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Mission Kashmir [Collector's Edition] [DVD]
 
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Mission Kashmir [Collector's Edition] [DVD]

Sanjay Dutt , Hrithik Roshan , Vidhu Vinod Chopra    Suitable for 12 years and over   DVD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Sanjay Dutt, Hrithik Roshan, Preity Zinta, Sonali Kulkarni, Jackie Shroff
  • Directors: Vidhu Vinod Chopra
  • Writers: Vidhu Vinod Chopra, Abhijit Joshi, Atul Tiwari, Suketu Mehta, Vikram Chandra
  • Producers: Vidhu Vinod Chopra, Vir Chopra
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English, Hindi, Urdu
  • Subtitles: Hindi, Dutch, English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.77:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: Sony Pictures
  • DVD Release Date: 2 Sep 2002
  • Run Time: 154 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00006FI34
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 57,410 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Special Features

Wide Screen
DVD 9
English
Hindi
Region 2
Dolby Digital 5.1 Englsih Hindi
Dolby Digital 5.1
Trailer
Dutch\English\Hindi

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
A beautiful film about a very serious problem, the political strife in divided Kashmir in India, I mean in the Indian half of Kashmir. Beautiful because of the dancing, the music, the constant celebration of something or other since one of the main characters is a TV actress. The main hero is himself able to sing, to dance, to play some music, to draw and to paint, and do so many other things. This gives a great atmosphere and a marvellous picture of what Indo-Aryan people are. It also gives an extremely open vision of the Moslems there who are not at all submitted in any way to any orthodox fundamentalism. Yet behind this brilliant picture, there is a situation that hurts in the deepest cells of our brain. The fundamentalists are trying to take over this half of Kashmir and reunify Kashmir under a basic moslem rule. The fundamentalists are shown as terrorists who cast a curse, a death sentence - it has another name but this name does not tell us what it really is - against anyone who will cooperate with Indian soldiers or police. The first victim of this sentence is a doctor who dared take care of a wounded soldier, and the second victim will be a child who will not find the treatment he needs because of the fear of doctors who refuse to treat him. The film also shows how the police can kill a whole innocent family just to kill one terrorist, making us wonder who the terrorists are then. Then we sink lower and lower into the terrorist dilemma with the main hero who is divided between avenging his family killed by the police and recognizing that it was an accident and yielding to the love of the beautiful girl who is a TV actress and forgiving the police. We are thus taken down into the minutest details of a terrorist attack against the Indian Prime Minister and our hero will make it fail at the very last second due to his epiphanic conversion. This is Indian cinema that associates drama and even tragedy to romance and musical pageant. That's a way of looking at life as being always the association of totally antagonistic elements and considering the truth can only be found in such a cocktail of black, white and grey elements into an optimistic finishing colourful touch. It is a way to see the light of hope even in the darkest moments of history and demonstrating to us that a fair dose of meditation will always alleviate unhappy events and prospects.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University of Paris Dauphine & University of Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By GeekZilla TOP 50 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
From the outset it's clear that this isn't a jaunty action film like Dhoom 2. When a doctor and his family are killed because he breaks a militant's fatwa by treating a policeman we are introduced to the ugly politics surrounding Kashmir. There follows a heartbreaking scene when the same police officer begs the doctors at a hospital to look at his fatally injured son.

The film enters a spiral of tragedy when the police's revenge attack inadvertently kills the family of a young boy caught in the crossfire. Out of sympathy and a deep sense of their own grief, they take him in.

Three traumatised souls find solace in a new family life. But this paradise is blown apart when young Altaaf realises that his new father is the man responsible for the death of his family.

This is a solid start to a Bollywood film. We have complex relationships where love, loss, and hate all combine to create a sorry state of affairs which gives birth to an angry young man who grows up to join the terrorist movement. Father figure and son become nemeses and we can understand both sides. It isn't often that we sympathise with a terrorist and it's a brave move to make, especially when tensions over Kashmir are still strong today.

The film never recaptures the spark of the opening half an hour however, though the romantic involvement with Sufiya (Preity) along with a tense finale manage to salvage it from falling into confusion.

In a nutshell: The song and dance routines won't have you humming along the next day, in fact you probably won't remember any of them as they are pretty poor for such a large film, but perhaps this is quite fitting for a film with an often sombre tone. After a while the film becomes less compelling than it should be, but you appreciate what it has to say. This film doesn't take the easy option and polarise Kashmire into 'goodies' and 'baddies' - it shows us the people in the middle, those who are recruited as tools of idealism/terrorism. You get to see how the emotions of the young and desperate are exploited by terrorist leaders to channel that angst into a passionate and fanatical hatred, and how it all effects the real people who are left to pick up the pieces. 4 stars, but only just.
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Amazon.com:  23 reviews
51 of 52 people found the following review helpful
timely 6 Aug 2002
By Orrin C. Judd - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
One of the great things about Bollywood is that for Americans who are tired to death of the inanity and sameness of summer blockbuster-type
movies, these imports from India offer a completely different kind of movie experience. Mission : Kashmir, for example, presents a dedicated and happily married policeman trying to stop terrorists. Easy enough to predict how Hollywood would handle that one : Michael Bay or some other loud noise and explosion director; Bruce Willis/Nicholas Cage/Arnold Schwarzenegger starring; Rene Russo as the wife; plenty of blood and death and snappy one-liners; no emotions; no thought required. It's all so familiar and insipid you wouldn't even rent it went it comes to video. Bollywood may be just as formulaic in its own way, but it is very much its own way and besides being fresh and different for an American viewer the formula also seems superior in several important aspects.

First, despite the Hindu nationalism of India, which would make you think filmmakers would shy away, the stories use politics and history to
illuminate contemporary concerns--most often the clash between rival religions. So in Mission : Kashmir, the hero, Inspector Inayat Khan is a
Muslim loyal to India, hunting down Muslim terrorists who are trying to "liberate" Kashmir and destroy India. His particular hatred of the terrorists is fueled by a fatwa which was placed upon anyone who assists him or his family, so that when his son fell from a window no doctor would treat the boy even as he lay dying in Khan's arms.

But rather than present everyone as cardboard cutouts, uniformly bad or uniformly good, the film explores the legacy of hatred and the currents of violence that have made people hate each other. In one especially effective scene, after a police raid in which Kahn's Hindu deputy, Avinash, has gone berserk, his Sikh colleague, Gurdeep Singh, tries comforting him. But as Avinash bemoans the loss of loved ones to terror and wails that Gurdeep can't know what it is like, Gurdeep explodes in rage because his family was murdered by Hindus rioting after the assassination of Indira Gandhi. In a nation where so many ethnicities and religions have co-existed so uncomfortably, everyone has his own scars, some quite horrible.

Another refreshing feature of these films is that they quite revel in melodrama and pathos. So when Khan exacts his revenge, slaughtering an entire village to get at the terrorist leader who issued the fatwa, he rescues the man's son and at the insistence of his own wife, Neelima, adopts him. The child, Altaaf, who witnessed the raid, is nearly catatonic and is obsessed with the ski-masked gunman who shot his father. When, several years later, he finds the mask in Khan's desk drawer, he runs away from home, is taken in by a Kashmiri terrorist who raises him as a son, and dedicates himself to getting revenge on Kahn. So the father is responsible for the death of Khan's son and Khan is responsible for the death of the father and now the son and Khan will duel to the death with the struggle in Kashmir, and the jihad of the boy's third "father", as a backdrop--and so violence begets violence and passes from generation to generation.

Meanwhile, Neelima, who is Hindu, is torn between the two men she loves and when Altaaf returns as a young man, hell-bent on murdering her husband, she tries desperately to convince him that no religion, no cause, no blood feud can justify his course of action, that he has a choice to make, between love and hate and good and evil. But just the fact of her temporarily eluding security to meet with him brings down the distrust of Kahn's Hindu superiors upon him and Kahn confronts her, saying she'll have to choose between him and her "son". And, of course, when the final confrontation comes, Altaaf does indeed have to choose between the vengeful and mindless sectarian violence or the kind of love and healing of which his "mother" spoke.

Granted, many of these scenes are way over the top and somewhat implausible, but they're at least trying to elicit some reaction from us. The
filmmakers want to invoke the emotions that might drive such destructive, even self-destructive, behaviors--to make us at least share the feelings if not the thoughts of the various characters. Think how different this is than say a Die Hard movie, where the terrorists are merely evil incarnate with no coherent motivation.

The final innovation that Bollywood brings to the movies is one that can take some getting used to and is particularly jarring in a film like this one. Bollywood productions tend to be musicals--not musicals as in the Sound of Music either, where there are songs throughout and some pretense for them, but musicals in the sense that big production numbers break out nearly at random, often blending in elements of fantasy, with no real
intention of moving forward the narrative of the film. Here the songs begin at a couple of really odd moments, once during a major terrorist assault and once when Kahn has unknowingly brought a bomb home in his briefcase. Just when we'd expect the film to try and exploit the tension of the situation, the stars start singing and dancing. As if the timing wasn't disconcerting enough, the song during the attack turns into a huge Up With People type extravaganza. It's exceedingly odd. But it's also so unusual that it ends up being rather exhilarating and it's certainly memorable.

If all this isn't enough to intrigue you : the cinematography and the scenery in Kashmir are spectacular; the screenplay's cowritten by the fine
novelist Vikram Chandra; there are any number of terrific action sequences; there's a romantic angle as Altaaf finds the girl he loved in childhood; and the actors and actresses are uniformly fabulous looking. Sanjay Dutt is especially appealing as Kahn, big, bluff, and tough, with the manly good looks of a Jack Lord or a Victor Mature. Hrithik Roshan, as Altaaf, is more the Brad Pitt-type, a pretty and sensitive hearththrob, but it's very much Dutt's picture and he carries it ably.

With all this going for it and with terrorism and Kashmir so much in the news, it seems likely that even if you're new to Bollywood, this is a film you'll enjoy and a timely introduction to the fine crop of films coming out of India these days.

GRADE : A-

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Terrific music, great film, but don't forget it's fiction 7 July 2002
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
Mission Kashmir. The music is terrific, and - it has to be said - sung by fans even in Kashmir itself, where this film went down like a lead balloon when it was shown on cable. Put aside any thoughts that Mission Kashmir tells the 'truth' about Kashmir: it is a (well-made) Bollywood epic, not a documentary. Even so, it represents the classical Indian view of Kashmir - and ought to be watched by those interested in the politics of Kashmir. However, that aside, the music - and the fact that parts of the film were filmed in the Kashmir Valley (Dal Lake, and the Chief Secretary's house up Gupkar Road) merit a viewing. Do go watch it.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Americans can start watching Bollywood with this one. 13 July 2003
By Rykre - Published on Amazon.com
Format:DVD
If you have or haven't seen Lagaan or Monsoon Wedding yet, or you feel slightly discouraged about watching foreign films where you have to read English Subtitles, this film "Mission Kashmir" is a great place to start if you want to capture that great Indian film, Bollywood experience, that so many people in America are starting to discover. (Bollywood means Bombay's Hollywood).
This DVD of "Mission Kashmir" gives you an English Audio track to listen to so that you don't have to struggle with reading as you're watching. The English dubbing has some voices that your kids hear when they watch English dubbed "Japanese Anime".
In India, in the exciting world of Bollywood, this film has one of the hottest male stars of Indian cinema. His name is Hrithik Roshan. Ladies are going nuts over this handsome guy. As in other Bollywood films that he's done, Hrithik Roshan is quickly becoming the most popular male star of Bollywood. Some of his other films that are popular (in India, and other countries outside of America), are "Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai", "Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham", "Fiza", and "Mujhse Dosti Karoge". If you find a way to rent these films, you're in for a treat. Your husband may enjoy them too, because the girls in these films are gorgeous too.
In "Mission Kashmir", the female co-starring with Hrithik is Preity Zinta. She has also been in some Indian Blockbusters, such as "Chori Chori Chupke Chupke", "Dil Chahta Hai", and "Har Dil Jo Pyar Karega", just to name a small few.
The other main character of this film is more of a Bollywood veteran star named Sanjay Dutt. Many of his big movies include; "Khal Nayak", "Khoobsurat", "Vaastav" and "Daud" (This film "Daud" features an intensely sexy song video with the undenyably gorgeous Urmila Matondkar). I'm sure Sanjay Dutt has had many other popular films, but I don't follow him as much as I do other Bollywood stars.
Now I'll close with just a small comment about Bollywood. I've come to recognize that women enjoy the stories of Indian films better than men do. I guess women have longer attention spans, then most men. Indian films aren't for the bone-headed, simple mindedness that American Blockbuster films rely on. These stories are more intricate and detailed. Most men prefer American Hollywood films more because Hollywood does more special effects, and extensive violence and blatant use of fowl language. In other words, men usually don't want to follow a story, men don't want to have to think, they just want to be entertained by unrealistic action scenes, and watching people get beat up and/or killed. Many Hollywood Blockbusters aren't much when it comes to an actual story...
Bollywood films have a lot more to offer than just visual effects. Maybe it's just me, but I happen to love watching beautiful girls dance. In Bollywood, song videos are normal. I'll agree with some people though. Some of the songs, although passionate and sexy, still seem a little out-of-text with the story here. But, luckily, you can always skip the songs by simply jumping to the next chapter. You also have an option with the DVD to just watch the song videos without the movie, which I enjoy when I don't have time to watch a full movie. I even have a "Priety Zinta" Song DVD collection where her song videos are mixed up with other song videos from other movies that she's done. These song videos are usually filmed in some exotic paradise location, or in hot dance bar, or somewhere else, which is so colorful and exciting. India's Bollywood song videos are like watching "moving, active, visual art for the mind and the ears." The hell with MTV, I'd rather watch visual art that is sensual, not angry and disturbing. I mean, what do YOU watch music videos for?
"Mission Kashmir" is a great place to start for both men and women. It's got a great detailed story, and it's got your violence, too. It's got handsome guys and gorgeous girls. And the DVD has an English voice track, so nobody has to think too hard... What's more, most all Bollywood DVD's have an English subtitle option. That wasn't always the case with VHS. This factor alone is helping to bring Bollywood to the American audience.
So, give this one a try. I'm sure you'll enjoy this new movie experience.
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