Gulaab Gang

2014
6| 2h19m| en| More Info
Released: 07 March 2014 Released
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Synopsis

A fearless woman fights social injustice; creating a sanctuary for abused women and battling a crooked politician.

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Reviews

ThiefHott Too much of everything
Platicsco Good story, Not enough for a whole film
Inmechon The movie's only flaw is also a virtue: It's jammed with characters, stories, warmth and laughs.
Portia Hilton Blistering performances.
ravenhoney90 Marvelous, Spectacular, Mind Blowing, Super Awesome... Seeti Maar.... Parda Phad movie... I never ever did clap for any movie in theater but Gulaab Gang Forced me to do so.... HATS OFF ....HATS OFF ....HATS OFF to all team #GulaabGang for making a master piece of the year... Great Tribute to #WomenPower on #WomensDayJuhi Chawala totally Wicked Queen, never thought she could be so hideous, just loved her performance... Madhuri Dixit- No words, it's like Suraj Ko Diya Dikhana... Seeti Maar, Parda Phaad performance is what all i can say...Story is amazing, screenplay never let make us feel bore, every second our curiosity remained maintained which is commendable........ We all audience were hooting and Applauding on every next dialogue, CHAPPAR PHAD KE ENTERTAINED KIYA !!! A big thanks to Soumik Sen... Anubhav Sinha ... ! Thank You Soooooo Much for Gulaab Gang #JaiHoJese Til Mein Tel Hai, Jyon CHakmak Mein Aag Tera Sai Tujh Me Hai Tu Jaag Sake To Jaag..... RodIjGod
Ketan Gupta The early 90's of Bollywood was ruled by gorgeous and talented Sridevi, Madhuri Dixit, Juhi Chawla,Karisma Kapoor who set the screen on fire with their charisma and versatility in acting. Gulab Gang will blow your mind with powerhouse performance by Madhuri Dixit and Juhi Chawla. Gulab Gang talks about the right of education , freedom , speech of women in the village of UP. Rajjo ( played by Madhuri) leads the gang and fights for crime against women. Her path is vehemently blocked by shrewd and crooked politician ( played by Juhi Chawla). They face-off each other in the battle of guts and glory.As a first time director, Soumik Sen does a decent job of bringing two veterans and extracting extraordinary performance from them. The movie is exceptional in the first half with few moments like introduction scenes of Madhuri and Juhi , confrontation between them and shutting down then entire office of local office are definitely applauding. However, the second half is messed up completely with so many potholes in the script and not so convincing climax as if the director was in hurry to complete the film. Cinematography is outstanding. Art direction is decent. Background score is good. Music is a big letdown. In fact, it was not required at all. Madhuri Dixit outshines as Rajjo. She will remind you of Janki from Lajja where she played similar strong-headed character. She excels in dialogues and is brilliant in the action scenes. You will probably remember Juhi Chawla as chirpy and bubbly next-door-girl characters she played in various film but you will be taken in for surprise as she plays the negative role with aplomb. She emotes expressively through her eyes with devilish charm.Overall, decent flick where Madhuri Dixit and Juhi Chawla shines in this political drama. Good 3/5https://www.facebook.com/FilmyChowk
anupam-graper Good vs. bad Kind vs. cruel Righteous vs. cruel Justice vs. injustice Human vs. inhuman Education vs. illiteracy Batman vs. jokerWhich of the above does one choose from ? If your choice to any one of the above options is on the left side...then go watch Gulaab Gang and take your family and friends with you. You won't be disappointed !Madhuri Dixit, India's biggest female superstar ever plays the role of a courageous and righteous woman he fights for justice and education, specially girl child. She faces struggles and hurdles in her way but she triumphs in the end.Madhuri performs outstandingly well - she emotes, expresses, fights, dances, sings and does everything you can imagine in this movie. The supporting cast including the villain complements Madhuri well and you enjoy the conversations..Direction is OK; Dialogues are good in particular the one's spoken by Rajjo, the lead actor; Choreography is good; Sound mixing is superb and action is outstanding !Go for it guys...proud to be father of three girls...and Madhuri is a true inspiration...Kudos to her !
karan_sunny_5 Nothing like a screen-rippingly pitch-perfect morality tale. Soumik sen casts female protagonists: a vigilante group leader Rajjo and a power-hungry politician Sumitra Devi, as the horn-locking leads and delivers a sucker punch. That it has female leads is sensational only when seen in a narrow context of the stars playing them but their character's causes, aspirations and life-paths are more a product of their personalities. Rajjo's fight for social justice and education is as gender independent as Sumitra's power-trip. It's coincidental that Rajjo's fight rehabilitates more women than men as she is working within a society that heaps double the disadvantages on the females. Just like it's coincidental that Sumitra finds herself working within male-dominated party-offices. Not once did I have to sit through lectures against another gender, and that is the film's first victory. The fight here, for justice and Enlightenment of masses goes beyond gender, as it should be. That Soumik Sen is able to then drop the grid of a massy entertainer on this wonderful post female-empowerment battle of wits and sickles is remarkable. Never does this grid reduce or trivialise the seriousness of the underlying issue, but only scales up the action and renders the vigilante group more intimidating than your standard ground-bound lathi fight. The other frill, the melodic song-breaks, barely last a minute before melting into the background score as the incident-heavy plot progresses. The choreography feels natural and stemming from the camaraderie and everyday work these bunch of self-sufficient ashramites of Rajjo indulge in. There are some other directorial decisions which are masterful: the opening cartoon montage literally spells out the bones of the "story". The point of this movie is both enjoying the how we then see the bones being filled with flesh and blood of this aptly located, arrestingly colour-coded human saga and the message corked within it. Bolstered by a terrific supporting ensemble (Divya Jagdale, Priyanka Bose, a mellow Tannishta Chatterjee, and all the guys) the two leads stand tall and deliver the goods like only they can. Juhi Chawla, cast against type transforms herself into the vile Sumitra Devi, a person who has fashioned herself as the ultimate political scion. Her self-satisfied smug grin at any opportunity to brow-beat and manipulate is as compelling to watch as her intolerance for Rajjo's popularity. Rajjo brings out the worst in her, to the point that she's compelled to smuggle arms for the ultimate face-off and throw her gloved-hand approach she was found carping about for much her screen time. It's a scene seeing her go down and kudos to the director to build her up to be an intimidating adversary with an unpredictable arsenal of "moves". Finally, there is Dixit. Being a hardcore fan, I was left underwhelmed by how emotionally contained and restrained her last two screen characters, in Aaja Nachle and Dedh Ishqiya were. She was beguiling in both, but how I ached to see her bare her fangs a bit. She is again a single crusader here, but Sen lets her rip. She nails those dialogues in close-ups, absolutely convinces in action sequences (who wants to watch a CGI overloaded 300 sequel when you see some awesome, well contextualised wire-fights right here!) but what still haunts me, much after the screening's finished, is how she had completely internalised Rajjo's crusade for education. There is this scene where the masterful camera comes down on her as she reads the approval of the funds and the way she hugs that piece of paper, it just summed everything. Another scene sees the camera slowly moving to her hunched with unwiped tears gleaming on her face and an old man sitting with her. This is after a second murder of one of her adopted girls. She packs in incredible amounts of resilience and is a beautiful amalgamation of the likes of Gandhiji, Tolstoy and the real-life Sampat Pal. In a governance-less land, this story about the reluctant, noble vigilantes with mainstream frills gets under your skin with Dixit as the heart and soul. While self-serious, it never sags, and it's got songs, action and comedy as welcome relief.Finally it's beautiful to see the industrious and the substance-filled real heroes of the world being championed, than the Dons, Gundays, Rowdy rathores, Rajkumars etc that has become the vogue of late. I sat through the end credits silently cheering for those incredible people who bettered not just their lives, but the world around them. It all starts with education.