Haraamkhor
Haraamkhor (transl. Scoundrel) is a 2015 Indian romantic drama film directed by Shlok Sharma.[3][4][5] It stars Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Shweta Tripathi.[6][7] Jasleen Royal is the music composer. The film was shot in just 16 days.[8]
Haraamkhor | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Shlok Sharma |
Produced by | Guneet Amarpreet Kaur Anurag Kashyap Feroze Alameer Achin Jain |
Written by | Shlok Sharma |
Starring | Nawazuddin Siddiqui Shweta Tripathi |
Music by | Songs Jasleen Royal Background Music Vishal Khurana Karan Gour |
Cinematography | Siddharth Diwan |
Edited by | Kratika Adhikari Charu Shree Roy |
Production company |
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Distributed by | Indian Film Studios |
Release date |
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Running time | 92 minutes[1] |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹22.50 million[2] |
Box office | ₹22.70 million[2] |
In April 2017, an FIR was registered against director Shlok Sharma on a complaint by Balbharati, Maharashtra's textbook bureau, objecting to striking similarities between its logo and promotion scenes from Haraamkhor.[9]
Haraamkhor was premiered at the 15th annual New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF)[10][11] and Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles (IFFLA). Nawazuddin Siddiqui received the Best Actor award at the NYIFF.[12]
Plot
Shyam is a school teacher in a village. Sandhya, and her best friends Mintu and Kamal are some of his students. Kamal has a crush on Sandhya, but she is not interested. After school, Shyam visits Sandhya's home to have some documents notarized by her father, who is a local police inspector. Sandhya and Shyam become closer. Sandhya takes care of her father when he arrives home drunk. She follows him to a party when he lies to her about going on a work trip. On her way home, Sandhya falls and injures her knee and goes to Shyam's house, where his wife, Sunita cares for her and lets her stay with them for the night. Sandhya spies on Shyam and Sunita having sex. While she is asleep, Shyam tries to talk to Sandhya and teases her, but she is angry with him.
The next day, Sandhya rebukes Shyam for lying to her about how he and his wife did not have sexual relations. It is revealed that Sandhya's mom abandoned her as a child and her father has started dating someone new, but was waiting for the right time to tell her. Shyam fixes an old moped (Luna) at Sandhya's home. They meet in secret and start having an affair. Kamal is jealous and Mintu wants to help him.
Sandhya and Shyam have sex. One month later, she reveals that she hasn't gotten her period, so they make a secret trip to the city. At the woman's clinic, Sandhya is recognized by her father's girlfriend, who keeps her secret. Sandhya is not pregnant and she and Shyam share a laugh about it. When they return to the village, Shyam tells Sandhya that they should stop seeing each other and keep their relationship strictly a student-teacher one.
Rumors reveal their secret anyway and Sunita threatens to leave Shyam. Shyam scolds and hits Sandhya for being obvious. Meanwhile, Mintu and Kamal wreak havoc in Shyam's empty home. Sunita comes back home. Shyam becomes suspicious of the kids breaking and entering his home when he sees them with some of his stuff. Shyam catches hold of Mintu and kills him by asphyxiation. Kamal manages to escape. But as he sees Shyam trying to suffocate Mintu to death, he returns with a rock and hits it hard on Shyam, killing him in the process.
Cast
- Nawazuddin Siddiqui as Shyam Tekchand, School Master
- Shweta Tripathi as Sandhya, student
- Trimala Adhikari as Sunita, Shyam's wife
- Mohammad Samad as Mintu, Sandhya’s classmate
- Irfan Khan as Kamal, Sandhya’s classmate
- Harish Khanna as Raghuvir Singh, police inspector, Sandhya's father
- Shreya Shah as Neelu, Sandhya's father's girlfriend
- Hanif as Shaktimaan
- Jhanvi Trivedi as Archana
- Nandini Khatri as Bindiya
- Puja Banerjee as Gynaecologist
Soundtrack
The soundtrack of Haraamkhor consists of just one song, "Kidre Jaawan", which was composed by Jasleen Royal and the lyrics of which were written by Aditya Sharma.[13]
Critical reception
Rajeev Masand of News18 praised the performances of the actors saying that, "the film benefits enormously from the convincing performances at its heart. Shweta Tripathi is in good form as the confused, ignored young teenager who can’t help making all the wrong choices. But it’s Nawazuddin Siddiqui whose brilliant, mostly understated portrayal of a violent predator is the film’s biggest strength." and gave the film a rating of 3 out of 5.[14] Rohit Vats of Hindustan Times praised the film saying that, "Brave and original, Haraamkhor walks the razor’s edge. One tiny mistake, and it could have been pronounced morally twisted. However, Haraamkhor is one film you just shouldn’t miss, even if it’s just to see how Hindi cinema is exploring new themes with finesse." and gave the film a rating of 4.5 out of 5.[15] Mayank Bharara of ShowBiz-BizAsia rated the film 7 out of 10 stars. Bharara praised the actors' performances as engaging but noted that the plot "has a tendency to get monotonous."[16][17]
References
- "Haraamkhor". Netflix.
- "Haraamkhor - Movie - Box Office India". boxofficeindia.com.
- "The brave new world of Indie films".
- "Beyond Bollywood: New Indian cinema finds critical and financial success".
- "I am not your typical actress: Vishakha Singh – Times Of India". Articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- "Shweta Tripathi: I can't be an arm candy in films".
- "'All I Want is To Touch a Chord as an Actor'".
- "Shweta Tripathi: Living her dream".
- "FIR against director in Haramkhor promo issue".
- "Nawazuddin Siddiqui Shines in Shlok Sharma's 'Haraamkhor' at New York Indian Film Festival".
- "Immigrant voices".
- "Nawazuddin Siddiqui: Honoured to receive Best Actor Award at NYIFF".
- "Kidre Jaawan - Haraamkhor - Jasleen Royal". YouTube.
- "Haraamkhor Review: Compelling Story Strengthened By Performances". News18.
- "Haraamkhor movie review: Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Shweta Tripathi take us to the land of shocking truths". Hindustan Times.
- "LIFF 2015 Movie Review: 'Haramkhor'". Archived from the original on 9 September 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
- "'Haraamkhor' Review: A Dark & Relevant Tale Told with Innocence".