Singh Is Kinng
Singh Is Kinng | |
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File:Singhisking.jpg
Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Anees Bazmee |
Produced by | Vipul Amrutlal Shah |
Screenplay by | Anees Bazmee Suresh Nair |
Story by | Anees Bazmee |
Starring | Akshay Kumar Katrina Kaif Om Puri Ranvir Shorey Neha Dhupia Javed Jaffrey Sonu Sood Sudhanshu Pandey |
Music by | Pritam |
Cinematography | Sanjay F Gupta Ben Nott |
Distributed by | Reliance Entertainment Viacom 18 Motion Pictures Hari Om Productions |
Release dates
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8 August 2008 |
Running time
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2:16:08 |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi Punjabi |
Budget | ₹500 million (US$7.4 million)[1] |
Box office | ₹1.75 billion (US$26 million)[2] |
Singh is Kinng is a 2008 Indian action comedy film. Directed by Anees Bazmee, the film stars, Akshay Kumar and Katrina Kaif in lead roles. The film also featured a music video with Snoop Dogg. Released on 8 August 2008, a major part of the shooting was done in Australia. Akshay Kumar was also nominated for the Asian Film Awards under the Best Actor category for his performance in the film.Singh is Kinng was declared Superhit by Box Office India.[3]
The spelling of the word "king" in the film's title with an additional letter "n" was based on advice provided by a numerologist.[4][5]
This film is not related to the 2015 film Singh Is Bliing, which also starred Akshay Kumar and was rumored to be the sequel to Singh is Kinng.[6]
Plot
Lakhan Singh (Sonu Sood), a.k.a. Lucky, is the "kinng of the Australian underworld." He is accompanied by his Sikh mafia associates, Julie (Neha Dhupia), Mika (Jaaved Jaffrey), Pankaj Udaas (Yashpal Sharma), Raftaar (Sudhanshu Pandey), Dilbaugh Singh (Manoj Pahwa) and Guruji Gurbaksh Singh (Kamal Chopra). In a small village in Punjab, the birthplace of Lucky, there lives another Sikh, Happy Singh(Akshay Kumar). Happy, though good at heart, has unintentionally caused many problems in the village, and the villagers are fed up with him. They decide to send Happy on a long trip to Australia with his friend Rangeela (Om Puri) to bring Lucky back to Punjab, which will keep Happy out of the village for some time and bring peace to the village.
But at the airport, Happy's and Rangeela's tickets to Australia are accidentally exchanged with those of Puneet(Ranvir Shorey), who was to fly to Egypt. In Egypt, Happy meets Sonia (Katrina Kaif) and falls deeply in love with her. But he does not express his love to her. Leaving her behind, he heads to Australia to meet Lucky. Lucky refuses to return to his hometown and throws Happy and Rangeela out of his house. Penniless, Happy finds warmth and affection in an elderly lady (Kirron Kher) who provides him with food in spite of being a stranger.
Lucky winds up in hospital, paralyzed, after a series of violent incidents that Happy causes. (In one of these incidents, his head is bumped severely, and the trauma from the resultant concussion is what paralyzes him.) Unexpectedly, Happy is given the position of Kinng! The lady who helped Happy is obviously worried and depressed, as her daughter is returning from Egypt with her wealthy boyfriend, Puneet. The daughter does not know that after the death of her father years ago, her mother had become poverty-stricken and been reduced to work as a flower seller. Happy gives her Lucky's spacious house and makes all his mafia associates work under her.
The lady's daughter arrives--and to Happy's horror, she is none other than Sonia! Happy, heart-broken, is forced to make a show of happiness to Sonia. Puneet says that he too would have had a good time with Happy and Sonia in Egypt had his ticket to Egypt not been exchanged in the airport, because of which he had ended up in Australia. Puneet had always been jealous of Sonia being with Happy; however, he doubts something going on between them.
Meanwhile, Lucky's gang members spend enough time with the kindhearted Kinng for most of them to be reformed and give up lawless lives in favour of law-abiding ones.
In spite of herself, Sonia falls in love with Happy...and the truth becomes difficult to hide. Puneet sets his heart to marry Sonia. Sonia gets trapped in an emotional tug-of-war between Puneet, who loves her, and Happy, whom she loves.
During the confusion, Happy's associates reveal to Puneet who they are, and that Happy is the Kinng of the Australian underworld, not a manager as Puneet had believed him to be. Puneet, in turn, reveals this to Sonia, who has become aware of her own poverty.
Soon Puneet meets Mika, Lucky's other brother, who agrees to kill Happy. Puneet's motives to kill Happy, however, differ from Mika's: Puneet wants to kill Happy to keep Sonia away from him, whereas Mika wants to kill Happy to make himself Kinng.
On the dawn of the wedding day, the sound of gunshots firing can be heard. Happy takes Sonia in order to save her--and unknowingly, both run around the fire seven times, essentially getting married. (During all this, Lucky's head is bumped, and the trauma-induced paralysis he had suffered from is relieved.) Suddenly, Mika turns up on the spot, ready to kill Happy, armed with a gang and his new special glasses and hearing aid. As he is about to shoot, Lucky steps up and stops him. Then a dialogue ensues between Mika, Happy, Lucky, and the associates of the Kinng. Then Happy tells him that being the "kinng" is not as great as it may seem and explains him the characteristics of a true Sikh. Lucky confesses that he had always found being Kinng a source of misery, because a true kinng fights for others, not for himself. Overcome with remorse, Mika drops his gun. The movie ends with Happy's and Sonia's marriage.
Cast
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- Akshay Kumar as Harpreet Singh (Happy)
- Katrina Kaif as Sonia Singh
- Neha Dhupia as Julie
- Sonu Sood as Lakhan Singh (Lucky)
- Jaaved Jaaferi in double role as Mika
- Ranvir Shorey as Puneet
- Kamal Chopra as Guruji Gurbaksh Singh
- Om Puri as Rangeela
- Sudhanshu Pandey as Raftaar
- Kirron Kher as Rose Lady (Sonia's Mother)
- Yashpal Sharma as Pankaj Udaas
- Manoj Pahwa as Dilbag Singh
- Chayan Sarkar as Man at Airport
- Gurpreet Ghuggi as Manjeet
- Snoop Dogg as himself
- Gleven Roy Abugan as himself
- Tyson Bradly as DJ
- Sanchita Choudary as Tanya
Music
The music of the film was composed by Pritam and the lyrics were written by Mayur Puri. The title song was composed by the British bhangra band RDB. The soundtrack was launched officially at the IIFA Awards in Bangkok on 8 June 2008.
Snoop Dogg also has a cameo in the video of the title song.[7]
Shreya Ghoshal who a sung the song Teri Ore won the Filmfare Award for Best Female Playback Singer and the IIFA Award for Best Female Playback. Mayur Puri was nominated for the Star Screen Awards under the Best Lyrics category for the same song.
Singh is Kinng | |||||
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File:SIK Cover.jpeg
Album cover
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Soundtrack album by Pritam | |||||
Released | 8 June 2008 | ||||
Genre | Feature film soundtrack | ||||
Length | Error in Module:Hms: Seconds value must be less than 60 | ||||
Label |
Junglee Music
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Producer | Vipul Shah | ||||
Pritam chronology | |||||
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RDB chronology | |||||
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The soundtrack of the film is as follows:
Track | Singer | Duration | Lyrics |
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Singh Is Kinng | Snoop Dogg, RDB, Akshay Kumar | 4:55 | Snoop Dogg, RDB |
Jee Karda | Labh Janjua, Suzanne D'Mello | 4:51 | Mayur Puri |
Bas Ek Kinng | Mika Singh, Neeraj Shridhar, Ashiesh Pandit, Javed Jaffrey, Hard Kaur | 4:40 | Mayur Puri |
Bhootni Ke | Daler Mehndi | 5:02 | Mayur Puri Bimal Oberoi |
Teri Ore | Shreya Ghoshal, Rahat Fateh Ali Khan | 5:39 | Mayur Puri |
Talli Hua | Neeraj Shridhar, Labh Janjua | 4:50 | Mayur Puri |
Bas Ek Kinng – Tiger Style Mix | Javed Jaffrey, Neeraj Shridhar, Hard Kaur, Mika Singh, Ashiesh Pandit | 4:04 | Mayur Puri |
Bhootni Ke – Tiger Style Mix | Mika Singh | 4:45 | Mayur Puri |
Talli Hua – Jay Dabhi Mix | Neeraj Shridhar, Labh Janjua, Stylebhai | 4:33 | Mayur Puri |
Jee Karda – Remix | Labh Janjua, Suzanne D'Mello | 4:52 | Mayur Puri |
Teri Ore – Lounge Remix | Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, Shreya Ghoshal | 6:09 | Mayur Puri |
Bhootni Ke – Remix | Daler Mehndi | 3:54 | Mayur Puri Bimal Oberoi |
Reception
Some members of the Sikh community had expressed their displeasure over the portrayal of Sikhs in the movie. On 1 August 2008, the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) wrote a letter to Sheila Dikshit, the chief minister of Delhi, asking her to ban the movie, as the trailer showed Akshay Kumar's character sporting a trimmed beard. But according to their religious guidelines, male Sikhs should not trim their beards, and the DSGMC found this offensive. After negotiations with the DSGMC authorities, the film was given clearance on 7 August 2008.[8]
References
- ↑ Singh Is King Box Office Collections – BO. Indicine.com (9 August 2008). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
- ↑ Boxofficeindia.com. Boxofficeindia.com. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
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External links
- Articles with dead external links from October 2010
- EngvarB from January 2014
- Use dmy dates from January 2014
- Pages with broken file links
- Duration with input error
- Music infoboxes with deprecated parameters
- 2008 films
- Fictional Indian people
- Films set in Australia
- Hindi-language films
- Indian films
- Indian-Australian films
- Hari Om Entertainment films
- Film scores by Pritam