Ajnabee
2001

Ajnabee

Following a whirlwind romance, Raj Malhotra (Bobby Deol) and Priya Malhotra (Kareena Kapoor) get married and live in Switzerland, where they become friends with Vikram "Vicky" Bajaj (Akshay Kumar) and Sonia Bajaj (Bipasha Basu), another Indian couple. During a Christmas vacation, the couples get caught in a web of suspicion, with seductions and inappropriate forms of intimacy on display. This leads to a somewhat veiled suggestion about wife swapping. Nothing is very clear, but the two men find themselves in opposite houses.

Soon after, Sonia is found murdered, with Raj accused of the crime. Raj manages to escape to try and clear his name even as the Swiss police chase him. He convinces Priya of his innocence. The narrative then goes into various twists and turns as we realise that the meeting between the couples, the murder, and the framing were all part of a plan hatched by Vikram and his girlfriend Neeta to collect a major insurance policy belonging to his wealthy wife.

Raj manages to record Vikram's boastful confession and hacks into his account to transfer the insurance money back to the company. This leads to an angry fight that ends in the deaths of both Vikram and Neeta. and Raj and Priya return to India.

Locations in Europe: Lucerne, other locations in Switzerland
Storyline
  • Star(s): Bobby Deol, Akshay Kumar, Kareena Kapoor, Bipasha Basu
    Songs/Dance/Action: India, Switzerland, Mauritius, Singapore, Bahrain, Dubai, Muscat
    Language: Hindi
    Indian/ International Crew: No significant international crew.
    Director/Producer: Abbas-Mustan (Director)/Vijay Galani (Producer)


    Film Location Analysis

    By Kaushik Bhaumik

    Although a considerable part of the film is set in Switzerland, we see very few locations. Most of the action takes place in a non-descript residential locality with families living in separate villas.

    The song ‘Mohabbat Naam Hai Kiska’ has a sequence in the Swiss Museum of Transport, Lucerne and Main Station, Lucerne, locations the romantic couple sing and dance through. The song ends with the couple singing on the streets of Lucerne after having shopped. Otherwise, the song is shot in stock picturesque locations—alpine meadows, roads covered in snow with mountains looming large in the backdrop, or dancing vigorously in thick snow—all very stock Bollywood scenarios for songs shot in Switzerland. 

    The film has an avid focus on modes of transportation to indicate globalisation, as well the international lifestyles of the new rich Indians and their love for adventure.

    We see a Swiss town centre very briefly in the song ‘Kasam Se Teri Aankhen’. More interestingly, a chase sequence involving one of the protagonists suspected of murder is supposedly happening in Switzerland but is actually shot mostly in Singapore.  The film cleverly cuts between police cars with the word ‘Polizei’ emblazoned on them, and a chase through streets and a tube station, which are clearly Singapore locations. It is possible that the filmmakers didn’t get permission to shoot an elaborate chase sequence in Switzerland. However, it has to be noted that the topology of Singapore and its crowds does make for an exciting chase sequence.

    There is another chase sequence, this time shot entirely in an unidentified location, a car chase that takes place in the countryside outside a city. The well-shot car sequence ends with the police cars being stranded at a railway crossing due to a train passing through. Afterwards, the protagonists being chased are seen as hiding in a logging factory.

    The Swiss sequence ends with the runaways making their way past a border check-post on a high mountain pass densely covered in snow. The bare landscape and the whiteness of the snow contrast with the black clothing the hero is wearing, as well as his surreptitious dark shades. However, the difficulty of passage through such a snowbound landscape in a remote area also allows the couple to get past the police.

    Ajnabee makes use of the pristine Swiss landscape and light in stock Bollywood fashion—to denote a picturesque world of romance and good living. But it is also the first film to show the lives of Indians residing and working at jobs in Europe quite substantially. And the murder mystery set in Switzerland brings to mind the serpent in the garden that casts a shadow on the idealised vision of that location in most Bollywood films until then, and from then on as well. There is a long sequence of gloom and doom set in an unidentified urban location when husband and wife meet again, after the husband accused of murder has gone on the run from the law. The scene passes from early winter to high winter with snow on the ground. The scene ends at a small empty railway station (invoking the earlier romantic song in the lush railway station) with snow falling across a train that separates them across opposite platforms. 

    Above all, the NRI in Europe is not necessarily a new generation of ideal Indians. In this, the film departs considerably from the manner in which Bollywood saw itself in Europe, especially Switzerland, at the turn of the millennium.

    Additional Information & Links

    Song: ‘Mohabbat Naam Hai Kiska’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdHf9eKJPQ0

    Tourism

    https://www.newlyswissed.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Bollywood-Filming-Locations-in-Switzerland_final.pdf

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