Khoobsurat
1999

Khoobsurat

Sanjay "Sanju" Shastri (Sanjay Dutt) is a conman who becomes involved in a fight with a smuggler, Jogia Seth (Paresh Rawal). Sanju owes money to Jogia Seth. Sanju has limited time to pay his debt if he wants to survive and save an orphan named Gudia, now a hostage. Natwar (Johnny Lever) comes up with a plan and suggests that Sanju pretend to be an NRI relative of a family of three brothers, the Chaudhary's, and swindle them to pay off Jogia Seth.

Dilip, Mahesh, and Satish are the three brothers, and Shivani (Urmila Matondkar) is Dilip's daughter. She is a young woman with low self-esteem and confidence. Sanju befriends the family and helps Shivani recognize her own worth, transforming her into a beautiful woman. Sanju and Shivani fall in love. Subsequently, he is caught stealing, and his cover is blown off. At the end, Sanju fights Jogia Seth and wins back the trust of the Chaudhary brothers. Shivani and Sanju are reunited.

Locations in Europe: Gruyères, Zweisimmen, Thun in Switzerland
Storyline
  • Director/Producer: Sanjay Chhel (Director) / Jhamu Sugandh and Rahul Sugandh (Producers), Sanjay Dutt (Executive Producer)
    Star(s): Sanjay Dutt, Urmila Matondkar
    Songs/Dance/Action: Shot in India and Switzerland

    Language: Hindi


    Film Location Analysis

    By Kaushik Bhaumik

    The European locations consist of two blocks of ‘fantasy’ song sequences across the two songs ‘Bahut Khoobsurat Ho’ and ‘Azmale Ye Formule’. Both songs have alternating sequences between locations in India and Switzerland. The first song sees the couple of Dutt and Gruyeres sing and dance through the streets of Gruyères (otherwise famous for its cheese, the HR Giger museum at the St Germain castle and museum dedicated to Tibetan artefacts). Starting off at the bottom of the castle much of the Gruyères happens around the town square where at one point we see three men playing the iconic Swiss horns in front of a church swaying to the tune of the song. We see townspeople lined on pavements looking on as the couple performs on the street. There is a brief sequence on a railway engine shot at the Zweisimmen railway station (a must after the iconic Swiss train sequence in Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge). The song and dance sequence continues in Zweisimmen as we see the usual banners of the Swiss flag and the Rampant Bear- the coat of arms of Bern of which Zweisimmen is a municipality.  There is a sequence in a park and then most sequences happen on the streets of the town with one sequence in the middle being the customary soing and dance on the shore of an unidentifiable picturesque Swiss lake.

    The song ‘Azmale Ye Formule’is a more elaborate affair. Like the first song, this song too cuts between India and Switzerland. It is a dance-oriented song with a dance crew in action almost throughout the song. It is also a song that has a folkish community dance theme to it with the dance crew changing costumes between Goan Roman Catholic wedding party on the Bombay beaches to them wearing Indian wedding/festive costumes from all over India- Maharashtra, Kerala, north Indian Muslim qawwali costume and so on. The song is mostly shot in Thun and features the Schloss Schadau and the lake front where we find the qawwali party dancing on the parapet skirting the lake. There is some symmetry between the Christian beach sequence in Bombay and the Islamic dance sequence on the Swiss lake front.

    These sequences belong to an earlier period of Bombay cinema in Europe with productions using European locations for song sequences mostly to add an exotic value to the film. Shooting whole films in Europe was beyond the means of most production houses in 1999. Again the songs seem to revel in the free movements for dancing, singing and romancing that empty European streets afford in addition to, of course, the exotic beauty of nature and the sense of the air being fresh and clean. Shooting on European streets was almost the equivalent to shooting on set in a studio without needing to spend on the set. The choreography of these songs is frequently frontal emphasizing the sense of the performance happening on stage. But beyond this, diegetically, the songs frequently signalled the fantasies of a new ethos of heterosexual romance that dreams of new vistas of upward mobility in the early years of globalization and the liberalization of the Indian economy. This fantasy had/has a standard formula- prosperity in India and regular access to Europe to escape the social and material restraints that Indian societies and cities imposed on the young.

    Additional Information and Links

    Video for song ‘Bahut Khoobsurat Ho’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqA-sQVsB3U

    Video for song ‘Azmale Ye Formule’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7uDMACb8To

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