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Mangal Pandey: The Rising

  • 2005
  • T
  • 2h 30min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,5/10
10.859
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aamir Khan, Rani Mukerji, Ameesha Patel, and Toby Stephens in Mangal Pandey: The Rising (2005)
Guarda Mangal Pandey: The Rising (2005) trailer
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24 foto
BiographyDramaHistoryWar

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThis is a film about the leader of the 1857 mutiny and his fight against the British rule.This is a film about the leader of the 1857 mutiny and his fight against the British rule.This is a film about the leader of the 1857 mutiny and his fight against the British rule.

  • Regia
    • Ketan Mehta
  • Sceneggiatura
    • H. Banerjee
    • Farrukh Dhondy
    • Ranjit Kapoor
  • Star
    • Aamir Khan
    • Rani Mukerji
    • Toby Stephens
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,5/10
    10.859
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Ketan Mehta
    • Sceneggiatura
      • H. Banerjee
      • Farrukh Dhondy
      • Ranjit Kapoor
    • Star
      • Aamir Khan
      • Rani Mukerji
      • Toby Stephens
    • 83Recensioni degli utenti
    • 26Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria e 7 candidature totali

    Video1

    Mangal Pandey: The Rising (2005) trailer
    Trailer 0:53
    Mangal Pandey: The Rising (2005) trailer

    Foto23

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    Interpreti principali98

    Modifica
    Aamir Khan
    Aamir Khan
    • Sepoy Mangal Pandey
    Rani Mukerji
    Rani Mukerji
    • Heera
    Toby Stephens
    Toby Stephens
    • Captain William Gordon
    Coral Beed
    Coral Beed
    • Emily
    Ameesha Patel
    Ameesha Patel
    • Jwala
    Kirron Kher
    Kirron Kher
    • Lol Bibi
    Om Puri
    Om Puri
    • Narrator
    Ben Nealon
    Ben Nealon
    • Hewson
    Habib Tanvir
    • Bahadur Shah Zafar
    • (as Tanveer Habib)
    Varsha Usgaonkar
    Varsha Usgaonkar
    • Rani Laxmibai
    • (as Rani Lakshmibai)
    Kenneth Cranham
    Kenneth Cranham
    • Kent
    Tom Alter
    Tom Alter
    • Watson
    Mukesh Tiwari
    Mukesh Tiwari
    • Bakht Khan
    Shahbaaz Khan
    Shahbaaz Khan
    • Azimullah
    Amin Hajee
    Amin Hajee
    • Vir Singh
    Dibyendu Bhattacharya
    Dibyendu Bhattacharya
    • Krupashankar Singh
    • (as Dibiyendu Bhattacharya)
    Ahsan Baksh
    • Hassan Ali
    Irfanouzzaman
    • Deendayal Awasthi
    • Regia
      • Ketan Mehta
    • Sceneggiatura
      • H. Banerjee
      • Farrukh Dhondy
      • Ranjit Kapoor
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti83

    6,510.8K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8darashukoh

    Great Film! Better than most Bollywood Historicals, though not completely accurate

    I am amazed at the negative comments about this film, especially from India. I'll address those criticisms later after providing a summary of the film.

    Set in 1857, the film tells the story of Mangal Pandey, a sepoy (private) in the 34th Native Infantry regiment of the Bengal Army (the army of the Presidency of Bengal, governed by the British East India Company and recruited largely from upper caste UP and Bihar stock). Mangal is depicted as an ordinary soldier who is offended by the introduction of the new Enfield rifle cartridges which were greased with pig and cow fat (the former anathema to Muslims and the latter sacred to Hindus). The movie shows him changing from a loyal Company sepoy who saved a British officer's life, to one who ends up questioning the logic of British rule. Other themes include his friendship with the same British officer, the officer's rescue and subsequent romantic relationship with a sati - a widow expected to burn herself on her husband's funeral pyre,and a prostitute who exclusively services the English brothels but falls for Pandey. The movie brings opium cultivation, corruption within the Company, the growing distance between English and Indians, as well as backward, traditional Indian attitudes into sharp focus.

    All in all, the film is highly entertaining, a good story - well told, with powerful performances by the main characters. Aamir Khan is in his element, living the character of Pandey and conveying a fantastic portrayal of the soldier who realizes, bit by bit, that his loyalty to a foreign army makes him as "untouchable" as the low-caste man or prostitutes he scorns. Toby Stephens performance as the outsider in British India (Scottish, poor schooling, too fraternal with the natives) was brilliant and his chemistry with Khan was the high mark of the film's dramatic impact. The music by AR Rahman is louder than usual and some of the beats are frankly out of sync with the times ( the lesbianish gypsy dance number was a bit much!!).

    The strength of the film was in conveying a sense of the time period - costumes,hair-styles, sets, manners ( the English officer's "Koi Hai"), were exactly what one could expect. The historical background was fairly accurate (sati was outlawed, opium cultivation was forced, the Company was beset by corruption, the English did have European only brothels) though the exact interpretation of events may have not been supported by history.

    Which brings me to the criticism of the film. these seem to be of two variants - one, the film was not entertaining enough, and two, the anguished howl of the historians who decry its historical illegitimacy in the hope that no one may turn nationalist by seeing this film.

    I will dismiss the first criticism, since that may be a matter of taste - certainly, desi (Indian) audiences raised on simpler story lines and poorer production values (see Asoka and n number of Indian period dramas) may find The Rising a bit heavy to digest.

    Historically, the film may be inaccurate in the sense that Mangal Pandey may not have been the nationalist as portrayed, the relationships with the English officer and the prostitute are probably fictitious. But are they impossible? NO. The film has a paragraph disclaimer about inaccuracy at the beginning but this does not satisfy the history lobby. Why is it not possible that the official version about Pandey - that he was under the influence of bhang ( a hallucinogen) when he shot and killed an officer and then tried to shoot himself - is dressed up to cover the Company's stupidity in introducing the greased cartridges? Its not as if such "doctoring" of history has not taken place - witness the designations of "Mutiny" on the British side and "First War of Indian Independence" on the Indian side - when it was something in between? Secondly, why is The Rising being targeted when virtually every Indian film plays merry with historical events and characters? Akbar and Salim did not go to war over a dancing girl (Mughal-e-Azam), Shah Jahan was not the devoted son depictd in Taj Mahal but an ambitious usurper, one hopes that Ashoka was not the ghastly caricature depicted in Shahrukh Khan's film, and certainly India was not administered by ARMY officers as shown in Lagaan b ut by a civil ICS administration.

    Similarly, Hollywood glosses over the fact that getting the German Enigma machines in WW2 was a purely British affair (U-571 shows us otherwise), and of course America won the war (no mention of UK/Common wealth forces, or more importantly - Soviet forces).

    What I am saying is that films always distort history a bit - and so long as they are not conveying a completely different story - that should not matter. A purist on the matter of history myself, I am surprised by the vehemence of the historical community's attack on the film. My guess is that they do not want a false sense of nationalism to emerge on the basis of the Mangal Pandey story. They are a hundred and fifty years late in stopping the myth from taking hold.

    In the end The Rising is a great film, a great story, well shot, with a few excusable omissions.
    9pwteatros

    Sweet amazing surprise

    I went to see this movie with a friend of mine from India. I was going because of her, expecting to be bored to death. I was wrong! The Rising is one of these movies that are larger, bigger than life. The amazing powerful music sets the tone to a legend of a great folk hero for Indians. The acting, in most cases, was haunting. The cinematography was breathtaking and the songs, and I am not a big fan of people singing and dancing in movies, were magical and helped move the story along. Of course, it was a big history lesson form me (though the producers warn you that some of this is fictionalized), but I have a better understanding of the Indian culture now. I finally get to see Toby Stephens\playing a role that doesn't involve him being mean, a villain or plain evil.
    8Chris_Docker

    Fusion of history, colour, romance, mythology, love and heroism

    This epic tale of the first Indian uprising (mid 19th century) has so much going for it, it's hard to know where to begin. Firstly, it documents a period of history that tends to be airbrushed under the carpet in British history lessons. Germany and Japan are still constantly reminded of the atrocities their countries committed, but we have to go back a bit earlier to look at the British East India Company - the most successful business enterprise in history, controlling one fifth of humanity, and having its own army. The value of being reminded brings a certain sense of humility. It maybe even helps to explain some of the feelings one can sense just walking about Delhi today as a white person.

    It's also a rare treat to have an epic of this scale, told from an Indian point of view, in English (or mostly in English). It successfully merges factual history with cultural norms, mythology, song and dance, grand battle scenes, touching romance and heroism.

    The British East India Company was subject to the uprising or 'mutiny' largely because of a failure to understand and respect local customs (from a purely military point of view, George Bush should consider bringing more or better historians to the White House). Having been subjected to abominations and still helping the Company fight wars, Indians rallied over a deeply held religious insult and attacked the British rulers.

    It is a great credit to the filmmakers that the British have not been demonised. There is no dwelling on the greatest excesses and neither are the Indians portrayed as flawless. For instance, we see a British soldier preventing a local (forced) sacrifice of a young wife at the burning of the corpse of her 60yr old husband, and the excesses of the British depicted are those common in most armies where power has led to degeneracy. We see not only the forced cultivation of poppies, but shady dealings with the resultant drugs and the Indians always coming out the losers. We see houses of prostitution set up to 'keep the troops healthy'; Indian soldiers treated as second class citizens with brutal punishments for minor slips handed out by self-important British officers.

    But whenever it gets too grim to watch, it springs the Bollywood trick of bursting into song and dance. The only other genre that routinely manages such a happy switch is grand opera. The slave courtesans sing joyously with double edged lyrics about being a slave to love. The spectacle of glorious colour and wonderful dancing spectacle entrances us.

    Many great conquerors have been also ruthless and uncaring to those they abused. The British East India Company was perhaps no different, and at worst should perhaps be judged more by the morality of the time than present day international law. But that way of thinking is a get-out. Invading another country is almost always for selfish reasons, glossed over in one way or another according to the double-talk of the day. History usually sides with the victors.

    The Rising will not get the marketing it deserves in the UK: many will avoid it because of the Indian songs. But it is a film well worth catching.

    My main quibble is that India is constantly portrayed in movies (including this one) as incredibly clean. I have never found this so, except in 5 star hotels enclaves. There is a great water shortage and most streets are pretty unhygeinic by Western standards. If Calcutta was the paradise of colour and good health depicted in The Rising, then it's gone backwards, whatever the improvements in basic freedoms and human rights. But realism it not Indian cinema's forte.
    7saurabh_saxena_ghaziabad

    Its pumps you up in the end...honestly! It does.

    I saw it. I was lucky enough to find the ticket. As for the movie goes...if you are expecting a Lagaan (I mean the flair) its not there BUT B U T BUT its a really well made movie. Cinematography is excellent, it meets the Hong Kong Film industry standard in every sense(Hong Kong has become better than Hollywood in cinematography lately). Music is not bad at all Mangal Mangal song is really good and there is one Banjara(Gypsi) song which is really FRESH. Choreography is as always good ....the best in the world. One thing that surprised me was the improved special effects. A technically well made movie in every sense..no issues on that.

    Acting...you get what you expect of him... you know who I mean. Toby was really good but if compared quarter as good as him. Rani..not much scope...but she ended up creating an impact...every other character was good..the women in the role of KAMLA i think her name is MONA did a really good job (she was really good in that two bit role..thats what i call to make an IMPACT).

    How I personally judge a movie is by its impact over me when i leave the hall. And there was an IMPACT. As per my movie experience goes this is a kind of movies that will grow on any one after every subsequent viewing.
    Chrysanthepop

    A Ballad That Lacks Heart

    Ketan Mehta perhaps wanted to make a lavish 'Braveheart' with 'The Rising: Ballad of Mangal Pandey'. Well, the end result is far from it. The depiction of the rebellion and the pursuit for revolution was very bleak. I can understand that Mehta wanted to make a lavish epic-type movie about an Indian hero but there is just too much exaggeration for the story to resonate. So much is spoon-fed to the viewer while it fails at telling a proper story. There are so many sequences that are unintentionally funny. Forget historical accuracy, even the characters (with the exception of a few) felt one-dimensional. Even the title character was poorly developed.

    The mutiny preparation was rushed. While each and every one of the songs are beautiful, the holy song could have been left out as it doesn't add to the story and only slackens the pace. Even the romance between Jwala and William looked forced (this track shouldn't have been included at all).

    Mehta does introduce some interesting issues that have not been depicted on screen earlier. Such as the Indian nanny breastfeeding the British baby while she struggles to feed her own child. His cinematographer does a superb job in capturing the picture with his camera. The art direction is eye candy.

    A.R. Rahman's score deserves special mention. It is of an eclectic mix with a variety of songs, all of which have been beautifully visualized. I especially liked how 'Rasiya' and 'Vari Vari' were executed. Rani Mukherjee dances wonderfully. Many have made unfair comparisons to that of Madhuri Dixit's 'mujra' in 'Devdas'. Madhuri's character was a trained dancer while Rani's Heera had just been sold to the brothel and her primary task was to seduce. Back to Rahman's music, his background score is highly effective. It remains consistent and always contributes well to the scene (sometimes it's the only thing that works in a scene).

    Aamir Khan makes a comeback after four years. However, this is far from his best work. He looks uninterested and wooden in most places and is easily overshadowed by Toby Stephens. He does seem to enjoy playing with his fake moustache. Stephens has the best character and he does full justice to it with a remarkable performance. Rani Mukherjee acts with full guns blazing. Whether her character is relevant or not to the movie, the actress is sensual, spontaneous and natural on screen and that's always great to watch. Amisha Patel has a few fits of hyperventilation (even though her character wasn't supposed to be someone sick with asthma).

    'The Rising: Ballad of Mangal Pandey' is a lackluster film. It has very little to offer whether in the form of entertainment, enlightenment or engagement.

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Hugh Jackman turned down the role of Captain William Gordon.
    • Blooper
      When the opening credits roll, a coin can be seen on which there are the following words "Victoria Empress". The events of the film are set in 1857, but Queen Victoria becomes Empress of India by the decision of the British Parliament only in 1876 and this is announced in India in 1877, 20 after the story of the film. It is important, because the Mughal Emperor (Bahadur Shah II), still alive in 1857, is also shown in the film, and the British Queen gets this title long after his deposition in 1857 and his 1862.
    • Citazioni

      Mangal Pandey: What is "company"?

      Captain William Gordon: In your Ramayana there was one villain "Ravana" who had ten heads, company has a hundred heads and they're all joined by the glue of greed.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in The Story of India: Freedom (2007)
    • Colonne sonore
      Mangal Mangal
      Sung by Kailash Kher

      Composed by A.R. Rahman

      Lyrics by Javed Akhtar

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 12 agosto 2005 (Regno Unito)
    • Paesi di origine
      • India
      • Regno Unito
      • Stati Uniti
    • Sito ufficiale
      • Kaleidoscope (India)
    • Lingue
      • Hindi
      • Urdu
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Mangal Pandey
    • Azienda produttrice
      • NH Studioz
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 340.000.000 INR (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 954.108 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 531.018 USD
      • 14 ago 2005
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 8.142.076 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      2 ore 30 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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