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Ghajini (pronounced [ɡədʒniː]) is a 2008 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film directed and co-written by A. R. Murugadoss in his Hindi film debut. A remake of the director's Tamil film of the same name , the film stars Aamir Khan , Asin Thottumkal , Jiah Khan and Pradeep Rawat .
[38] [39] Ghajini, together with Chandramukhi and Anniyan, earned more than three times their combined cost of production. [38] The Telugu dubbed version, which was released on 4 November 2005, [40] was also successful [41] and did better business than many straight Telugu films. [42] [43] The film's success earned Suriya a fan following in ...
[5] [6] The title is a portmanteau of the words "Ghajini" and "Rajinikanth", [7] and was titled so because of the forgetful nature of Rajinikanth's character in Dharmathin Thalaivan and Suriya's character in Ghajini (2005). [8] The shoot began with a song sequence shot in Thailand, before the team completed scenes in Chennai. [9]
His first Bollywood film was Ghajini (2008), a Hindi remake of his Tamil film of the same name. It became the first Bollywood film to gross over ₹ 100 crore (US$12 million) domestically. [ 5 ] In 2012, he directed the action thriller Thuppakki , starring Vijay , which became the second Tamil film to gross ₹ 100 crore at the domestic box ...
Ghajini may refer to: Ghajini, an Indian Tamil film; Ghajini, an Indian Hindi remake of the Tamil film Ghajini, by A. R. Rahman; Ghajini – The Game, 2008 third-person action game based on the 2008 film Ghajini; Mahmud of Ghazni, whose name Ghazni is pronounced "Ghajini" in Tamil
It got a 3 out of 5 star rating from Nollywood Reinvented who questioned the originality of the storyline, as the film seems copied from two 2008 Bollywood films; Race and Ghajini. [3] Nollywood Forever gave it a 58% rating. While the reviewer found the cinematography to be of high quality, he found the plot too convoluted and confusing. [4]
The 1990s saw a dramatic change in the Hausa language cinema, eager to attract more Hausa audience who find Bollywood movies more attractive, Kannywood; a cinematic synthesis of Indian and Hausa culture evolved and became extremely popular. Turmin Danya ("The Draw"), 1990, is usually cited as the first commercially successful Kannywood film.
In 2008, Mantena co-produced Ghajini, which became the highest-grossing Indian film of that year. [4] [5] In 2010, he produced the political thrillers Rakht Charitra and Rann and the Bengali drama Autograph. [6] [7] In 2011, Mantena co-founded Phantom Films with Anurag Kashyap, Vikas Bahl and Vikramaditya Motwane.