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Rang De Basanti (transl. Paint Me Saffron) is a 2006 Indian Hindi-language epic coming-of-age socio-political drama film written, produced, and directed by Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra. [3] The film stars an ensemble cast including Aamir Khan , Siddharth (in his Hindi debut), Atul Kulkarni , Sharman Joshi , Kunal Kapoor , British actress Alice ...
The poem has also been used in the 2000 film, Dhadkan and the 2006 film, Rang De Basanti, being featured heavily for the track Lalkaar in the latter. The poem is also referenced in abridged form in the 2009 movie, Gulaal by Anurag Kashyap. [6] The poem has also been recently used in Ajay Devgn's 2021 film Bhuj: The Pride of India.
The actions of Khan and his compatriots have been depicted in the Hindi film Rang De Basanti (2006), where his character is depicted by Kunal Kapoor. Chetanya Adib portrayed Khan in the Star Bharat television series Chandrashekhar.
Chandan Roy Sanyal (born 30 January 1980) is an Indian actor who is known for his work in the Hindi and Bengali language films of India. [1] After graduating with a degree in mathematics, he made his acting debut in the 2006 film Rang de Basanti, in a minor role.
The infobox says that the film is Hindi/English/Punjabi language, but the article is categorised as Hindi and Urdu language. I changed the categories to reflect that in the infobox. Happy editing! --Nehrams2020 (talk • contrib) 22:54, 20 April 2009 (UTC) "...it had the highest-selling DVD title sales of its time."
Following a hiatus, she has worked intermittently, appearing in the social dramas Water (2005), Rang De Basanti (2006) and Delhi 6 (2009). Apart from her acting career, Rehman is a philanthropist. She is an advocate for education and is an ambassador for RangDe, an organisation combating poverty in India. [1]
Rang De Basanti is a 2006 Indian drama film written and directed by Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra.It features an ensemble cast comprising Aamir Khan, Soha Ali Khan, Madhavan, Kunal Kapoor, Siddharth Narayan, Sharman Joshi, Atul Kulkarni and British actress Alice Patten in the lead roles.
The rationale for using the name Rang De Basanti instead of Paint it Yellow is because of the approximately 20x increase in the likelihood of the title being listed in external search engines. Addressed the other comments viz., caption changed appropriately, lead section modified accordingly and original research removed from cast section.