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No Smoking

  • 2007
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 8m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
No Smoking (2007)
A surreal story about a man, his addiction of smoking, and a mysterious and powerful organisation, which claims to cure such addictions, though through very unusual ways.
Play trailer2:35
1 Video
40 Photos
Dark ComedyDramaHorrorMysteryThriller

A heavily addicted smoker is unprepared for the true price he must pay when he asks a guru's help to kick the habit.A heavily addicted smoker is unprepared for the true price he must pay when he asks a guru's help to kick the habit.A heavily addicted smoker is unprepared for the true price he must pay when he asks a guru's help to kick the habit.

  • Director
    • Anurag Kashyap
  • Writers
    • Raj Singh Chaudhary
    • Anurag Kashyap
  • Stars
    • John Abraham
    • Ayesha Takia
    • Paresh Rawal
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    9.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anurag Kashyap
    • Writers
      • Raj Singh Chaudhary
      • Anurag Kashyap
    • Stars
      • John Abraham
      • Ayesha Takia
      • Paresh Rawal
    • 97User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    No Smoking (2007) Trailer
    Trailer 2:35
    No Smoking (2007) Trailer

    Photos40

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    + 36
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    Top cast22

    Edit
    John Abraham
    John Abraham
    • K
    Ayesha Takia
    Ayesha Takia
    • Anjali…
    Paresh Rawal
    Paresh Rawal
    • Shri Shri Prakash Guru Ghantal Baba Bangali Sealdah Wale
    Ranvir Shorey
    Ranvir Shorey
    • Abbas Tyrewala
    Kiku Sharda
    Kiku Sharda
    • Doctor in charge of K's brother J
    Akhauri P. Sinha
    • ACP
    Joy Fernandes
    • J's friend Alex
    Karan Makhija
    • J's friend, at the starting.
    Megh Pant
    • ACP Assistant
    Vasan Bala
    Vasan Bala
    • The man at the launch party of Alex's cigars
    Pravishi Das
    Pravishi Das
    • Woman in Burkha
    • (as Pravishee)
    Joy Fernandas
    Sanjay Gandhi
    Sanjay Gandhi
    • Chacha
    Vikramaditya Motwane
    Vikramaditya Motwane
    • Man showing middle finger.
    Jesse Randhawa
    • Dancer…
    Gajraj Rao
    Gajraj Rao
    • Rajendra Kishan Dhingra
    Vineet Sharma
    Vineet Sharma
    Vivek Sharma
    • Director
      • Anurag Kashyap
    • Writers
      • Raj Singh Chaudhary
      • Anurag Kashyap
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews97

    7.39.8K
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    Featured reviews

    10aurotaro

    No Smoking - Welcome to New Age Cinema of Beauty and Class

    Throw away the colorful clothes, all the expensive jewellery and welcome to realistic cinema.

    A theme which is hard to make a movie on, attempted by a writer/director of many realistic movies like Black Friday and Satya.

    What appears on the screen is true magic of a director who thinks a different way. A second of this movie cannot be missed, a minute is as good as not watching the movie.

    Put on your thinking caps for a movie. See, visualize, enthrall.

    This movie is a must-watch for those who love change, who love to think about every scene in the movie and analyze.

    Commercial? -- 0% value.

    Cinematic Experience? - 200% value.

    It did take me two full times to watch this movie to understand the whole concept of this movie.

    It did make me think 10 times before I touched my next cigarette.

    I applaud you Mr Anurag Kashyap. Screw the critics who slammed you.
    10vishal-17422

    Ahead Atleast 50 years of its actual time of release

    One of the best hindi movie John 10/10 Paresh rawal 11/10 Anurag 20/10 Vishal Bhardwaj Music 50/10
    7singh-amrit

    Vivid. Unreal. Stunning. Abstract art at its best.

    Hmmm… so didn't we think "abstract art" is a term coined to be used only for paintings or photographs or at best sculptures or any form of art that is static? Whenever we thought of an abstract cinema, most of us would start and stop at Shyam Benegal.

    But Anurag Kashyap with his latest film, changes lots of definitions and perceptions. No doubt Shayam Benegal brand of cinema is one of the USPs of Indian film Industry. But usually in that brand of cinema you could see through Director's brain by the end. You could make out what was the film maker trying to portray. But Anurag Kashyap keeps his card close to his chest till the end. It's hard to define if it was a good thing to do or bad. But the fact remains that there would be numerous questions in your mind after watching this film with various possible answers and none of the answer being totally right or totally wrong. This is peak of vivid imagination. This is stuff dreams are made of.

    Anurag, the director of highly rated Black Friday, shows that there is an intelligent film maker in there who dares to think away from ordinary. This bold attempt may not fetch him commercial success every time, but one thing is for sure that we have a film maker who makes film he believes in and not for making money. This is a good sign for Indian cinema. He gives a new dimension to Art Cinema. Every few reels, you can feel proud that you have got to the crux of the events going on screen, you can soar sky high. But then suddenly you realize that you don't have wing, the film takes an unimaginative new turn and you are left where you started.

    With stunning cinematography, amazing art work, superb direction and high class acting, this certainly is an experience of its own kind. John Abraham looks sexy with his hot 6 packs. Paresh Rawal is as good as it gets. Ayesha Takia is decent.

    Don't try to find or infuse any sense or logic of your own, just watch what is shown, be it lady singing in Adnan Sami's voice or a bath tub in Siberia opening in underground world in Mumbai, and you might like the ride.
    9Sparrowmaniac

    Unbelievable, Classy, Abstract

    There is no doubt left in my mind, that Anurag Kashyap is the next big thing in Bollywood. He is probably the best Indian director for a long time, after the great Satyajit Ray. After his controversial debut in the industry with Paanch, and Black Friday, he delivers this classy act with No Smoking. Truth be told, I was a bit skeptical about this film. A few of my friends had already had a glimpse of it and warned me against going for it, but I gave it a shot nonetheless. And I'm not complaining.

    No Smoking is not your traditional movie. Its not targeted to be a box office hit, because simply 9/10 people will find it stupid, boring and curse Mr.Kashyap to be a raving lunatic. But in the truest of sense, there could not have been any better addiction movie than No Smoking. We have had Requiem For a Dream, Trainspotting in Hollywood, but this the first time we have an Indian story to it. True No Smoking is even more abstract than both, but it also follows a complicated theory. One which is iterated by the Guruji(Paresh Rawal) of the Hindu knowledge of the soul, consciousness, and the Vedas.

    What is the basic theme of the movie is that every addiction has its core in the consciousness, the soul and we have to purify the soul in order to rid us of the addiction. The entire movie we are thrown into possibilities where the antagonist, K (John Abraham) is comprehending what is right or wrong. And that is not restricted to his addiction but all judgments in his life. Whether or not to cheat on someone's wife, or whether or not to trust someone, whether or not in his actions/inactions he is unintentionally causing anyone harm. Which is why we see he is made to believe his wife's death, his brother's suicide is his doing. But this is what his subconscious is telling him. This is what the cure is trying to tell him.

    The treatment that the Guruji is giving him is completely psychological. We find all the patients/relatives of the people who have been to see the "Prayogshala" is admitted to a ward which is made by the Prayogshala itself. People will misinterpret as an emotional blackmail, but in truth its cleansing the soul. We see that the antagonist feels claustrophobic at the end of the end of his dream. He says that his throat is parched and he needs a smoke, when he breaks a window and rushes to the middle of nowhere to get a smoke. The dream of Siberia, the Russian soldier shooting him(although no blood comes out) is all an indication that this is not real, its the journey of the soul, a pathway to cure of his afflictions. We find many clues to this right from the start to the end, to the point when he is desperately trying to prove to the cops that he didn't murder his wife, we find him going all ends out to prove that he is innocent, but somehow nothing works out, since HE has been living a dream, and he just woke up, so his stories are not matching up. This is something novel that Fincher did in the legendary "Fight Club"

    We find in the end the real K, looking out as if searching for a long lost friend, but in real he was searching for his soul, which was waiting to be cleansed, and as his soul his bathed in fire, it is cleansed and is returned to him. About the missing fingers, well everyone thought that was another torture device, but did anyone notice the fingers missing ?? They were the index finger and the middle finger, the ones we use to smoke. They are taken from the patient as a precaution. And the journey of the soul is complete only when he convinces another of his kin to undergo the same procedure, then his finger is returned to him.

    The movie was like I said, superb, and instead of praising any of the actors, well, this is a all in all Kashyap movie throughout. It didn't matter who was the actor, true John Abraham has done a remarkable job, but the genius that Kashyap is, made this movie so good. The direction and screenplay made this the success that it is. The script was just too good, and the sets used, (which I think were real locations actually) were also marvelous. Also the small glimpses of cheap visual effects makes it even more brilliant to show the journey of the soul. The soundtrack is also too good. Apart from the Hindi numbers exclusively for the movie, we are also treated with lots of melodious oldies starting from Frank and Nancy Sinatra to others, and to careful notice one can see that all these songs were about smoking. Paresh Rawal is also excellent in his role as the Guruji, he makes it look so easy. Ayesha Takia is again just a pretty face in this movie, without not much chance to prove herself.

    Lastly this review would be incomplete without a special credit to the masterful, artful Anurag Kashyap. He made a movie about a social peril, about smoking, and he made it look so easy, that it was just brilliant. He has well proved his merit over all other contemporaries. It is just pathetic that people still want to watch stupid remakes by Sanjay Leela Bhansali, irritating soap/family dramas by Karan Johar, and utter bullshit from the likes of Farah Khan, Sajid Khan when they always have options of watching brilliant stuff from this man. This perhaps is my longest review but you also don't get to see such exquisite movies such as No Smoking everyday. 9/10 !!!
    10rohan-choukkar

    The best tribute to Franz Kafka

    For all those illiterates (the numbers of these great unwashed I do not doubt, it is hardly surprising that the movie bombed) who give it 1-2 stars and talk about preserving sanity, a question: Ever heard of Franz Kafka? I saw this movie just after I had read The Trial and The Castle back-to-back. It is a brilliant tribute to the genius of Kafka: I wonder that is what Anurag Kashyap intended in the first place. The plot follows the same twists and turns that one would have in a Kafka novel, particularly the descent to meet the Baba. It is not just any shady place, it is a passage from The Trial faithfully replicated: when K first approaches his accusers (note the name: another Kafka hallmark). Sheer genius. Both the original writer, and the film-maker.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Kay Kay Menon was the first choice for the lead role (K), but he declined suggesting Kashyap to cast an actor having stardom. Anurag then offered SRK the role, who ultimately declined as he felt that the movie promotes 'anti-smoking' feelings. John Abraham was the only star-actor to love the script, and agree to do it.
    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Worst Stephen King Adaptations (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Ash Tray
      Written by Gulzar

      Composed by Vishal Bhardwaj

      Performed by Deva Sen Gupta

      Courtesy of EROS Music

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 26, 2007 (India)
    • Country of origin
      • India
    • Languages
      • Hindi
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Пагубное пристрастие
    • Production companies
      • Big Screen Entertainment
      • Eros Worldwide
      • Panorama Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $797,693
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 8 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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