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Pati Patni Aur Woh (Hindi: , English: The Husband, Wife And

Mistress) is a 1978 Hindi movie produced and directed by B. R. Chopra. The film
stars Sanjeev Kumar, Vidya Sinha, Ranjeeta Kaur, and in guest
appearances Rishi Kapoor, Neetu Singhand Parveen Babi.
Adam & Eve live a worry-free life in paradise. They are instructed not to eat an

apple. One day they cannot resist the temptation, and both take a bite out of it.
Nature takes offense and expels them from heaven. They are forced to live on
Earth as ordinary human beings - together with the apple that has followed them.
Now Adam is called Ranjeet Chaddha, a Sales Manager, and Eve is called Sharda.
Both meet, fall in love, and get married. Both live in perfect harmony and soon
become parents of a baby boy. Then one day Sharda sees signs of a lipstick on
her husband's kerchief, when she questions, he clarifies and Sharda is satisfied
with his explanation. What Sharda does not know that Ranjeet is carrying on with
his pretty Secretary, Nirmala Deshpande, who he has convinced that his wife is
seriously ill, is dying, and will marry her after her passing. Watch how hilarious
events unfold and prove that Ranjeet is a liar and a two-timer, watch him repent...
but hold it! Not for long!Sanjeev Kumar

Vidya Sinha

Ranjeeta Kaur

Asrani

Parveen Babi

Nana Palsikar

Om Shivpuri

Rishi Kapoor

Neetu Singh

as

as

as

Ranjeet Chhadha

Sharda Chhadha
as

Nirmala Deshpande

Abdul Karim Durrani


as

as

as

Nirmala's Nanaji

Sharda's Father

as

as

Neeta (Guest appearance)

Singer (Cameo of song "Tere Naam Tere Naam")

Singer (Cameo of song "Tere Naam Tere Naam")

Songs
No
.

Title

Playback

Lengt
h

1. "Ladki Cycle Wali"

Mahendra Kapoor, Asha Bhosle

2. "Na Aaj Tha Na Kal Tha"

Kishore Kumar

3. "Tere Naam Tere Naam"

Mahendra Kapoor

4. "Thande Thande Paani Se

Mahendra Kapoor, Asha

Nahana"

Bhosle, Poornima

Tamas (film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tamas
Directed by

Govind Nihalani

Produced by

Lalit M. Bijlani
Govind Nihalani
Freni Variava

Screenplay by

Govind Nihalani

Based on

Tamas

Starring

by Bhisham Sahni
Om Puri
Deepa Sahi
Bhisham Sahni
Surekha Sikri

Music by

Vanraj Bhatia

Cinematography

V. K. Murthy

Edited by

Sutanu Gupta

Distributed by

Blaze Entertainment Pvt Ltd

Release dates

1988

Running time

274 minutes

Country

India

Language

Hindi

Govind Nihalani

Ca
, -
, -




,
,

st[edit]

Om Puri as Nathu

Deepa Sahi as Kammo

Uttara Baokar as Jasbir

Amrish Puri as Sardar Teja Singh

A.K. Hangal as Bakshi ji

Manohar Singh as Hayat Baksh

Bhisham Sahni as Harnam Singh

Dina Pathak as Banto

K. K. Raina as Mirdad

Iftekhar as Ehsan Ali

Surekha Sikri as Rajo

Pankaj Kapur as thekedaar

Saeed Jaffrey as Karim Khan

Awards[edit]
Award

National
Film Awards

Ceremon
y

1988

Category

Nominee

Outcom
e

Nargis Dutt Award for Best


Feature Film on National
Integration

Govind
Nihalani

Won[7]

Best Supporting Actress

Surekha
Sikri

Won[8]

Best Music Direction

Vanraj
Bhatia

Won[9]

Devdas (2002 Hindi film)


Box office

99 crore (US$15 million)[2]

Shahrukh

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Khan as Devdas Mukherjee

Devdas is a 2002 Indian romantic drama film directed by Sanjay Leela


Bhansali and based on the 1917 Sharat Chandra
Chattopadhyay novellaDevdas. This is the third Hindi version and the first
film version of the story in Hindi done in colour.[3][4] The film follows Devdas
(Shah Rukh Khan), a wealthy law graduate in the early 1900s, who returns

from his studies in London to marry his childhood sweetheart, Paro


(Aishwarya Rai). However, the rejection of this marriage by his own family
sparks his descent into alcohol, ultimately leading to his emotional
deterioration. The film was screened retrospective, during the
2014 International Film Festival of India in the Celebrating Dance in Indian

cinema section.[5] Devdas was declared a hit in India by Box Office


Indiaand won the Filmfare Award for Best Film. The film also won
five National Awards and a further nine Filmfare Awards, tied with Dilwale
Dulhania Le Jayenge with the most Filmfare Awards any film had won at
the time (later beaten in 2005 by Bhansali's Black).

It was received well by western audiences alike and was nominated for
theBAFTA Award for Best Foreign Language Film and was also India's
submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It was
ranked #74 inEmpire magazines "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" in
2010.[6] Time Magazine named Devdas as the best movie of 2002 among all
the movies released around the world in 2002.[7] The film was recently
included in Time Magazine's top 10 movies of the millennium worldwide. [8]

The acting was seen by many as the primary factor for the film's success,
withShah Rukh Khan, Aishwarya Rai and Madhuri Dixit all winning Filmfare
Awards for their performances. The film's success was also attributed to
the dance performances, with Dixit's "Maar Daala" considered one of the
most iconic of her career and the song "Dola Re Dola" becoming a hit due
to the unique dance duet between Aishwarya Rai and Madhuri Dixit, two of
the leading actresses of the epoch. At the time of its release, Devdas was
the most expensive Bollywood film ever produced, with a reported budget
of 50 crore(US$7.5 million).[1] The film was a major commercial success in
India and abroad, becoming the highest grossing Indian film of the year.

Devdas

Awards[edit]

Devdas was India's entry for Best Foreign Language Film at the Oscars in
2003.
The film was also screened at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival

Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sahib Bibi Aur Gulam

Directed by

Abrar Alvi

Produced by

Guru Dutt

Written by

Abrar Alvi

Based on

Shaheb Bibi Golam

Bimal Mitra

by Bimal Mitra

Starring

Meena Kumari
Guru Dutt
Waheeda Rehman
Rehman
D.K. Sapru
Minoo Mumtaz

Music by

Hemant Kumar

Cinematography

V. K. Murthy

Edited by

Y.G.Chawhan

Running time

155 Minutes

Country

India

Language

Hindi

The film opens at the ruins of an old haveli in Calcutta, where a group of
labourers are busy pulling down what remains. When the workers break off for
lunch, the overseer (Guru Dutt) wanders through the haveli. As he sits at a place
there begins a flashback to the end of the 19th century.
The lower-class and educated Bhoothnath arrives in colonial Calcutta looking for
work. He lives in the grand haveli of the Choudhurys, a family of zamindars with
his Brother-in-Law. He works at the Mohini Sindoor factory run by Subinay Babu,
a dedicated member of the Brahmo Samaj. Subinay Babu's daughter Jaba
(Waheeda Rehman) is amused by Bhoothnath whom she considers an
unsophisticated rustic. Bhoothnath becomes fascinated with the goings-on in the

haveli and every night observes the decadent lifestyle of the Choudhury
brothers.

Chhoti Bahu (Meena Kumari) becomes a desperate alcoholic to make


zamindar Rehman stay at home, inSahib Bibi Aur Gulam

One night the servant, Bansi, takes Bhoothnath to meet the younger zamindar's
(Rehman) wife Chhoti Bahu (Meena Kumari) who implores him to bring her Mohini
Sindoor believing it will keep her unfaithful husband home. Bhoothnath is struck
by her beauty and sadness and inadvertently becomes Chhoti Bahu's secret
confidante. A bomb explodes in the marketplace and Bhoothnath is injured in the
ensuing crossfire between freedom fighters and British soldiers. Jaba looks after
him.
Chhoti Bahu's repeated attempts to appease her husband fail until she becomes
his drinking companion to keep him by her side. Jaba's marriage is finalised with
Supavitra (a member of Bramho Samaj) but after her father's death she declined
the marriage. Bhoothnath becomes a trainee architect and goes away to work on
a training project. After his return he find the haveli in partial ruins. Chhoti Bahu
is now a desperate alcoholic and her husband, paralysed. Meanwhile he learns
that he and Jaba were betrothed as children. One night Chhoti Bahu asks
Bhoothnath to accompany her to a nearby shrine to pray for her ailing husband.
Their conversation is heard by the elder zamindar, Majhle Babu, who suspects
that Chhoti Bahu is having an affair with Bhootnath (though really it was not). He
orders his henchmen to chase them. As Bhoothnath and Chhoti Bahu travel in the
carriage, it is stopped by the henchmen. Bhoothnath is knocked unconscious and
Chhoti Bahu is abducted. When he wakes up in hospital, Bhoothnath is told
Chhoti Bahu has disappeared and the younger zamindar is dead. The flashback
ends.
Bhoothnath's workers inform him a skeleton is found buried in the ruins of the
haveli. From the jewellery on the corpse, Bhoothnath realises it is the remains of
Chhoti Bahu.

The last scene shows a nostalgic Bhoothnath riding away on a carriage with
Jaba, who is now his wife. In this, the filmed version departs significantly from
the novel, where Jaba and Bhoothnath do not get a happy ending.
The film also depicts the decline of the old landed zamindari families of Bengal
during the 19th century.

Parineeta (1953 film)


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Parineeta
Directed by

Bimal Roy

Produced by

Ashok Kumar

Written by

Dialogue: Vrajendra Gaur,

Screenplay by

Bimal Roy, Asit Sen, Moni

Nabendu Ghosh

Bhattacharjee, Nabendu
Ghosh

Based on

Parineeta
by Sarat Chandra
Chattopadhyay

Starring

Ashok Kumar,

Cinematograph

Kamal Bose

Meena Kumari

y
Edited by

Hrishikesh Mukherjee

Release dates

1953

Language

Hindi

Parineeta (Hindi: , translation: Married Woman) is a 1953 Bollywood film


starring Ashok Kumar and Meena Kumari, based upon the 1914 Bengali novel
of the same name by Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay, which was earlier filmed in
Bengali. The film was directed by Bimal Roy. This version of the film is
considered by many to be the most faithful adaptation of the novella, particularly
due to Meena Kumari's interpretation of the role of Lalita.

Story [edit]
Lalita is an orphaned niece of an impoverished clerk named Gurucharan. She
falls in love with Shekhar, son of their rich landlord neighbor. Gurucharan has to
mortgage his house to Shekhars father in order to get one of his daughters
married as he is heavily debt ridden. Shekhars father, often chides him about his
overdue loan and a day comes when, completely pressed on all sides,
Gurucharan is forced to take advantage of the altruistic offer of an interest free
loan made by a wealthy young man named Girin. This gives rise to an ugly
misunderstanding that Lalita has been "sold" to Girin. What happens thereafter
forms the gripping rest of this great story of perfect love. Beautiful part of this
movie is dialogue and communication between Meena Kumari and Ashok Kumar.

Cast[edit]

Ashok Kumar as Shekhar Rai

Meena Kumari as Lalita

Asit Baran as Girin Babu

Sheetal (Baby Sheela)

Nazir Hussain as Gurcharan Babu

Badri Prasad as Nabin Rai

Pratima Devi as Shekhar's aunt

Rekha Mallick

Manju

Manorama

Awards[edit]

1954 Filmfare Best Director Award - Bimal Roy

1954 Filmfare Best Actress Award - Meena Kumari

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Junoon (1978 film)


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article does not cite any references or sources. Please


help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2012)

Junoon

DVD cover

Directed by

Shyam Benegal

Produced by

Shashi Kapoor

Written by

Shyam Benegal (screenplay)


Satyadev Dubey(dialogues)
Ismat Chugtai (dialogues)
Ruskin Bond (novella, A Flight

of Pigeons)

Shashi Kapoor

Starring

Shabana Azmi
Jennifer Kendal
Naseeruddin Shah

Narrated by

Amrish Puri

Music by

Vanraj Bhatia

Cinematograph

Govind Nihalani

y
Edited by

Bhanudas Divakar

Release dates

December 14,1978

Running time

141 minutes

Country

India

Language

Hindi
English

Junoon (Hindi: , translation: The Obsession) is a critically acclaimed and


award-winning 1978 Indian Hindi language film produced by Shashi Kapoor and
directed by Shyam Benegal. The film is based on Ruskin Bond's fictional
novella, A Flight of Pigeons, set around the Indian Rebellion of 1857. The film
also had award-winning soundtrack, composed by Vanraj Bhatia, and
cinematography by Govind Nihalani.
Its cast included Shashi Kapoor, his wife Jennifer Kendal, Nafisa Ali, Tom
Alter, Shabana Azmi, Kulbhushan Kharbanda,Naseeruddin Shah, Deepti
Naval, Pearl Padamsee and Sushma Seth. The film also featured Shashi and
Jennifer's children Karan Kapoor, Kunal Kapoor, and Sanjana Kapoor,
Contents
[hide]

1 Plot

1.1 Cast

2 Awards

2.1 1979 National Film Awards awards

2.2 1980 Filmfare Awards awards

2.3 1980 Filmfare Awards nominations

2.4 Recognition

3 Soundtrack

4 External links

Plot[edit]
The story is set around the Indian Mutiny of 1857. Javed Khan (Shashi Kapoor) is
a feckless feudal chieftain with a Muslim Pathan heritage, whose world revolves
around breeding carrier pigeons. His younger brother-in-law, Sarfaraz Khan
(Naseeruddin Shah) is politically awakened and actively plots the fight against
the British. Freedom fighters attack the local British administrators while they
are in Sunday Worship at Church, massacring them all. Miriam Labadoor, Jennifer
Kendal) manages to escape with her daughter, Ruth (Nafisa Ali) and mother. The
three women seek refuge with the wealthy Hindu family of Lala Ramjimal
(Kulbhushan Kharbanda). Lala is torn between his loyalty for India and his
privileged position under the British. However, matters are taken out of his hand
by Javed Khan who barges into Lala's house and forcibly takes Ruth and her
family to his own house. This leads to jealousy on part of his wife, Firdaus
(Shabana Azmi) and anger on part of his brother, who ultimately gives in to the
Pathan tradition of offering hospitality and sanctuary (Nanawatai) even to
uninvited guests. Various situations ensue due to cultural misunderstandings in
the domestic routine of the Muslim household with its new English guests. Javed
falls in love with Ruth, and wants to marry her but is opposed bitterly by her
mother. Noticing intense feelings of Javed for her daughter Ruth, Miriam
Labadoor (mother) cleverly makes an agreement with Javed that she would only
give her daughters hand to Javed if British were defeated. At first instance,
Javed is hesitant but accepts the offer when again Miriam asks him if he has
misgivings in his war against the British. There are simmerings of a love affair
under the watchful suspicious eyes of Firdaus.
Meanwhile the Rebellion runs into problems and the British are defeating the illorganized Indian forces. In a stormy scene, Sarfaraz destroys Javed's pigeon
coops and sets his pets free after he finds out that Indian forces have lost the
Battle for Delhi. There is a delayed recognition by Javed of his subjugated
identity, colonised by the British. Sarfaraz dies in a battle against the British.

The Labadoors return to the protection of the re-deployed British contingent,


smuggled by Firdaus, who only wants to save her marriage. Javed finds out that
the Labadoors have sought sanctuary in the church and rushes there to meet
Ruth one last time. Surprisingly, Ruth comes out and expresses her feelings for
Javed against her mothers will. However, Javed honourably keeps his word and
the promise he had made with Miriam Labadoor and leaves the church without
Ruth. The movie ends here with the voiceover that Javed was martyred fighting
the British while Ruth and her mother return to England. Ruth dies fifty five years
later, unwed.

Cast [edit]

Shashi Kapoor as Javed Khan

Nafisa Ali as Ruth Labadoor

Jennifer Kendal as Miriam Labadoor (Ruth's Mom)

Naseeruddin Shah as Sarfaraz Khan, Javed's brother-in-law

Shabana Azmi as Firdaus, Javed's wife

Ismat Chughtai as Miriam's Mom

Kulbhushan Kharbanda as Lala Ramjimal

Sanjana Kapoor

Kunal Kapoor

Karan Kapoor

Benjamin Gilani as Rashid Khan

Sushma Seth as Javed's aunt

Tom Alter as Ruth's father

Amrish Puri as the Narrator

Geoffrey Kendal

Deepti Naval as Rashid's wife

Pearl Padamsee as bitter woman

Awards[edit]
1979 National Film Awards awards [edit]

Best Feature Film in Hindi Shashi Kapoor

Best Cinematography Govind Nihalani

Best Audiography Hitendra Ghosh

1980 Filmfare Awards awards [edit]

Best Film Shashi Kapoor

Best Director- Shyam Benegal

Best Dialogues Pandit Satyadev Dubey

Best Editing Bhanudas Divakar

Best Cinematography Govind Nihalani

Best Sound Recording Hitendra Ghosh

1980 Filmfare Awards nominations [edit]

Best Supporting Actor Naseeruddin Shah

Best Supporting Actress Jennifer Kendal

Pinjar (film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pinjar

Directed by

Chandra Prakash Dwivedi

Screenplay by

Chandra Prakash Dwivedi

Story by

Amrita Pritam

Based on

Pinjar

Starring

Urmila Matondkar

by Amrita Pritam

Manoj Bajpai
Sanjay Suri
Kulbhushan Kharbanda
Isha Koppikar
Farida Jalal
Sandali Sinha
Priyanshu Chatterjee

Music by

Uttam Singh

Cinematography

Santosh Thundiyil

Edited by

Ballu Saluja

Release dates

24 October 2003

Running time

188 minutes

Country

India

Language

Hindi/Urdu
Punjabi

Pinjar (Hindi: , Urdu: , Punjabi: ; English:Cage) is a 2003


Indian period drama film directed by Chandra Prakash Dwivedi. The movie is
about the Hindu-Muslim problems during the partition of India. The film is based
on a Punjabi novel of the same name, written by Amrita Pritam.[1] Urmila
Matondkar, Manoj Bajpai and Sanjay Suri are in the lead roles. Besides critical
acclaim, the film also won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film on
National Integration.

Cast[edit]

Puro (later, Hamida): Urmila Matondkar

Rashid: Manoj Bajpai

Ramchand: Sanjay Suri

Lajjo: Sandali Sinha

Trilok: Priyanshu Chatterjee

Rajjo: Isha Koppikar

Tara (Puro's Mother): Lilette Dubey

Mohanlal (Puro's Father): Kulbhushan Kharbanda

Shyamlal (Ramchand's Father): Alok Nath

Ramchand's Mother: Farida Jalal

Pagali: Seema Biswas

Rahim's Aunt: Dina Pathak

Rahim's Mother: Sudha Shivpuri

Rahim's wife: Parveena Bano

Hukamchand: Pradeep Kukreja

Hukamchand's Wife: Salima Raza

Managing Director: Ghulam Arif

Rashid's Brother: Rohitash Gaud

2004: Filmfare Best Art Direction Award:Munish


Sappal

2004: National Film Award - Special Jury Award: Manoj


Bajpa

Awards[edit]

3 Idiots
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

3 Idiots

Theatrical release poster

Directed by

Rajkumar Hirani

Produced by

Vidhu Vinod Chopra

Written by

Abhijat Joshi

Screenplay by

Abhijat Joshi

Rajkumar Hirani

Rajkumar Hirani
Vidhu Vinod Chopra

Based on

Five Point Someone What


not to do at IIT!
by Chetan Bhagat

Starring

Aamir Khan
Kareena Kapoor Khan
Madhavan
Sharman Joshi
Boman Irani

Omi Vaidya
Narrated by

R. Madhavan

Music by

Shantanu Moitra

Cinematograph

C. K. Muraleedharan

y
Edited by

Rajkumar Hirani

Production

Vinod Chopra Films

company
Distributed by

Reliance Entertainment

Release dates

25 December 2009

Running time

171 minutes[1]

Country

India

Language

Hindi[1]

Budget

55 crore (equivalent
to81 crore or US$12 million
in 2015)[2]

Box office

392 crore (equivalent


to579 crore or US$87 million
in 2015)[3]

3 Idiots (Hindi: ) is a 2009 Indian coming of age comedy-drama film cowritten, edited, and directed by Rajkumar Hiraniand produced by Vidhu Vinod
Chopra. Abhijat Joshi wrote the screenplay. It was loosely adapted from the
novel Five Point Someone by Chetan Bhagat. The film stars Aamir Khan, Kareena
Kapoor, R. Madhavan, Sharman Joshi, Omi Vaidya, Parikshit Sahni and Boman
Irani.
Upon release, the film broke all opening box office records in India. It was the
highest-grossing film in its opening weekend in India and had the highest
opening day collections for a Indian film. It also held the record for the highest
net collections in the first week for a Bollywood film. It also had a record footfall

of 31,785,000.[4] It also became one of the few Indian films to become a major
success in East Asian markets such as China,[5] eventually bringing its overseas
total to more than US$65 million the highest-grossing Bollywood film of all
time in overseas markets, before being overtaken by Bajrangi Bhaijaan (2015).
The film is distinctive for featuring real inventions by little-known people in
India's backyards. The brains behind the innovations were Remya Jose, a
student from Kerala, who created the exercise-bicycle/washing-machine;
Mohammad Idris, a barber from Meerut district in Uttar Pradesh, who invented a
bicycle-powered horse clipper; and Jahangir Painter, a painter from Maharashtra,
who made the scooter-powered flour mill.[6] This film was remade
in Tamil as Nanban (2012) which also received critical praise and commercial
success.[7][8] It has also been announced that there will be a Chinese remake of
the film produced by Stephen Chowand that there are plans for
a Hollywood remake produced in the United States.[9] A Telugu remake was
planned despite Nanbanhaving a Telugu dubbed version titled Snehitudu.

Cast[edit]

Aamir Khan as Ranchoddas Shamaldas Chanchad/Phunsukh Wangdu One


of a group of three friends in the university. He went missing after graduation
and his two friends traveled across India looking for him, while telling stories
of their time in engineering college together. Rancho, as a student, was
intelligent and had a brilliant personal philosophy. He rallied against unjust
systems of teaching. At the end of the film, he is shown to be a famous
scientist and entrepreneur.

R. Madhavan as Farhan Qureshi the film's narrator and a friend of Rancho


and Raju. His father wanted him to be an engineer despite his lack of interest
in the career. He is now an accomplished wildlife photographer.

Sharman Joshi as Raju Rastogi. He comes from an impoverished family


with a mother who is a retired school teacher and a paralyzed father who had
been a postman. The family is so poor that they can't afford the car that
would be demanded as a dowry for his sister. In the present day, he is a
settled married man in Delhi who has freed his family from poverty by
becoming a wealthy executive.

Kareena Kapoor as Pia Sahastrabuddhe Viru "Virus" Sahastrabuddhe's


younger daughter, an intelligent and capable doctor. Rancho is her love
interest, and she breaks off her engagement to another to be with Rancho.

Boman Irani as Dr Viru Sahastrabuddhe better known as "Virus", he is


the strict college director. He is also Pia's father, and the film's "antagonist".
By the end of the movie he has changed his doctrinal method of teaching.

Omi Vaidya as Chatur Ramalingam better known as "Silencer". an Indian


who has a mere inability to speak Hindi due to two factors; being born in
Uganda and having completed basic education in Pondicherry. He believes in
mindless memorisation. and sneers at Rancho's distinctive ideas, as does
Virus. He is vice-president of a company at the present only to find out that
Rancho is much more successful.

Rahul Kumar as Manmohan Better known as "Millimeter" or "MM", a


young man who earns a small living in the college such as helping students
by ironing their clothes, finishing assignments, and getting groceries; Rancho
persuades him to buy a school uniform and go to any school to gain
knowledge.

Dushyant Wagh as Centimeter/Elder Manmohan the present-day


Millimeter, who works as Rancho's/Phunsukh Wangdu's assistant in Ladakh

Mona Singh as Mona Sahastrabuddhe Pia's elder sister and Virus's first
daughter.

Parikshit Sahni as Mr Qureshi Farhan's father, a strict but loving parent


who just wants his son to be happy.

Amardeep Jha as Mrs Rastogi Raju's mother, a retired schoolteacher and


dedicated mother.

Javed Jaffrey as the real Ranchhodas Shyamaldas Chanchad a person


Raju, Farhan, and Chatur meet during the Shyamaldas Chanchad funeral
service. His character is shown to be a corrupt person right from childhood,
taking benefits from 'Chhote' in his homework and his exams. His father
sends him to London and he sends 'Chhote' to ICE to gain an engineering
degree in his name. He does appreciate what Chhote did for him, giving Raju
and Farhan information on where to find him.

Arun Bali as Shamaldas Chhanchad father of Ranchhoddas Shamaldas


Chhanchad.

Ali Fazal as Joy Lobo a student with a passion for machines. After Virus
tells him that he will not graduate, he commits suicide.

Akhil Mishra as Librarian Dubey

Rohitash Gaud as Ranchhodas' servant

Achyut Potdar as Machine Class Professor

Madhav Vaze as Joy Lobo's father.

Olivier Sanjay Lafont as Suhas Tandon a materialistic man who is Pia's


ex-fiance.

Jayant Kripalani as Interviewer - the company head who conducts Raju's


job interview.

Main article: List of accolades received by 3 Idiots


The film won 40 accolades; among these are six Filmfare Awards including best
film and best director, ten Star Screen Awards, sixteen IIFA awards and
three National Film Awards. In January 2014, it was nominated in the Best
Outstanding Foreign Language Film category for 37th Japanese Academy
Awards

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