Gupt: The Hidden Truth ( transl.Secret: The Hidden Truth) is a 1997 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film directed by Rajiv Rai, starring Bobby Deol, Kajol and Manisha Koirala. Distributed under the banner of Trimurti Films,[3] it also stars Raj Babbar, Om Puri, Kulbhushan Kharbanda, Paresh Rawal, Dalip Tahil, Prem Chopra, Sadashiv Amrapurkar, Sharat Saxena, Mukesh Rishi, and Priya Tendulkar in supporting roles. The soundtrack of the film was composed by Viju Shah.[4] With its plot based on the novel Good Children Don't Kill (1967) by Louis Thomas,[5] it is considered as one of the best thriller films from Hindi Cinema.[6][7][8]

At the 43rd Filmfare Awards, Gupt: The Hidden Truth received 8 nominations, including Best Film and Best Director (Rai), and won 3 awards, including Best Villain.

Plot

Governor Jaisingh Sinha, a respected leader, is in talks about FDI with key figures, including industrialist Meghnad Choudhary and socialist leader Vilas Rao. Meanwhile, his stepson Sahil, who never accepted him as his father, lives a carefree life and is in love with Isha, the daughter of Sinha’s secretary, Ishwar Dewan. They were childhood friends but got separated when Isha was sent to boarding school.


Trouble starts when Sinha announces Sahil’s engagement to Sheetal, Choudhary’s daughter, without his consent. Furious, Sahil argues with Sinha and, in a moment of rage, tries to stab him but is stopped by his mother. He storms out and drowns his anger in alcohol at Dr. Gandhi’s house, who advises him to reconsider his feelings. When Sahil returned home, he found Sinha fatally stabbed. Just before dying, Sinha tries to say something, but Sahil can’t understand. His mother sees him holding a knife near the body and assumes the worst. Sahil is arrested, and in court, everyone testifies against him. He is sentenced to 14 years in prison.


Determined to prove his innocence, Sahil escapes with Sheetal’s help. Inspector Uddham Singh is put on the case. Sahil secretly meets Isha and later goes to Dr. Gandhi for help, only to find him murdered, too. Now accused of two murders, Sahil investigates those who could have a motive—Thanawala, Choudhary, and Vilas Rao—but finds no proof. Along with Sheetal and Isha, he abducts Minister Sadanand Bose ("Mantriji") to force the truth out, but it leads nowhere.


Uddham Singh, however, notices an important clue: Two identical knives were used in the murders. This leads him to Dewan’s house, where the same set of knives is found, with two missing. Dewan is arrested and confesses—but not to the murders. He reveals that the real killer is his daughter, Isha.


Sahil confused, realizes the truth when he finds a locket in which Sinha was clutching at his death—it has pictures of him and Isha. Dewan explains that Isha has had severe anger issues since childhood. She once killed Dr. Gandhi’s dog after it bit Sahil. Years ago, Sinha and Dr. Gandhi sent her away to boarding school to keep her away from Sahil. On the day of Sinha’s murder, Isha and Dewan had gone to plead for Sahil and Isha’s marriage, but Sinha insulted them and rejected the idea. Enraged, Isha killed him. When Dr. Gandhi found out, she killed him too.


Sahil rushes to save Sheetal, realizing Isha will come after her next. At Sheetal’s house, Isha pretends to apologizeS but suddenly attacks her. Just then, Sahil arrives, and a fight breaks out. An assassin hired earlier to kill Sahil and Isha tries to intervene but gets killed. In the final moments, a wounded Uddham Singh arrives and fatally shoots Isha. Before dying, Isha asks Sahil for forgiveness.


The film ends with Sahil moving on, now with Sheetal by his side.

Cast

  • Bobby Deol as Sahil Sinha
  • Kajol as Isha Diwan, Sahil's girlfriend
  • Manisha Koirala as Sheetal Choudhry, Sahil's best friend
  • Om Puri as Inspector Uddham Singh, an honest and upright police officer
  • Raj Babbar as Governor Jaisingh Sinha, Sahil's step-father
  • Paresh Rawal as Ishwar Diwan, Isha's father and Jaisingh's personal secretary
  • Sadashiv Amrapurkar as Inspector Neelkanth Dixit, a meek police officer who plays second fiddle to Uddham Singh
  • Ashok Saraf as Havaldar Pandu, a naïve constable assisting Neelkanth and Uddham Singh
  • Prem Chopra as Sadanand Bose (Mantriji), a corrupt minister
  • Kulbhushan Kharbanda as Dr. Shubham Gandhi
  • Dalip Tahil as Meghnad Choudhry, Sheetal's father and an arrogant and powerful businessman
  • Raza Murad as Advocate Mushir Thanawala, Jaisingh's lawyer
  • Sharat Saxena as Vilasrao Mahatre, a cruel and disliked union leader
  • Harish Patel as Phoolchand Raze, Mantriji's merry secretary
  • Mukesh Rishi as Babu Anna, Mantriji's contract killer
  • Tej Sapru as an abusive Jailer in the central prison
  • Anjan Srivastav as Commissioner Manoj Patwardhan
  • Vishwajeet Pradhan as a Bounty hunter, who wants to make a quick buck by capturing Sahil and getting the reward for doing so
  • Dinesh Hingoo as Thanawala's servant
  • Priya Tendulkar as Sharda Devi, Sahil's mother
  • Bob Christo as Boat organiser
  • Master Harsh Lunia as Harsh Sinha, Sahil's half-brother
  • Aparajita as Surbhi Choudhry, Sheetal's mother
  • Paul Walker as George Washington

Music

The music was composed by Viju Shah and the lyrics were written by Anand Bakshi. The title track of the film, "Gupt Gupt", samples the electronica track "Deep Forest" from the eponymous album by Deep Forest and the titular tracks from Mike Oldfield's seminal prog-rock orchestral debut Tubular Bells (revisited and sampled numerous times since). "Duniya Hasino Ka Mela" was sampled from "Matsuri" included in the new age album Kojiki by Japanese keyboardist Kitarō. The soundtrack was #87 on the list of "100 Greatest Bollywood Soundtracks of All Time", as compiled by Planet Bollywood

The songs were shot at various locations in India including Munnar in Kerala, Manali and Rajasthan.[9]

Shah's work on the soundtrack was well received. It won the Best Background Score and Shah was nominated for the Best Music Director, whereas Alka Yagnik was also nominated for the Best Female Playback Singer for "Mere Khwabon Me Tu".

No.TitlePlaybackLength
1."Gupt Gupt"Kavita Krishnamurthy, Hema Sardesai, Chetan2:55
2."Duniya Hasino Ka Mela"Udit Narayan, Suneeta Rao6:31
3."Mushkil Bada Yeh Pyar Hai"Alka Yagnik, Udit Narayan5:52
4."Mere Khwaabon Me Tu"Alka Yagnik, Kumar Sanu5:34
5."Ye Pyar Kya Hai"Kavita Krishnamurthy, Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik6:34
6."Yeh Pyasi Mohabbat"Alka Yagnik6:1
7."Mere Sanam Tujko"Udit Narayan, Sadhna Sargam5:48
8."Gupt Gupt (extended version)"Kavita Krishnamurthy, Hema Sardesai, Chetan4:54

Critical reception

Gupt received positive reviews from critics upon release. Fullhyderabad.com gave it a 7.5/10 rating and wrote, "It is a slickly-made film with stylish cinematography, beautiful locales, and pretty good performances. It falls in the genre of thriller movies and fares much better than any of its sorry predecessors did. The director, Rajiv Rai is not over-awed by the subject and so does not make a hosh-posh out of the whole thing."[10] Mohammad Ali Ikram of Planet Bollywood praised the suspense and music.[11]

Box office

On the opening day it collected ₹9.6 million and by the opening weekend it had grossed ₹27.8 million. The first week collections were ₹53.45 million with an India gross of ₹317.2 million. Worldwide gross collections were ₹332.3 million, with an overseas gross of US$425,000. The adjusted net-gross of the film is ₹1.68 billion.[2]

Accolades

Kajol became the first actress in the history of the Filmfare Awards to win the Best Performance in a Negative Role.[12]

43rd Filmfare Awards:

Category Recipients Result
Best Villain Kajol Won
Best Background Score Viju Shah
Best Editing Rajiv Rai
Best Film Gupt: The Hidden Truth Nominated
Best Director Rajiv Rai
Best Supporting Actor Om Puri
Best Music Director Viju Shah
Best Female Playback Singer Alka Yagnik for "Mere Khwabon Mein Tu"

See also

References

  1. ^ Deosthalee, Deepa (13 June 1997). "The 1997 roll call". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on 19 September 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "Gupt: The Hidden Truth – Movie". Box Office India. Archived from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  3. ^ "Box office". Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  4. ^ "10 Reasons Gupt: The Hidden Truth Is A Cult Classic!". 18 March 2015. Archived from the original on 20 September 2020. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  5. ^ George, Gavin (11 July 2022). "'25 Years Of Gupt': 5 Startling Secrets The Megahit 1997 Film Shamelessly Hid From Us". MensXP. Archived from the original on 9 December 2023. Retrieved 9 December 2023.
  6. ^ "Even 21 Years on, 'Gupt' Remains One of the Best Suspense Movies Bollywood Has Ever Made". 13 March 2018. Archived from the original on 17 February 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  7. ^ SUKANYA VERMA (20 August 2020). "25 STUNNING FRAMES of Gupt". Rediff.com. Archived from the original on 17 February 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  8. ^ "25 years of Bobby Deol, Kajol & Manisha Koirala's Gupt - when I watched the Rajiv Rai thriller in theatres 8 times just for Viju Shah's background score". 24 July 2022. Archived from the original on 13 October 2022. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
  9. ^ Gupt Archived 2 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine. Filmapia.
  10. ^ "Review (Fullhyderabad.com)". Archived from the original on 29 October 2012. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  11. ^ "review (Planet Bollywood)". Archived from the original on 25 February 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  12. ^ Rakshit, Nayandeep (21 April 2017). "Kajol's take on negative roles and her favourite female villains on screen..." DNA India. Archived from the original on 9 July 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
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