Download Film Veer Zaara Rating: 10,0/10 8454 reviews

Appalled at Human Rights abuses in Pakistan, the International Human Rights Commission recruits an aspiring young lawyer, Saamiya Siddiqui, to look into the rights of prisoners, especially those who have been languishing in jails for years without getting a fair trial. Dungeons and dragons solo adventures 4e pdf free. One of the cases she is assigned pertains to Prisoner No.786 alias.

VEER-ZAARA (2004, Hindi, 192 minutes) Directed by Yash Chopra Produced by Yash Raj Films, Ltd. 2012 end of the world full movie in hindi dubbed watch online. We soon meet our heroine-to-be, Zaara Hayaat Khan (Preity Zinta), only child of one of Pakistan’s leading (and apparently more liberal and progressive) politicians. Though she is engaged to be married to the scion of another prominent family in a convenience match that reflects the ambitions of both clans, Zaara gets an “establishing song” ( Hum to bhai jaise hain, “I will stay just the way I am!”), that informs us of her spirited and independent nature (and also recalls Kajol’s opening number in the Chopra-produced Dilwale; Veer’s equivalent song, by the way, was the carefree and romantic Kyon hawa, “Why is the wind singing today?,” which accompanied the credits and visually recalled Bholi si surat in Chopra’s Dil To Pagal Hai). Incidentally, Yash-ji apparently remains addicted to using Lata Mangeshkar for the singing voice of his heroines, despite the incongruity of a now obviously aging and husky voice being lip-synched by perky twenty-somethings; given the overall structure of his plot, however, this requires but a relatively small additional suspension of disbelief. Zaara, who lives in an Indo-Saracenic mansion that makes Meena Kumari’s “rose palace” in PAKEEZAH look like a gilded birdcage, is doted on by her parents but is herself devoted to her aged nanny Bebe (a cameo by ultra-veteran Zohra Sehgal), a Sikh orphan who accompanied the family to Pakistan at the time of Partition. In case anyone supposes that Pakistan is less than fully hospitable to Sikhs, we see Zaara accompanying Bebe to a lavish Lahore Gurudwara, bowing respectfully before the Guru Granth Sahib (the Sikh scripture), and bringing amrit (holy water) from the temple when Bebe lays dying beneath a framed portrait of Guru Nanak.

Download film veer zaara ganool

Before passing away, however, Bebe extracts a promise from Zaara to bring her ashes back to India, to immerse them in the sacred waters of her native place in Punjab. This occasions an impulsive trip by Zaara, without parental permission and only days before her planned marriage, to the Other Side; a convenient bus accident enroute (it looks bad, but a cheery voiceover informs us that no one was seriously hurt) allows the dashing Veer to rescue both Zaara and the precious cargo she bears. After an initial misunderstanding, he becomes her guide to (what is evidently) the Promised Land: a multi-religious Punjab that looks even more idyllic than it did in DDLJ (complete with a bhangra-dancing cameo by famed Punjabi singer Gurdas Man) and that is celebrated in the rousing patriotic anthem Aisa des hai mera (“Thus is my land”)—though the final verse adds “Thus is your land too,” suggesting the unity of Punjabis on both sides of the border.

Veer

Visually, the song’s portrayal of a rural paradise nods at Mehboob Khan’s MOTHER INDIA, and its final shots of color-saturated tracts of flowers also evoke the famous tulip-field sequence in Chopra’s SILSILA. Her sacred task tearfully accomplished, Zaara accepts Veer’s invitation to visit his own village, which turns out to be another happy rustic republic, presided over by Bauji and Maati (in wonderful cameos by Amitabh Bachchan and Hema Malini, speaking Hindi-ized Punjabi), the aunt and uncle who raised the orphan Veer. Bauji (a.k.a.

Chaudury Sumer Singh) is a sturdy Jat yeoman who is fond of both rum and rural development—he has already built a medical clinic and a school for the village’s boys and will soon (at Zaara’s urging) make one for girls as well. Maati is, as one might expect, a kind of wizened and mellowed Basanti (see SHOLAY), and she jokes about hailing (like Hema) from Madras and having come to Punjab via a love marriage to Bauji. But while Veer pines for his lost love, Zaara, back in Lahore and in the thick of wedding preparations, realizes that she has lost her heart to him, even confessing this to her mother; she now sees Veer everywhere, singing to her Main yahaan hoon (“I am here”). Unable to bear Zaara’s suffering, Shabbo, her perky servant-cum-confidante, boldly contacts Veer and urges him to come to Lahore and take Zaara away.

This leads to an all-stops-pulled-out encounter at a Sufi shrine on the very eve of Zaara’s wedding; accompanied by a double entendre-laced qawwali performance ( Aaya tere dar par diwaana, “Having broken all the barriers of society.your mad lover has come to your threshold,” which has to rank as an instant classic in the realm of filmi qawwali) the lovers embrace on a rain-drenched causeway, in full view of both shocked families. Since the Khan clan’s future allegedly depends on Zaara’s carefully-calculated match, the revelation that she loves a “Hindustani” boy wreaks havoc all around, causing Dad to suffer a heart attack and Mom to shed many tears. Visiting Veer in secret, the latter explains the gravity of the situation and extracts from him the promise that he will relinquish his claim on Zaara and return to India. This Veer willingly gives, in a scene that inevitably echoes (as locus classicus) Rama’s calm deferral to parental fiat (Veer: “A mother never has to beg of her son; she need only order him”), and (more recently) Shahrukh’s similar speech as Raj in DDLJ. It concludes with the following memorable exchange: (Zaara’s mother, astonished): “Are all sons in your country like you?” (Veer, kneeling before her lovingly): “I don’t know. All this, of course, would have been more than enough for most (non-Indian) films, but Chopra adds roughly another hour of non-flashback subplot, detailing Saamiya’s legal battle, against an unscrupulous prosecutor named Zakir Ahmed (the versatile Anupam Kher), to win Veer’s release.

Even while evoking the emotional courtroom finishes of such classics as Andaaz (1949) and Awara (1951), but here in a surprisingly-just Pakistani setting, Chopra manages to save some surprises (not to mention one of the film’s most romantic ballads, Tere liye, “For you.I live”) for the tear-drenched finale. In the Sufi allegorical interpretation of the Majnun-Leila tale, the hero relinquishes his claim on Leila to allow her a socially-approved marriage to another, then goes mad and endures years of exile in the desert. His ultimate reward, through the grace of a Sufi pir, is union—not with his worldly beloved, but with Allah Himself. Veer’s outcome is more mundane, but the film’s neat tie-up of romantic, patriotic, and (in Indo-Pak terms) national-concilliatory subplots yields an apotheosis that is well worth waiting for. Indeed, given the film’s final moments, it is easy to read its epic romance as a parable of another long-sundered relationship: that between the two halves of the Punjab and indeed between their two nations and of accompanying processes of historical amnesia and then re-membering, here brought to a fantasied (and of course Indo-centric) resolution. Unlikely though it may be that life will, in this case, imitate art, it has to be conceded that this is ambitious and visionary art all the same.

Slickly-satisfying, oozing cinematic self-confidence, and boasting beautiful camerawork, superb performances by all the principals (including a wonderfully subdued and subtle Shahrukh-Veer), lovely songs with lyrics by Javed Akhtar, and dazzling sets and costumes, VEER-ZAARA is Yash Chopra at the top of his game. The Yashraj Films DVD of VEER-ZAARA is of unusually high quality, with superior English subtitles (not to mention about a dozen other languages) for both dialog and songs. It is worth the cost, and of course also includes a supplemental “making of” disc for hardcore fans.

I was fully prepared to see a typical Bollywood romantic musical, but came blow away at the sheer awesomeness of this movie! Yes, it is a romantic musical with great music, but the underlying themes are so much more keeping you engaged during the entire movie. Be prepared to see a sense romance, courage, honor and humanity that will heighten your senses. You will feel love, spirituality, anger, sadness and happiness all throughout. The scenery is beautiful and the actors all play their roles well. Veer's speech in court towards the end is something that will be remembered as it should be a basis of all humanity's dealings with differences. It is awesome in a world filled with hatred towards differences that a story like this can rise above and see the common thread in all humanity. A must see, even if you don't enjoy romantic musicals

Appalled at Human Rights abuses in Pakistan, the International Human Rights Commission recruits an aspiring young lawyer, Saamiya Siddiqui, to look into the rights of prisoners, especially those who have been languishing in jails for years without getting a fair trial. Dungeons and dragons solo adventures 4e pdf free. One of the cases she is assigned pertains to Prisoner No.786 alias.

VEER-ZAARA (2004, Hindi, 192 minutes) Directed by Yash Chopra Produced by Yash Raj Films, Ltd. 2012 end of the world full movie in hindi dubbed watch online. We soon meet our heroine-to-be, Zaara Hayaat Khan (Preity Zinta), only child of one of Pakistan’s leading (and apparently more liberal and progressive) politicians. Though she is engaged to be married to the scion of another prominent family in a convenience match that reflects the ambitions of both clans, Zaara gets an “establishing song” ( Hum to bhai jaise hain, “I will stay just the way I am!”), that informs us of her spirited and independent nature (and also recalls Kajol’s opening number in the Chopra-produced Dilwale; Veer’s equivalent song, by the way, was the carefree and romantic Kyon hawa, “Why is the wind singing today?,” which accompanied the credits and visually recalled Bholi si surat in Chopra’s Dil To Pagal Hai). Incidentally, Yash-ji apparently remains addicted to using Lata Mangeshkar for the singing voice of his heroines, despite the incongruity of a now obviously aging and husky voice being lip-synched by perky twenty-somethings; given the overall structure of his plot, however, this requires but a relatively small additional suspension of disbelief. Zaara, who lives in an Indo-Saracenic mansion that makes Meena Kumari’s “rose palace” in PAKEEZAH look like a gilded birdcage, is doted on by her parents but is herself devoted to her aged nanny Bebe (a cameo by ultra-veteran Zohra Sehgal), a Sikh orphan who accompanied the family to Pakistan at the time of Partition. In case anyone supposes that Pakistan is less than fully hospitable to Sikhs, we see Zaara accompanying Bebe to a lavish Lahore Gurudwara, bowing respectfully before the Guru Granth Sahib (the Sikh scripture), and bringing amrit (holy water) from the temple when Bebe lays dying beneath a framed portrait of Guru Nanak.

Download film veer zaara ganool

Before passing away, however, Bebe extracts a promise from Zaara to bring her ashes back to India, to immerse them in the sacred waters of her native place in Punjab. This occasions an impulsive trip by Zaara, without parental permission and only days before her planned marriage, to the Other Side; a convenient bus accident enroute (it looks bad, but a cheery voiceover informs us that no one was seriously hurt) allows the dashing Veer to rescue both Zaara and the precious cargo she bears. After an initial misunderstanding, he becomes her guide to (what is evidently) the Promised Land: a multi-religious Punjab that looks even more idyllic than it did in DDLJ (complete with a bhangra-dancing cameo by famed Punjabi singer Gurdas Man) and that is celebrated in the rousing patriotic anthem Aisa des hai mera (“Thus is my land”)—though the final verse adds “Thus is your land too,” suggesting the unity of Punjabis on both sides of the border.

Veer

Visually, the song’s portrayal of a rural paradise nods at Mehboob Khan’s MOTHER INDIA, and its final shots of color-saturated tracts of flowers also evoke the famous tulip-field sequence in Chopra’s SILSILA. Her sacred task tearfully accomplished, Zaara accepts Veer’s invitation to visit his own village, which turns out to be another happy rustic republic, presided over by Bauji and Maati (in wonderful cameos by Amitabh Bachchan and Hema Malini, speaking Hindi-ized Punjabi), the aunt and uncle who raised the orphan Veer. Bauji (a.k.a.

Chaudury Sumer Singh) is a sturdy Jat yeoman who is fond of both rum and rural development—he has already built a medical clinic and a school for the village’s boys and will soon (at Zaara’s urging) make one for girls as well. Maati is, as one might expect, a kind of wizened and mellowed Basanti (see SHOLAY), and she jokes about hailing (like Hema) from Madras and having come to Punjab via a love marriage to Bauji. But while Veer pines for his lost love, Zaara, back in Lahore and in the thick of wedding preparations, realizes that she has lost her heart to him, even confessing this to her mother; she now sees Veer everywhere, singing to her Main yahaan hoon (“I am here”). Unable to bear Zaara’s suffering, Shabbo, her perky servant-cum-confidante, boldly contacts Veer and urges him to come to Lahore and take Zaara away.

This leads to an all-stops-pulled-out encounter at a Sufi shrine on the very eve of Zaara’s wedding; accompanied by a double entendre-laced qawwali performance ( Aaya tere dar par diwaana, “Having broken all the barriers of society.your mad lover has come to your threshold,” which has to rank as an instant classic in the realm of filmi qawwali) the lovers embrace on a rain-drenched causeway, in full view of both shocked families. Since the Khan clan’s future allegedly depends on Zaara’s carefully-calculated match, the revelation that she loves a “Hindustani” boy wreaks havoc all around, causing Dad to suffer a heart attack and Mom to shed many tears. Visiting Veer in secret, the latter explains the gravity of the situation and extracts from him the promise that he will relinquish his claim on Zaara and return to India. This Veer willingly gives, in a scene that inevitably echoes (as locus classicus) Rama’s calm deferral to parental fiat (Veer: “A mother never has to beg of her son; she need only order him”), and (more recently) Shahrukh’s similar speech as Raj in DDLJ. It concludes with the following memorable exchange: (Zaara’s mother, astonished): “Are all sons in your country like you?” (Veer, kneeling before her lovingly): “I don’t know. All this, of course, would have been more than enough for most (non-Indian) films, but Chopra adds roughly another hour of non-flashback subplot, detailing Saamiya’s legal battle, against an unscrupulous prosecutor named Zakir Ahmed (the versatile Anupam Kher), to win Veer’s release.

Even while evoking the emotional courtroom finishes of such classics as Andaaz (1949) and Awara (1951), but here in a surprisingly-just Pakistani setting, Chopra manages to save some surprises (not to mention one of the film’s most romantic ballads, Tere liye, “For you.I live”) for the tear-drenched finale. In the Sufi allegorical interpretation of the Majnun-Leila tale, the hero relinquishes his claim on Leila to allow her a socially-approved marriage to another, then goes mad and endures years of exile in the desert. His ultimate reward, through the grace of a Sufi pir, is union—not with his worldly beloved, but with Allah Himself. Veer’s outcome is more mundane, but the film’s neat tie-up of romantic, patriotic, and (in Indo-Pak terms) national-concilliatory subplots yields an apotheosis that is well worth waiting for. Indeed, given the film’s final moments, it is easy to read its epic romance as a parable of another long-sundered relationship: that between the two halves of the Punjab and indeed between their two nations and of accompanying processes of historical amnesia and then re-membering, here brought to a fantasied (and of course Indo-centric) resolution. Unlikely though it may be that life will, in this case, imitate art, it has to be conceded that this is ambitious and visionary art all the same.

Slickly-satisfying, oozing cinematic self-confidence, and boasting beautiful camerawork, superb performances by all the principals (including a wonderfully subdued and subtle Shahrukh-Veer), lovely songs with lyrics by Javed Akhtar, and dazzling sets and costumes, VEER-ZAARA is Yash Chopra at the top of his game. The Yashraj Films DVD of VEER-ZAARA is of unusually high quality, with superior English subtitles (not to mention about a dozen other languages) for both dialog and songs. It is worth the cost, and of course also includes a supplemental “making of” disc for hardcore fans.

I was fully prepared to see a typical Bollywood romantic musical, but came blow away at the sheer awesomeness of this movie! Yes, it is a romantic musical with great music, but the underlying themes are so much more keeping you engaged during the entire movie. Be prepared to see a sense romance, courage, honor and humanity that will heighten your senses. You will feel love, spirituality, anger, sadness and happiness all throughout. The scenery is beautiful and the actors all play their roles well. Veer's speech in court towards the end is something that will be remembered as it should be a basis of all humanity's dealings with differences. It is awesome in a world filled with hatred towards differences that a story like this can rise above and see the common thread in all humanity. A must see, even if you don't enjoy romantic musicals

...">Download Film Veer Zaara(17.01.2020)
  • Download Film Veer Zaara Rating: 10,0/10 8454 reviews
  • Appalled at Human Rights abuses in Pakistan, the International Human Rights Commission recruits an aspiring young lawyer, Saamiya Siddiqui, to look into the rights of prisoners, especially those who have been languishing in jails for years without getting a fair trial. Dungeons and dragons solo adventures 4e pdf free. One of the cases she is assigned pertains to Prisoner No.786 alias.

    VEER-ZAARA (2004, Hindi, 192 minutes) Directed by Yash Chopra Produced by Yash Raj Films, Ltd. 2012 end of the world full movie in hindi dubbed watch online. We soon meet our heroine-to-be, Zaara Hayaat Khan (Preity Zinta), only child of one of Pakistan’s leading (and apparently more liberal and progressive) politicians. Though she is engaged to be married to the scion of another prominent family in a convenience match that reflects the ambitions of both clans, Zaara gets an “establishing song” ( Hum to bhai jaise hain, “I will stay just the way I am!”), that informs us of her spirited and independent nature (and also recalls Kajol’s opening number in the Chopra-produced Dilwale; Veer’s equivalent song, by the way, was the carefree and romantic Kyon hawa, “Why is the wind singing today?,” which accompanied the credits and visually recalled Bholi si surat in Chopra’s Dil To Pagal Hai). Incidentally, Yash-ji apparently remains addicted to using Lata Mangeshkar for the singing voice of his heroines, despite the incongruity of a now obviously aging and husky voice being lip-synched by perky twenty-somethings; given the overall structure of his plot, however, this requires but a relatively small additional suspension of disbelief. Zaara, who lives in an Indo-Saracenic mansion that makes Meena Kumari’s “rose palace” in PAKEEZAH look like a gilded birdcage, is doted on by her parents but is herself devoted to her aged nanny Bebe (a cameo by ultra-veteran Zohra Sehgal), a Sikh orphan who accompanied the family to Pakistan at the time of Partition. In case anyone supposes that Pakistan is less than fully hospitable to Sikhs, we see Zaara accompanying Bebe to a lavish Lahore Gurudwara, bowing respectfully before the Guru Granth Sahib (the Sikh scripture), and bringing amrit (holy water) from the temple when Bebe lays dying beneath a framed portrait of Guru Nanak.

    Download film veer zaara ganool

    Before passing away, however, Bebe extracts a promise from Zaara to bring her ashes back to India, to immerse them in the sacred waters of her native place in Punjab. This occasions an impulsive trip by Zaara, without parental permission and only days before her planned marriage, to the Other Side; a convenient bus accident enroute (it looks bad, but a cheery voiceover informs us that no one was seriously hurt) allows the dashing Veer to rescue both Zaara and the precious cargo she bears. After an initial misunderstanding, he becomes her guide to (what is evidently) the Promised Land: a multi-religious Punjab that looks even more idyllic than it did in DDLJ (complete with a bhangra-dancing cameo by famed Punjabi singer Gurdas Man) and that is celebrated in the rousing patriotic anthem Aisa des hai mera (“Thus is my land”)—though the final verse adds “Thus is your land too,” suggesting the unity of Punjabis on both sides of the border.

    Veer

    Visually, the song’s portrayal of a rural paradise nods at Mehboob Khan’s MOTHER INDIA, and its final shots of color-saturated tracts of flowers also evoke the famous tulip-field sequence in Chopra’s SILSILA. Her sacred task tearfully accomplished, Zaara accepts Veer’s invitation to visit his own village, which turns out to be another happy rustic republic, presided over by Bauji and Maati (in wonderful cameos by Amitabh Bachchan and Hema Malini, speaking Hindi-ized Punjabi), the aunt and uncle who raised the orphan Veer. Bauji (a.k.a.

    Chaudury Sumer Singh) is a sturdy Jat yeoman who is fond of both rum and rural development—he has already built a medical clinic and a school for the village’s boys and will soon (at Zaara’s urging) make one for girls as well. Maati is, as one might expect, a kind of wizened and mellowed Basanti (see SHOLAY), and she jokes about hailing (like Hema) from Madras and having come to Punjab via a love marriage to Bauji. But while Veer pines for his lost love, Zaara, back in Lahore and in the thick of wedding preparations, realizes that she has lost her heart to him, even confessing this to her mother; she now sees Veer everywhere, singing to her Main yahaan hoon (“I am here”). Unable to bear Zaara’s suffering, Shabbo, her perky servant-cum-confidante, boldly contacts Veer and urges him to come to Lahore and take Zaara away.

    This leads to an all-stops-pulled-out encounter at a Sufi shrine on the very eve of Zaara’s wedding; accompanied by a double entendre-laced qawwali performance ( Aaya tere dar par diwaana, “Having broken all the barriers of society.your mad lover has come to your threshold,” which has to rank as an instant classic in the realm of filmi qawwali) the lovers embrace on a rain-drenched causeway, in full view of both shocked families. Since the Khan clan’s future allegedly depends on Zaara’s carefully-calculated match, the revelation that she loves a “Hindustani” boy wreaks havoc all around, causing Dad to suffer a heart attack and Mom to shed many tears. Visiting Veer in secret, the latter explains the gravity of the situation and extracts from him the promise that he will relinquish his claim on Zaara and return to India. This Veer willingly gives, in a scene that inevitably echoes (as locus classicus) Rama’s calm deferral to parental fiat (Veer: “A mother never has to beg of her son; she need only order him”), and (more recently) Shahrukh’s similar speech as Raj in DDLJ. It concludes with the following memorable exchange: (Zaara’s mother, astonished): “Are all sons in your country like you?” (Veer, kneeling before her lovingly): “I don’t know. All this, of course, would have been more than enough for most (non-Indian) films, but Chopra adds roughly another hour of non-flashback subplot, detailing Saamiya’s legal battle, against an unscrupulous prosecutor named Zakir Ahmed (the versatile Anupam Kher), to win Veer’s release.

    Even while evoking the emotional courtroom finishes of such classics as Andaaz (1949) and Awara (1951), but here in a surprisingly-just Pakistani setting, Chopra manages to save some surprises (not to mention one of the film’s most romantic ballads, Tere liye, “For you.I live”) for the tear-drenched finale. In the Sufi allegorical interpretation of the Majnun-Leila tale, the hero relinquishes his claim on Leila to allow her a socially-approved marriage to another, then goes mad and endures years of exile in the desert. His ultimate reward, through the grace of a Sufi pir, is union—not with his worldly beloved, but with Allah Himself. Veer’s outcome is more mundane, but the film’s neat tie-up of romantic, patriotic, and (in Indo-Pak terms) national-concilliatory subplots yields an apotheosis that is well worth waiting for. Indeed, given the film’s final moments, it is easy to read its epic romance as a parable of another long-sundered relationship: that between the two halves of the Punjab and indeed between their two nations and of accompanying processes of historical amnesia and then re-membering, here brought to a fantasied (and of course Indo-centric) resolution. Unlikely though it may be that life will, in this case, imitate art, it has to be conceded that this is ambitious and visionary art all the same.

    Slickly-satisfying, oozing cinematic self-confidence, and boasting beautiful camerawork, superb performances by all the principals (including a wonderfully subdued and subtle Shahrukh-Veer), lovely songs with lyrics by Javed Akhtar, and dazzling sets and costumes, VEER-ZAARA is Yash Chopra at the top of his game. The Yashraj Films DVD of VEER-ZAARA is of unusually high quality, with superior English subtitles (not to mention about a dozen other languages) for both dialog and songs. It is worth the cost, and of course also includes a supplemental “making of” disc for hardcore fans.

    I was fully prepared to see a typical Bollywood romantic musical, but came blow away at the sheer awesomeness of this movie! Yes, it is a romantic musical with great music, but the underlying themes are so much more keeping you engaged during the entire movie. Be prepared to see a sense romance, courage, honor and humanity that will heighten your senses. You will feel love, spirituality, anger, sadness and happiness all throughout. The scenery is beautiful and the actors all play their roles well. Veer's speech in court towards the end is something that will be remembered as it should be a basis of all humanity's dealings with differences. It is awesome in a world filled with hatred towards differences that a story like this can rise above and see the common thread in all humanity. A must see, even if you don't enjoy romantic musicals

    ...">Download Film Veer Zaara(17.01.2020)