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Zinda

  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
Sanjay Dutt, Lara Dutta, John Abraham, and Celina Jaitly in Zinda (2005)
ActionDramaMysteryThriller

A man, taken and locked up for 14 years without any sane reason, is suddenly released, and has 4 days to figure out why this was done to him.A man, taken and locked up for 14 years without any sane reason, is suddenly released, and has 4 days to figure out why this was done to him.A man, taken and locked up for 14 years without any sane reason, is suddenly released, and has 4 days to figure out why this was done to him.

  • Director
    • Sanjay Gupta
  • Writers
    • Vishal Dadlani
    • Sanjay Gupta
    • Anwar Maqsood
  • Stars
    • Sanjay Dutt
    • John Abraham
    • Lara Dutta
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sanjay Gupta
    • Writers
      • Vishal Dadlani
      • Sanjay Gupta
      • Anwar Maqsood
    • Stars
      • Sanjay Dutt
      • John Abraham
      • Lara Dutta
    • 56User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 nominations total

    Photos15

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Sanjay Dutt
    Sanjay Dutt
    • Balajit 'Bala' Roy
    John Abraham
    John Abraham
    • Rohit Chopra
    Lara Dutta
    Lara Dutta
    • Jenny Singh Sarji
    Celina Jaitly
    Celina Jaitly
    • Nisha B. Roy
    Mahesh Manjrekar
    Mahesh Manjrekar
    • Joy Fernandes
    Raj Zutshi
    Raj Zutshi
    • Woo Fong
    Alisha Baig
    • Reema Chopra
    Nitin Raghani
    Russhita Singh Rushita Singh
    Russhita Singh Rushita Singh
    • Reema B. Roy
    • (as Rushita Singh)
    Rahhull Dosani
    Chirag
    Gaurav Chanana
      Master Shlok Chaturvedi
      Vicky Arora
      Vicky Arora
      Ayiana Flood
      • Unknown 2
      Monalisa
      Monalisa
        Humayun Saeed
        Humayun Saeed
        • Unknown 3
        Amit Sharma
        Amit Sharma
        • Unknown 1
        • Director
          • Sanjay Gupta
        • Writers
          • Vishal Dadlani
          • Sanjay Gupta
          • Anwar Maqsood
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews56

        4.93.9K
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        Featured reviews

        1ninja667

        Remake (particularly bad one) of Korean Oldboy where a man is inexplicably held prisoner for fourteen years and only has four days to find out why

        Bollywood should NEVER try to be as ambitious to tackle films like Oldboy. Indian morality eventually gets in the way. Such attempts are cringeworthy. Do not bother watching Zinda unless you like talentless 'eye candy' type films. Watch the original instead. What is it with Bollywood anyway? They shamelessly copy from oriental cinema/Hollywood and try to pass it off as their own. You can't help but feel disappointed. It was a massacre of the cultish Oldboy. You have to have a strong stomach to stomach some of the things that happen in Oldboy. Its like Bollywood was sugar coating the themes in Oldboy and what do you end up with? A version which your granny can watch with you without feeling too offended. If that was the case then Zinda should never have been made. Well it shouldn't have!
        1dutchmale24

        xerox could have done a better job

        The only reason this movie ended up with more as 1 star is because some hardcore nationalist bollywood lovers didn't write honest reviews. Don't get me wrong. I have nothing against remakes nor bollywood, but this is just uninspired crap. I like any kind of movies. But movies ought to be made by people who enjoy making them, they should be skilled. Willing to put effort in making a good movie. This guy is allowed to make movies because he is from a rich influential family.

        Sanjay Gupta must be one of the least talented directors these days. None of his work is original and all of his movies are cheap copies. this is the same, he saw a movie. Liked it, but just didn't understand it. it doesn't even come close to the original. Everything is just worse as the original oldboy. Camera work, story (that doesn't work out anymore) de fighting is lame, making it not offending for the Indian audience by cutting out the incest totally destroyed the story. The actor had to be a pretty face, too bad he didn't have acting skills with it. This untalented director shouldn't even be allowed to sell pop-corn in a cinema. Too bad mom and dad had money.

        Its a direct insult to the real oldboy, and Sanjay didn't even pay for the rights to rip it. Please don't watch it, get oldboy instead. This one will only make you vomit
        4shariqq

        A failed attempt does not a good movie make

        Having seen the Korean movie that Zinda is based on, and realizing how difficult a job Sanjay Gupta had on his hands, I went into this screening giving Zinda all the chance I could. What I eventually ended up watching got me thinking: Since Gupta has seen the original, what did he see at all in his version that he let it be released in cinemas? He should have left this movie on the shelves, or let out a quite Home video release and saved himself a lot of face. Or be man enough to announce that he failed. It is impossible that he could have been satisfied with the end-product. For a movie where the director deceives himself, what chance do the audience have? Zinda follows the life of Bala (Sanjay Dutt) who is plucked off his beach-house in Bangkok without notice, shortly after arriving there with his wife. He is imprisoned in a hotel-room, fed & cared for and yet devoid of all human contact. He is not even allowed to kill himself. His only contact with the outside world is a Television set which eventually gives him news that his wife has been killed and all evidence points to him as the murderer. 14 years of solitary confinement followed by sudden release fuels Bala's quest for vengeance against his captor (John Abraham). At his aid are a Female Punjabi Cab Driver (Lara Dutta) and his childhood friend (Mahesh Manjrekar).

        Sanjay Gupta and Sanjay Dutt as White Feather Films make a formidable team. Since rediscovering himself as a 'remake' film-maker, Gupta has been Indianising movies quite well. Somehow, they have always managed to entertain the testosterone audience. But here Gupta sets himself too high a target. Oldboy, the Korean film that Zinda is a remake of, is a masterpiece in film-making. The movie cannot and should not be tinkered with in its story and characters. All Gupta wants to do is pick the stylization from Oldboy and fit it into a movie he has imagined he can make. Yes, style has sold film before, but a minimalist interest in the script only works to negate any effect that the sleek-look may have. To give credit where due, Sanjay Gupta does make an attempt towards a movie like nothing we have 'seen' before. But a failed attempt does not a good movie make. Sanjay Gupta has always been a master technician of his movies, but this movie falters at a more basic level - it's writing. The theme of the movie is Revenge. But is Sanjay Dutt's Bala interested in revenge at all? Yes, to begin with: when he tries to discover the place where he was held captive. But thereafter all he is interested in is staring, walking, staring, running. With such a strong motive behind a well established character, where is the pay-off? Dutt himself gives a good performance. But with no backbone. This is not an act where even if the movie collapses all around him, his performance will emerge from the rubble as a saving grace (as it was in Pitaah). We have seen Mr Dutt do a lot better than this before, and in contrast, his Bala is too mediocre. John Abraham also does a good job - but unfortunately, the consistency and fierceness of his character does a 180 at the end, thanks again to the writing. He takes the entire movie to prepare this wonderfully evil character and ends it by adding a teaspoon-full of sugar. Lara Dutta does her best to look babe (she succeeds), but fails to convince us as a Punjabi or a cab-driver. Another White-Feather alumnus Sameera Reddy could have been a better choice. Mahesh Manjrekar is a lost cause.

        Sanjay Gupta and his cinematographer Sanjay F. Gupta (Oh, the number of Sanjays!) work well to mood the film right - but while the color-grading worked well in Musafir, and in Sanjay F Gupta's Karam, here the entire movie ends up with a grainy look. That, my dear Guptas, is definitely a not. The lack of dance-numbers and only background tracks is a positive, and Vishal-Shekhar with Strings add to a wonderful soundtrack. Down the years, maybe that's all this movie might be remembered for. And a somewhat decent, but copied, hammer-sequence.

        My Rating --> 2/5
        samsblood

        Not only a lack of concern, but it seems some actually see ripping off as a positive thing

        I've read the user comments on this forum and found a blithe lack of concern in many of the posts for the fact that 'Zinda' is a total ripoff. Here are some telling examples, along with my own not-very-profound responses. I trust I need do no more than that to make my point:

        "It is unfortunate that bollywood ripped off OLDBOY, but if that is the only way that the Indian audiences would get a glimpse of what the original was like, so be it" (Huh? Ever hear of buying the rights to do an official remake?)

        "I am reading the reviews of OLD Boy too, which i have not seen. But I should say that it is a great experiment by Indian cinema" (Yeah, a repeat experiment -- like where somebody else first came up with the ideas and took the risks before you came along and decided to do the exact same thing)

        "The legendary action-scene with the hammer looks as hard as it was in Korean version". (the Korean version? Almost makes it sound like 'Oldboy' ripped off 'Zinda')

        "First things first , i haven't seen Old Boy so just cant judge Zinda by it's standard... He did full justice to the role of Balajeet Roy(on par with Choi Min-shik" (So you haven't seen 'Oldboy', but you HAVE seen Choi Min-Shik's performance in it? Do the police come to you for psychic impressions when they run out of clues?)

        (And what does this mean): "There is no doubt that 'ZINDA' is a complete rip-off of Korean movie 'OLDBOY' but I must add that it is an excellent adaptation of 'OLDBOY'".

        --And I won't spoil the pristine effect of these following remarks by adding my own commentaries:

        "Hollywood is also planning a rip of this one, so what's the fuss all about"

        "People tell me that this movie is inspired/copied or total remake of a Korean masterpiece "OldBoy"; but I don't mind it"

        "Yes agreed that he copies other films scene by scene, but who doesn't? Why is he called a copycat, when i can add a long list of other copycats? Take Ek Ajnabee - which was an exact copy of Man On Fire, or Vivek Agnihotri for Chocolate - which was a ridiculous version of the classic 'The Usual Suspects'. At least Sanjay Gupta makes a good replica of a film"

        "Copy of old boy backed up with Sanjay direction makes it truly a ride you will never forget".

        "The story may be inspired from a Korean film, or so we are told, but is doesn't matter because no one's really seen it".
        1bumfromkorea

        Product of a questionably loose Indian Copyright laws

        Many have said this before, but I'm afraid I have to repeat the opinion on the account that a surprising many have decided that Zinda is worth of anything more than 1 star in IMDb. Zinda is a unscrupulous photocopy of the masterpiece Oldboy, and should be avoided, if not boycotted.

        Some will claim that Zinda is a 'tribute' or a 'remake' of the Oldboy. To them I ask one question: "What kind of filmmakers make remakes of a movie when the original came out two years ago and has been selling DVDs very well internationally?" It seems that this particular brand of Indian cinema has decided that it is quite content making money off of other people idea for free. And though it is impossible for the original filmmakers to sue the filmmakers of Zinda (on the account that Indian copyright laws does not allow for such suit), Zinda should be remembered as a true stain on the development of Indian Cinema.

        Because it has photocopied a great movie, Zinda avoids being an absolute terror of a movie. However, this does not excuse Sanjay Gupta and the section of 'Bollywood' that has involved itself in Zinda's production. Because of the blatant plagiarism, and the Zinda's makers absolutely refusing to apologize and reimburse the original filmmakers, I must say Zinda deserves 1 star, if not 0.

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        Storyline

        Edit

        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          The film faced problem when makers of Korean film Oldboy sent a legal notice for copying the film without consent.
        • Goofs
          The knife in Balajeet's back changes positions from the center to top left.
        • Quotes

          Balajeet Roy: I'll kill you, Rohit

          Rohit Chopra: If you kill me, who will tell you your daughter's whereabouts?

          Balajeet Roy: Tell me her whereabouts, Rohit

          Rohit Chopra: Your daughter is being plundered in this very whorehouse.

          Rohit Chopra: She is getting fucked!

          Balajeet Roy: [screaming] No!

        • Alternate versions
          The film was edited for television premiere. The age rating was changed from A (adults only) to U (universal) after a few violent and sexual scenes were removed.
        • Connections
          Referenced in Woodstock Villa (2008)
        • Soundtracks
          Yeh Hai Meri Kahaani, Khamosh Zindagani
          Written by Virag Mishra

          Composed by Faisal Kapadia and Bilal Maqsood

          Performed by Faisal Kapadia, Bilal Maqsood, Sanjay Dutt and John Abraham

          Courtesy of Super Cassettes Industries Limited (T-Series)

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        FAQ19

        • How long is Zinda?Powered by Alexa

        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • January 12, 2006 (India)
        • Country of origin
          • India
        • Language
          • Hindi
        • Also known as
          • Alive
        • Filming locations
          • Bangkok, Thailand
        • Production company
          • White Feather Films
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

        Edit
        • Gross US & Canada
          • $332,491
        • Opening weekend US & Canada
          • $167,246
          • Jan 16, 2006
        • Gross worldwide
          • $3,474,820
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 1h 56m(116 min)
        • Color
          • Color
        • Sound mix
          • DTS
          • Dolby Digital
        • Aspect ratio
          • 2.35 : 1

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