IMDb RATING
7.6/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
A displaced woman is forced to become a beer-bar dancer, and sire children of a gangster.A displaced woman is forced to become a beer-bar dancer, and sire children of a gangster.A displaced woman is forced to become a beer-bar dancer, and sire children of a gangster.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 15 nominations total
Rajpal Naurang Yadav
- Iqbal Chamdi
- (as Rajpal Yadav)
Shri Vallabh Vyas
- Habib Bhai
- (as Vallabh Vyas)
Abhay Bhargava
- Hegde Anna
- (as Abhay Bhargav)
Suhas Palshikar
- Irfan Mamu
- (as Suhas Palsikar)
Featured reviews
10gb-1
This is one of the movies that allows to peek at the life of the people who have suffered and haven't seen the light at the end of the tunnel. The movie is very effective for it takes us into the life of a beer bar dancing girl (Mumtaz) in the city of Bombay, and shows us the rut that she is in and any attempts made by her to rise are in vain. The movie is both dark in content and in the lighting which is symbolic of the hopelessness and is very effective. Tabu's performance is noteworthy as she depicts the life of Mumtaz with absolute sincerity. Details, such as, her twirling the cord of the phone when she is in a state of hopelessness shows she has really immersed herself into the character. With her performance you never feel that she is putting on a show. The movie neither glamourizes nor demeans the profession of these girls and the director deserves praise for that. The lack of songs is highly appropriate for this movie as this is not a "feel good" movie. As a warning to the faint of heart, this movie is highly disturbing and should be avoided when depressed.
Madhur Bhandarkar is amazing. Tabu is a glamorous Thespian! Not to mention Atul Agnihotri & Rajpal Yadav! Beautiful performances.
The emotion behind the life of a bar dancer in India and all the underlying difficulties - the ups and downs are depicted in this movie. The range (1886 - 2000) is narrated in a very effective manner.
The background aalaap, music, songs and all the rendition makes it a perfect movie.
The message her is so true that the audience really gets touched by it. With one of the few bold themes in the history of Bollywood, Chandni Bar stands out just like his other movies.
Be human, watch this and know how it feels to lead of life filled with utter baloney!
Can be watched with a typical Indian family? NO!
For more - bit.ly/TEJAS
The emotion behind the life of a bar dancer in India and all the underlying difficulties - the ups and downs are depicted in this movie. The range (1886 - 2000) is narrated in a very effective manner.
The background aalaap, music, songs and all the rendition makes it a perfect movie.
The message her is so true that the audience really gets touched by it. With one of the few bold themes in the history of Bollywood, Chandni Bar stands out just like his other movies.
Be human, watch this and know how it feels to lead of life filled with utter baloney!
Can be watched with a typical Indian family? NO!
For more - bit.ly/TEJAS
10nashish
Although I rented this movie on Video, I am still very moved by it. It was quite an experience. Hats off to the director and all the actors especially Tabu & Atul Kulkarni are very effective. The director has done a lot of non-routine stuff like the narration, the lights, the bar songs and background music etc. Hopefully the people get the right message the director wants to convey.
Chandni Bar is an intrguing film and, to this day, remains Madhur Bhandarkar's best film. Bhandarkar gives us a glimpse into the filthy world of Mumbai's lower strata of prostitution, and it is a very truthful look at once. I'm not going to drag it, the one who gives the film its realistic edge and poignancy is its leading lady. Tabu is tremendous in this film - totally there, committed, real, and very credible. You really feel for her throughout the film and want her best interest. She lives her role rather than just playing it and even though she is at times lacking in energy, she is the film; nothing else in it works as well as her story and superlative performance. She is well supported by a competent Atul Kulkarni as the tough but kind husband, and Anaya Khare gives a remarkably realistic performance in a tiny short role with just a few scenes to deliver. Chandni Bar is gritty, gripping, and for the most part rings true, which is a surprise considering the director's other works. Sadly Bhandarkar seems to have fallen too much in love with the idea of showing "the dark side of" that his next projects revolved around similar ideas but focused on providing the viewers some shock value, with much less credibility. Chandni Bar is one piece he could always be proud of, it is worth a watch as a film, and the brilliant Tabu remains its prime asset.
"Chandni Bar" is the BEST movie to come out of Bollywood in 4 decades. Its a brave film, speaking unabashedly about the seemy underbelly of Bombay (and YES it is and always will be Bombay to many), about the nexus between crime and the corrupt police in this city, about sin and the hope of redemption dashed by a vicious system. No wonder this was NOT India's entry to the Oscars....our politicians would be loathe to export something that could "create a bad impression" (they sent the ghastly jingoistic "Lagaan" instead). Pity, because, as an example of cinema verite at its grittiest, it would have probably won. Tabu would have definitely been in the running for Best Actress --- her performance is a study in truth and control. I happened to meet her on a plane and asked whether the film was shot more-or-less in sequence; and she answered in the affirmative --- no doubt this helped her create a slowly-intensifying graph of emotion, peaking at her gut-wrenching howls in the final scene. Her subtlety and sensitivity in the role of the dance-hall girl have had few equals seen by this writer in the cinema. Also the film's design, capturing the slums, back-alleys, police-stations and of course the seedy, sexual, smoky, boozy atmosphere of the dance-bar (changing its decor and its music with the passage of time in the plot) has an attention to detail and a REALISM that anyone who has ever been to these places will marvel at. Bravo to all concerned....and now may we PLEASE have this available on DVD?
Did you know
- TriviaMadhur Bhandarkar has written the role of Mumtaz for Tabu only. Infact he has pasted a picture of Tabu on the script.
- ConnectionsFeatured in 47th Filmfare Awards (2002)
- How long is Chandni Bar?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Танцующая на грани
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- ₹12,500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 2h 30m(150 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
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