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Gulaal (gulal, Crimson) is a 2009 Indian Hindi-language political drama film directed by Anurag Kashyap, starring Raj Singh Chaudhary, Kay Kay Menon, Abhimanyu Singh, Deepak Dobriyal, Ayesha Mohan, Jesse Randhawa, Piyush Mishra and Aditya Srivastava. It explores themes such as pursuit of power, quest for legitimacy, perceived injustices and ...
The cast is led by Fawad Khan, Vaani Kapoor, Riddhi Dogra, Lisa Haydon, Farida Jalal, Soni Razdan, Parmeet Sethi and Rahul Vohra. [4] [5] The film has a supporting cast from India and UK. [6] Principal photography took place in London, England from 29 September 2024 with a filming schedule lasting into October and November. [7]
Mishra again appeared in Anurag Kashyap's 2009 movie Gulaal, a movie based on Indian youth, politics, caste-prejudice, and other such social topics. He played Prithvi, the poet brother of Dukey Bana (played by Kay Kay Menon), in the movie. This was a role he executed with aplomb.
Abhimanyu Singh made his debut with the film Aks, directed by Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra.His first major role was in the 2009 film Gulaal, directed by Anurag Kashyap. [1] His performance in the film won him the 2010 Stardust Award for best breakthrough performance.
Panchayat 2, Gulaal, Monsoon Wedding Pankaj Jha is an Indian actor, painter, writer and director. His filmography includes Black Friday , Gulaal , Chameli , Anwar and Matrubhoomi .
In 2009, he directed Dev.D, a modern-day take on Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay's Bengali novel Devdas, [9] along with the political drama Gulaal. [10] Despite positive reviews, the latter was a box-office failure. [11]
Kashyap wrote a new screenplay based on Chaudhary's original script for what would eventually become the film Gulaal. Chaudhary played the lead character and earned praise. [3] In addition to his work on Gulaal, Chaudhary also assisted on the set of Black Friday while playing a primary character and wrote the short story on which No Smoking is
Gulal or abir [1] is the traditional name given to the coloured powders used for some Hindu rituals, in particular for the Holi festival or Dol Purnima (though commonly associated with the red colour used in the festival).