Loha (1987 film)

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Loha
Directed byRaj N. Sippy
Written byMohan Kaul-Ravi Kapoor (story),
Kader Khan (screenplay)
Produced bySalim
StarringDharmendra
Shatrughan Sinha
Karan Kapoor
Madhavi
Mandakini
Amrish Puri
Kader Khan
CinematographyAnwar Siraj
Edited byWaman Bhonsle
Gurudutt Shirali
Music byLaxmikant–Pyarelal
Production
company
Aftab Pictures
Release date
  • 23 January 1987 (1987-01-23)
Running time
160 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budgetest.20.5 million[1]
Box office60 million[1]

Loha (transl. Iron) is a 1987 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film directed by Raj N. Sippy. It features an ensemble cast of Dharmendra, Shatrughan Sinha, Karan Kapoor, Madhavi, Mandakini, Kader Khan and Amrish Puri.[2][3] The film centres around a plot involving three men (Dharmendra, Sinha and Kapoor) who set out to save 25 hostages from a dreaded bandit (Puri) who is on the payroll of the local politician (Khan).

Loha released worldwide on 23 January 1987, coinciding with the Indian Republic Day weekend. The film received mainly positive reviews from critics and was a commercial success. It was the second hit for Dharmendra in the year 1987, and the same year he would go on to give 5 more hits.

Story[edit]

Honest and diligent Police Inspector Amar (Dharmendra) is a middle-class man living in Bombay. In his attempt to arrest bandit Sher Singh (Amrish Puri), he and Inspector Dayal (Raza Murad) are attacked. Amar survives, but Dayal gets his legs crushed under a truck and is, as a result, unable to walk without a wheelchair. Subsequently, Amar arrests local politician Jagannath Prasad (Kader Khan), who gets released without being charged while Amar gets reprimanded and decides to resign. Shortly thereafter, Sher Singh hijacks a bus and holds the passengers as hostages in exchange for 25 of his jailed associates. Dayal's granddaughter, Seema (Mandakini), is amongst them, and Dayal asks Amar for assistance. Amar, along with ex-convict, Qasim Ali (Shatrughan Sinha), and Karan (Karan Kapoor), a drug-dealer, manage to rescue them, but differences crop up among the trio and they part ways. Then Amar finds out that Qasim and Karan have masterminded a plan to facilitate the escape of the 25 convicts and decides to confront them.

Cast[edit]

Soundtrack[edit]

Farooq Kaiser wrote the lyrics.

  1. "Tu Ladki Number One Hai" - Alka Yagnik, Shabbir Kumar
  2. "Teri Hasti Hai Kya Jo Mitayega" - Anuradha Paudwal, Kavita Krishnamurthy, Shabbir Kumar
  3. "Patli Kamar Lambe Baal" - Anuradha Paudwal, Kavita Krishnamurthy
  4. "Saat Taalon Mein Rakh, Saat Pardo Me Rakh" - Kavita Krishnamurthy, Anuradha Paudwal
  5. "Hum Gharibo Ne Tera" - Shailendra Singh, Suresh Wadkar, Mohammed Aziz

Reception[edit]

ABP news stated "Directed by Raj N. Sippy and written by Ravi Kapoor and Mohan Kaul with dialogues by Kader Khan, Loha is a top-notch B Film with excellent production qualities and a cast filled with familiar faces that make the film a fun trip. The film’s campiness and its commitment to being extreme across all elements truly adorn it a perverse sophistication. Like in Wages of Fear where the terrain to transport the unstable nitroglycerine is treacherous and the unpredictability of the interpersonal relationship between the four men adds to the tension, Loha also tries to induce the same tension but the straightforwardness with which it attempts it keeps things superficial. There is hardly any tension between Amar and Qasim once the former learns that it’s Hassan for whom they are merrily breaking the law and similarly the volatility of the nitroglycerin is replicated by the stereotypical antics of the bunch playing the convicts who ranged from Joginder of the runaway cult classic Ranga Khush (1975), Sudhir, Mac Mohan, Praveen Kumar, Goga Kapoor, Tej Sapru, Roopesh Kumar and Yunus Parvez to name a few. Barring Dharmendra, who had a great year in 1987 with 8 super hits in a row, both Sinha and Kapoor, too, appear to be checking stereotypical boxes. Even before his first film Sultanat (1986) released, Karan Kapoor had become a popular model and while his debut film’s script included a brief backstory of him being born to foreign mother, nothing in Loha explained his blonde mane, which looked strange when he is speaking decently comprehensible Hindi. There is no real reason for Loha to enjoy a revival, but the film involuntarily enough created a template that would soon go on to be replicated eerily enough in real life. Made a few years before the famous Rubaiya Mufti kidnapping by JKLF (Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front) where separatists demanded the release of five comrades for the daughter of Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, the then Home Minister of India, the film’s plot seemed extremely implausible. Many had even forgotten Loha by the time the Rubaiya Mufti kidnapping took place and while no one mentioned Loha at that point, the kidnapping found an indirect mention in Mani Rathman’s Roja (1992). If Loha were to be made today there’s hardly any doubt that it would be glitzy and chic and no one might think of it a B film. After all both Rubaiya kidnapping and the Air India Flight 814 hijacking in 1999 by Harkat-ul-Mujahideen and the subsequent release of three militants – Mushtaq Ahmed Zargar, Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, and Maulana Masood Azhar – in exchange for over 150 passengers prove that truth, too, could replicate a potboiler.

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Loha (1987) Hindi Movie Review, Budget and Box Office Collection". Bollywood Product. 8 July 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  2. ^ "Loha (1987) - Review, Star Cast, News, Photos". Cinestaan. Archived from the original on 31 October 2019. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Loha (1987) Hindi Movie| Review, Budget and Box Office Collection | Karan Kapoor, Dharmendra, Shatrughan Sinha". www.bollywoodproduct.com. Retrieved 18 December 2021.