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Karan Johar has been honored for his significant contributions to Indian cinema.

Karan Johar has been honored for his significant contributions to Indian cinema. He was presented with prestigious awards at renowned events, with awards such as the National Award for “Shershah” and the AIMA Director of the Year Award for “RRKPK,” both presented by the President and Vice President of India.

Karan Johar ( Indian filmmaker ) Biography

Karan Johar is one of the most popular faces and personalities in the Bollywood industry. Karan Johar is the one is a multi-talented person a director, model, actor, producer, writer and anchor. Karan Johar’s full name is Karan Kumar Johar aka Rahul Kumar Johar. 

Johar was born in Mumbai, India on May 25, 1972, parents Hiroo and film producer Yash Johar, who founded Dharma Productions. It is his mother’s side that is Sindhi Hindu, and his father’s side that is Punjabi Hindu. Green Lawns High School was his place of education. Johar writes in his autobiography, An Unsuitable Boy, that he failed the entrance exam to the prestigious Dehradun all-boys boarding school, The Doon School, because he did not score well in mathematics. As a result, Johar’s mother received a highly “emotional letter” from the then-headmaster Gulab Ramchandani rejecting admission. Following Green Lawns, he studied in Mumbai’s H.R. College of Commerce and Economics .

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Karan Johar Net Worth

Net Worth$215 Million
SalaryRs 100 Crore +
Monthly IncomeRs 10 Crore +

Karan johar Awards

YearAward ShowCategory
2015International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Picture
2015Filmfare AwardsBest Film
2014Filmfare AwardsBest Film
2014Screen AwardsBest Film
2014International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Picture
2014Zee Cine AwardsBest Film
2013Stardust AwardsDream Director
2013Stardust AwardsFilm of the Year
2013Zee Cine AwardsBest Film
2011International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Direction
2011Zee Cine AwardsBest Story
2011Zee Cine AwardsBest Director
2011Filmfare AwardsBest Director
2011Stardust AwardsDream Director
2010Filmfare AwardsBest Film
2009Filmfare AwardsBest Film
2009International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Picture
2007International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Direction
2007Zee Cine AwardsBest Director
2007Zee Cine AwardsBest Film
2006Global India Film AwardsBest Film
2004Zee Cine AwardsBest Film
2004International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Story
2004International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Picture
2002International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Story
2002International Indian Film Academy AwardsBest Direction
2002Zee Cine AwardsBest Director

Karan Johar has been Honor

In honor of his important contributions to Indian cinema, Karan Johar has received awards. At well-known occasions, he received honors such as the National Award for “Shershah” and the AIMA Director of the Year Award for “RRKPK,” which were given by the Indian President and Vice President.

“Chamkila” Review of the film: Diljit Dosanjh consistently supports Imtiaz Ali’s lively musical!

“Chamkila” Imtiaz Ali’s vibrant tribute to the late Punjabi singer is less of an intricate examination and more of a celebration.

Born Dhani Ram in a Punjabi Dalit Sikh household, singer Amar Singh Chamkila rose to prominence in the 1980s with his gritty musical style and taunting lyrics. His ground-breaking compositions were equally aware of rural class discontent in the working North as they were fixated on incest and illicit love. He was shot and killed in Mehsampur on March 8, 1988, while getting out of his automobile for a performance by unidentified gunmen. Along with him were two other members of his troupe and his wife, Amarjot, who was also his singing partner. There were several explanations put out, but the case remained unresolved since the state was being overrun by a violent insurrection.

This strange incident from Punjab’s troubled past has previously been used as material for films, most notably in the innovative absurdist docu-fiction Mehsampur (2018) directed by Kabir Singh Chowdhry. Now, Imtiaz Ali attempts to tackle Chamkila, co-writing with his brother, Sajid. Fans who are already familiar with the basic details of the singer’s life and passing, along with many rumors, won’t be convinced again. In Ali’s film, no mysteries are solved and no ghosts are banished. This interpretation of the Chamkila story is somewhat simple and more of a vivacious celebration than a thorough analysis. It does, however, manage to provide a glimpse into the artist’s innermost thoughts despite its squareness.

Amar Singh Chamkila

DirectorImtiaz Ali
CastDiljit Dosanjh, Parineeti Chopra, Anurag Arora, Kumud Mishra, Anjum Batra, Samuel John
Runtime146 minutes
StorylineThe life and times of the late Punjabi folk singer, Amar Singh Chamkila

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This happens considerably late in the film. Chamkila (Diljit Dosanjh) has sold out his Toronto show, during his overseas tour of ‘87. His oily impresario is grinning from ear to ear, telling him how, when Amitabh Bachchan performed at the same venue a few nights ago, they had to add 137 extra seats. In Chamkila’s case, he proudly adds, that number has exceeded a thousand. We expect Chamkila to cheer up at this achievement; he’s been, all his life, a devout Bachchan fan. Instead, his smile fades like the morning mist real explanation is provided for his blues: a narrator dryly notes that artists are strange creatures and that Chamkila’s dejection resembled something like a loss, as though his childhood had suddenly ended. This moment buried deep in the noise and tumult of Chamkila’s extraordinary life, is the best in Ali’s film, even if it’s wholly fictitious. Far from supplying answers about the slain Punjabi singer, mythologized to breaking point in popular discourse, it asks a gentle question: how comfortable was Chamkila, improbably baptized the ‘Elvis of Punjab’, with his meteoric rise?

Ali opens his tale with the fateful assassination, then proceeds to jumble up childhood and death, deed and aftermath, fact and hearsay. The lilting soundtrack begins to throb; images alter color and form; superimpositions appear. The wailing ‘Baaja’ reaches an angry crescendo, complete with spoken lines, like Broadway meets protest street theatre. It is a carousel spin of a start, reminiscent of the grainy dream sequences in Tamasha (2015), or the swirling structural schemes editor Aarti Bajaj devised for Rockstar (2011).

After this dramatic introduction, a largely subdued summary of Chamkila’s life and times follows. An average mill worker, he writes lyrics for the folk sensation Jinda (modeled after Punjabi singer Surinder Shinda) and brings him tea after charming his way into his orbit. An opportunity to perform for a furious akhada reveals his vocal prowess. He gains popularity by crooning upbeat duets, but he quickly runs out of supporters and a partner. Most people get tired of his high-pitched delivery and constant appointments, but Amarjot (Parineeti Chopra), who is tickled pink by his lewd rhymes, manages to stick around. They tie the knot.

It is known that Amarjot was descended from a Jat family of higher caste, while Chamkila’s ancestors were Chamar. Not only that but he was previously married, which he first keeps from Amarjot (and from Ali from us). Other factors were involved. Religious leaders and radicals roaming the countryside had placed severe restrictions on speech and culture; the police, who were cracking down hard in retaliation, weren’t any nicer. Chamkila was labeled as a renegade, or baagi, who corrupted young and families. He was exposed to various forms of intimidation and harassment as a result. In one chilling moment, a group of thugs show up at his door and tell him they enjoy his music before shaking him down for money.

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Ali barrels through the dark sociopolitical atmosphere of 80s Punjab, as you’d expect from a filmmaker of his (mostly romantic) persuasion. There is a constant softening of mood and tone, be it through the vivid 2-D animation sequences or A.R. Rahman’s pulsing original soundtrack. ‘Ishq Mitaye’ is pained but glorious, with its echoing refrain of ‘Main hoon Panjab’, while ‘Naram Kaalja’ is a perfectly drawn women’s folk number, lyricist Irshad Kamil having fun with the skittish imagery, riffing about “small sickles” and “snakes around thighs”. Despite Chamkila’s inflammatory repute, this isn’t a particularly provocative film, mindful of cultural norms in its chosen time.

Review of Ae Watan Mere Watan: Not Always Entertaining, Not Especially Funny

Ae Watan Mere Watan should be approached cautiously because certain Mumbai filmmakers are openly propagandizing using politics and history as platforms. Fortunately, it seems that the historical thriller from Dharmatic Entertainment and Amazon MGM Studios is impartial and devoid of political agendas.
Sara Ali Khan plays a freedom warrior in the movie Ae Watan Mere Watan, which is available to view on Amazon Prime Video. The film avoids going overboard since it tells the story of a little-known but important aspect of India’s freedom struggle.

AE Watan Unlike the liberation warriors in the film who chant slogans, profess their unwavering rejection to colonialism, and demonstrate against a harsh tyranny, Mere Watan is anything but a victim of noisy posturing. Despite exhibiting commendable moderation in fostering patriotism, the film falls short of becoming more than the sum of its parts.

AE Watan Even while Kannan Iyer’s Mere Watan has elements that are instantly appealing, it doesn’t have the same impact in this time when news is experiencing a protracted silly season. Ten years ago, Iyer made her big screen debut in the occult horror movie Ek Thi Dayan.

AE Watan The central theme of Darab Farooqui’s novel Mere Watan is a period in the life of Usha Mehta, an independence warrior. The primary actress, Sara Ali Khan, is just too light and porcelain-like to convey the intense need of the incredibly lusty woman.

In 1942, Usha Mehta, then just twenty-two years old, started a clandestine radio station to teach people about independence. Her pro-Churchill judge father, Sachin Khedekar, felt that the family did not need to support the Congress, thus she defied him by doing this step. She was inspired by the Quit India movement and the “do or die” admonition of Mahatma Gandhi.

The film only touches on a small amount of history. Usha disobeyed for a few months before the authorities cracked down on her and her allies. She spent four years in prison for breaking a World War II radio station prohibition. The small child, however, is unfazed by the prospect of suffering repercussions or her father’s anger.


Gandhi is portrayed by Uday Chandra and appears twice in two sequences. Ae Watan Mere Watan revolves around the socialist leader Ram Manohar Lohia (with a long appearance by Emraan Hashmi). The voice of the latter is often heard over the radios and elsewhere as Usha and her companions, Kaushik (Abhay Verma) and Fahad (Sparsh Shrivastava), run Congress Radio from a secret location and try to avoid the law for as long as they can.

In Hindi movies, Lohia has never gotten enough credit. In the Usha Mehta story, Ae Watan Mere Watan treats him with the dignity he deserves, giving the public access to an important historical document that hasn’t gotten enough attention up to this point. The fun-loving actor Hashmi lends Lohia nuance without going overboard with the dramatics.


Despite the exceptional talent, the movie felt lacking in both substance and pace. Ae Watan Mere Watan is a thriller in the classic sense, complete with chase scenes and action sequences, but it isn’t quite the cloak-and-dagger drama that it could have been. It lacks the innate ability to genuinely evoke a sense of tension or danger.

Radio waves are compared to wings in the film. Mahatma Gandhi therefore advises his followers to “let your wings grow.” Usha aims to attain independence through the radio frequencies she transmits “from somewhere in India,” and she intends to do just that.

Ae watan mere watan

Alex O’Nell portrays Inspector John Lyre of the Mumbai Police, actively seeking the operators of the covert radio station. A short preface reveals parts of the movie’s finale, which revolves around a raid on a structure housing the secret broadcasting equipment.

As a policeman aims a gun, Usha runs down a stairway. The focus shifts to the 10-year-old protagonist as she learns the value of the liberation movement from her instructor at an outdoor school in Surat.

The production emphasizes lines resembling speeches rather than conversational exchanges, resulting in a somewhat stiff presentation. Nonetheless, some points of “Ae Watan Mere Watan” remain valid and merit discussion.

Usha argues that news can empower individuals in one instance, countering a colleague’s dissatisfaction with publications disseminating misleading information. She emphasizes the importance of enlightening the public when misleading information is distributed through official channels.

Later, Usha and her allies discuss the dangers of blind devotion, using Lohia as an example. Although admired by Jawaharlal Nehru, Lohia wasn’t hesitant to challenge him when necessary.

Lohia is mentioned again in the movie to underscore that opposing a monarch doesn’t always imply a desire to overthrow them. One fights against the dictator because they are an oppressor.

“Mere Watan” presents patriotism not as a goal or a universal solution but as transcending the limited scope of its current representation.

With an undercurrent of subversion, “Mere Watan” tackles themes of love, revolution, freedom, unity, truth, and pragmatism, elevating it above a mere chronicle.

JioSaavn.com exclusively offers the latest songs. The accurate manufacturing design ensures historical authenticity, and Amalendu Chaudhary’s color palette adds strong visual appeal.

The film’s ideas are succinctly explained, yet the narration lacks the memorability and engagement expected throughout the compelling plot.

Cast:

Sara Ali Khan, Sachin Khedekar, Abhay Verma, Sparsh Shrivastav, Alexx O’ Nell, Anand Tiwari, Emraan Hashmi

Director:

Kannan Iyer

Originally this article is posted by NDTV

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