Rangeela (1995 film)

Rangeela  is a 1995 Indian Hindi-language romantic comedy film co-written, directed and produced by Ram Gopal Varma. It stars Aamir Khan, Urmila Matondkar and Jackie Shroff. The film was A. R. Rahman's first Hindi film with an original score and soundtrack, as his previous Hindi releases were dubbed versions of his Tamil, Malayalam and Telugu films.

Rangeela released on 8 September 1995, and proved to be a major box office success. The film received critical acclaim upon release, with particular praise directed towards the film's soundtrack and Matondkar's performance, thus proving to be a breakthrough for her. It was screened at the mainstream section of the International Film Festival of India.

At the 41st Filmfare Awards, Rangeela received a leading 14 nominations, Best Film, Best Director (Varma), Best Actor (Khan) and Best Actress (Matondkar), and won 7 awards, including Best Supporting Actor (Shroff), Best Music Director (Rahman) and Special Jury Award (Asha Bhosle for "Tanha Tanha").

Plot
A street-toughened orphan by the name of Munna (Aamir Khan) is befriended by some kind folks, whose effervescent daughter Mili (Urmila Matondkar) soon grows to be his best buddy. Both gravitate toward the Mumbai movie industry. While Mili finds occupation as a movie extra, Munna earns his livelihood selling movie tickets in the black market.

Mili has ambitions of becoming an actress. Fortune glances her way when she dances her way into a movie star's attention. This actor, Raj Kamal (Jackie Shroff), arranges for her to be auditioned for the heroine's role in his upcoming film called Rangeela. Mili's shortcomings amount to distractions, but thanks in no small way to Munna and Raj, she lands the role.

Raj and Munna both fall for Mili, but Mili is too busy making the movie to notice any of this. She starts spending a lot of time with Raj during the filming. Munna tries many times to tell Mili that he loves her, but he is unable to, or Raj gets in the way. Eventually, feeling inferior, Munna decides to leave Mili to Raj, who can give her a better life than he can. The matter is not resolved though, as Mili hears of this on the film's opening night reading the letter that Munna left for her. After learning that Munna is even leaving the town, she emotionally runs out of the function to find Munna. Raj is initially angry at Mili for leaving the function midway. Mili tells Raj that Munna has written in the letter that he loves her but has misunderstood their relationship and left the town for good. Raj is taken aback when Mili tearfully tells him that she too loves Munna and can't think of a life without him. Having realized his mistake, Raj decides to reunite Mili and Munna.

Mili and Raj manage to stop Munna midway. All the misunderstandings get cleared up. Finally, Mili and Munna reunite with a hug.

Cast

 * Aamir Khan as Munna
 * Urmila Matondkar as Mili Joshi
 * Jackie Shroff as Raj Kamal
 * Gulshan Grover as Steven Kapoor
 * Avtar Gill as P.C.
 * Reema Lagoo as Mrs. Joshi (Mili's mother)
 * Achyut Potdar as Mr. Joshi (Mili's father)
 * Rajesh Joshi as Pakya
 * Neeraj Vora as Drunk party guest (bluffer)
 * Rajeev Mehta as Restaurant Steward
 * Nitin Chandrakant Desai
 * Ram Mohan as Make-Up Dada
 * Shammi as Gulbadan's mother
 * Tarun as Tough guy at the shooting
 * Suman as Motilal
 * Himanshu
 * Aditya Narayan as child singing
 * Saroj Khan as herself (choreographer)
 * Remo D'Souza as a background dancer in title song
 * Shefali Shah as Heroine Gulbadan (special appearance)
 * Madhur Bhandarkar in a special appearance.

Production
Ram Gopal Varma once loved a woman named Satya Polavarapu, who he claims did not love him back since she preferred a wealthier, better looking man; this inspired him to write Rangeela.

Soundtrack
The soundtrack featured 7 songs composed by A. R. Rahman with lyrics penned by Mehboob and an instrumental theme song. The audio was released in 14 May 1995 by Rahman's mother Kareema. It is listed in almost all lists of best Bollywood soundtracks.

The soundtrack fetched Rahman two filmfare awards, Filmfare Award for Best Music Director and Filmfare R. D. Burman Award for New Music Talent. Mehboob got two nominations for Filmfare Award for Best Lyricist, for the tracks "Kya Kare" and "Tanha Tanha". Swarnalatha, Shweta Shetty and Kavita Krishnamurthy were nominated for Filmfare Award for Best Female Playback Singer for their respective tracks.

Asha Bhosle received the Filmfare Special Award that year for her rendition of the song "Tanha Tanha".

The song "Yaaro Sun Lo Zara" was originally composed for a Telugu film Super Police (1994) as "Baabu Love Cheyyara". The soundtrack was also released in Tamil, with title Rangeela itself and lyrics penned by Vairamuthu. However, the reused track "Yaaro Sun Lo Zara" was not included in the Tamil version. The soundtrack rights are now acquired by Tips Music Company.

Tamil (dubbed version)
All the tracks were written by Vairamuthu.

Reception
Rangeela opened to critical acclaim and was declared a “blockbuster” at the box office, grossing ₹334 million. It was also the fourth biggest grosser of 1995. Urmila Matondkar became an overnight sensation and a superstar. Her fame and star status were bolstered by hits like "Tanha Tanha" and "Rangeela Re". The costume designer of the film Manish Malhotra also received instant fame. The film proved to be a turning point for Khan's career, whose chemistry with Urmila was also appreciated. The choreography of Rangeela also deserves a special mention. The amazing dance sequences led by choreographers Ahmed Khan and Saroj Khan were considered classic and appealing. Rangeela 's music was also highly successful and that helped the film achieve victory at the box office. Film's music was noted for beating all time blockbuster Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge at almost all the award ceremonies. While Ahmed Khan took trophy for best choreographer for "Rangeela Re", many critics and Saroj Khan herself considered that she should have won it for "Tanha Tanha". Saroj Khan also had to battle with producers who showed her as guest choreographer in the movie credits, whereas she choreographed 4 songs.

Cultural significance
Despite the film's huge success, It was still regarded as a film ahead of its time as the films made during the early 1990s had dated plots and storylines. Shekhar Kapur called it 'The film of the 21st Century with great music and visuals' at the screening of the film. The look and presentation of Urmila Matondkar in the film became the talk of the town as it re-invented the image of the Bollywood Heroine. Aamir Khan played an unusual character of a Mumbaiya Tapori in the early stages of his career and that proved to be the milestone for him. A. R. Rahman's music of the film became such a rage that it topped the charts for almost a decade. The songs still remain popular as they have a fresh feel. The film established careers of so many technicians and the people who worked behind the camera.

Awards

 * 41st Filmfare Awards :

Won


 * Best Supporting Actor – Jackie Shroff
 * Best Music Director – A. R. Rahman
 * Best Story – Ram Gopal Varma
 * Best Choreography – Ahmed Khan for "Rangeela Re"
 * Best Costume Design – Manish Malhotra
 * Special Award – Asha Bhosle for "Tanha Tanha"

Nominated


 * Best Film
 * Best Director – Ram Gopal Varma
 * Best Actor – Aamir Khan
 * Best Actress – Urmila Matondkar
 * Best Lyricist – Mehboob for "Kya Kare Kya Na Kare"
 * Best Lyricist – Mehboob for "Tanha Tanha"
 * Best Female Playback Singer – Kavita Krishnamurthy for "Pyaar Yeh Jaane"
 * Best Female Playback Singer – Shweta Shetty for "Mangta Hai Kya"