film and Oscar-winning director Baz Luhrmann praising it, Lagaan had a chance to win. The BBC commented that the nomination raised Bollywood hopes that Indian films would become more popular in the US. In India, the nomination was celebrated with news reports about a win bringing in "a great boost for the Indian film industry" and "a Bharat Ratna for Aamir Khan and the status of a 'national film' for Lagaan".

When Lagaan lost the award to the Bosnian film No Man's Land, there was disappointment in India. Khan said, "Certainly we were disappointed. But the thing that really kept us in our spirits was that the entire country was behind us." Filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt criticised the "American film industry" as "insular and the foreign category awards were given just for the sake of it." Gowarikar added that "Americans must learn to like our films".

The film won a number of national awards including seven National Film Awards,nine Filmfare Awards, nine Screen Awards and ten IIFA Awards. Apart from these major awards, it also won awards at other national and international ceremonies.
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One Response to Lagaan (लगान) 2001

  1. Sandeep December 21, 2012 at 2:31 am #

    I love india.

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