Phone (English: Blow) is a 2008 Indian thriller coordinated by Ram Gopal Varma and delivered by Praveen Nischol. The film stars Sudeep, Amruta Khanvilkar, and Ahsaas Channa ahead of the pack jobs, while Kenny Desai, Ashwini Kalsekar, and Zakir Hussain assume supporting parts. The film depends on the notion and dark sorcery. The film was delivered on 22 August 2008 and was announced a blockbuster in the cinema world by a few media outlets.[1] [2]
Varma inferred the thought for the film from a Hindi news station which broadcasts stories on dark magic.[3] The storyline of Phoonk is specifically like the Telugu thrill ride novel Tulasi Dalam by Yandamuri Veerendranath. A prize of ₹5 lakh (US$6,600) was reported for the individuals who will watch the film alone in a theatre.[3]
The film was revamped in Telugu as Raksha and was named in Tamil as Bommayi. It was trailed by a continuation, Phoonk 2, in 2010.
Film director Ram Gopal Varma
Composed by Milind Gadagkar
Created by Pravin Nischol
Azam Khan
Parvez Damania
Starring Sudeep
Amruta Khanvilkar
Ahsaas Channa
Kenny Desai
Ashwini Kalsekar
Zakir Hussain
Cinematography Savita Singh
Altered by Amit Parmar
Nipun Gupta
Music by Bapi-Tutul
Delivery date
22 August 2008
Running time 110 minutes
Country India
Language Hindi
Box office ₹10 crores
Structural specialist and skeptic Rajiv (Sudeep) lives in Mumbai with his significant other Aarti (Amruta Khanvilkar), his two youngsters Raksha (Ahsaas Channa) and Rohan (Shrey Bawa), his mom, and the housemaid Laxmi (Anu Ansari). Rajiv's most believed associates are Anshuman (Kenny Desai) and Madhu (Ashwini Kalsekar), whom everybody, including Rajiv's companion Vinay (Ganesh Yadav) and Raksha, feels are not typical. During a party at his home, when he comes to realize that the couple pair have tricked him on a significant agreement for an IT firm in Delhi, Rajiv fires the two of them in the wake of offending them both. Embarrassed and irate at this, both of them choose to deliver retribution on Rajiv. Madhu noticed that Rajiv is exceptionally partial to Raksha.
Before long, a progression of bizarre occasions begin to happen in and around Rajiv's home. Mandar (Bharat Kaul), who is named to replace Madhu and Anshuman, is bafflingly killed at the building site. Raksha begins to talk and act strangely, causing everyone a deep sense of's shock. Specialists are called for, yet the abnormal conduct proceeds, with Raksha flying in the air, talking in a masculine voice, acting in torment. The offbeat and strict grandma over and over says that somebody is utilizing dark enchantment on Raksha, yet Rajiv and the specialists will not trust any of it.
Presently toward the finish of his brains, Rajiv starts to look to God. He likewise consents to his development workers' interest of making a little altar at the building site, which he was already stubbornly turning down. Vinay recommends requesting the assistance of Manja (Zakir Hussain), a performer acquainted with these things.
Manja dissects the entire circumstance, sees Raksha, visits Rajiv's home, and tells the last option that somebody is attempting to render retribution on him, at which Vinay shouts that it is, in all honesty, Madhu and Anshuman. Manja additionally lets them know that Rajiv's driver has been helping the couple by furnishing them with fundamental materials like Raksha's hair, soil from her foot, and her toys to perform dark sorcery.
Losing no additional time, Rajiv, Vinay, and Manja hurry to Madhu's home, where she and Anshuman are viewed as doing dark sorcery customs on a doll, apparently a likeness of Raksha. Rajiv orders Madhu to stop, yet she assaults him with a trishul. Vinay takes on Anshuman. The impact of the dark sorcery powers leak on the whole spot, driving everybody away. As Madhu will assault Rajiv who is being pushed towards the divider, Manja utilizes his powers to isolate the running roof fan, which lands on Madhu's head, entertainingly beheading her. Every one of the negative powers stop, and a bug emerges from one of the skulls on the floor and chomps the driver, who passes on.
Everybody hurries to the medical clinic to observe that Raksha has totally recuperated. Rajiv and Vinay see that everybody thinks it is the specialists who have relieved Raksha, and they grin at one another.
Cast
Sudeep as Rajiv (voice named by Rajesh Khattar)
Amruta Khanvilkar as Aarti
Ahsaas Channa as Raksha
Kenny Desai as Anshuman
Ashwini Kalsekar as Madhu
Ganesh Yadav as Vinay Sonti
Zakir Hussain as Manja
Shrey Bawa as Rohan
Anu Ansari as Laxmi
Javed Rizvi as Rajiv's driver
Shankar Sachdev as Shyam
K. K. Raina as Dr. Pandey
Lilette Dubey as Dr. Seema Walke
Bharat Kaul as Mandar
Jyoti Subhash as Amma
Geetanjali as Teacher
Kishore Kadam as Devappa
Dhiraj Regmi as Mani
Surveys and gathering
This segment needs extension. You can help by adding to it. (February 2015)
Smash Gopal Varma's Phoonk ended up being an unexpected hit in the cinematic world. The film opened later a powerful exposure crusade. It was an exceptionally low-spending plan film, which, joined with its prosperity in the cinema world, turned a decent benefit for its financial backers. It was exceptionally well known, particularly among more youthful watchers, for the maker's Rs. 5 Lakh challenge.
Basically, the film got blended surveys. Taran Adarsh gave it 4 out of 5 and said, "Phoonk is an intriguing realistic encounter regarding a matter that is seldom handled by the fantasy shippers in Bollywood: Black wizardry." AOL India commentator Noyon Jyoti Parasara gave a negative survey of the film saying, "By and large Phoonk scores low on the panic o-meter."[4]
References :
Film industry: Phoonk in progress wave – | The Economic Times. Economictimes.indiatimes.com (25 August 2008). Recovered on 2017-05-09.
"Chronicled duplicate". Chronicled from the first on 5 August 2008. Recovered 1 August 2008.
"Thought of 'Phoonk' got from Hindi news channel : Varma". The Economic Times. 26 August 2008. Recovered 15 January 2016.
Phoonk surveyed at AOL India
"Stardust Nominations". bollyspice.com. 25 January 2009.
"Selections for fifteenth Annual Star Screen Awards 2008". naachgaana.com. 6 January 2009.
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