Hamara Dil Aapke Paas Hai |  | Director: Satish Kaushik Actors: Anil Kapoor, Aishwarya Rai, Sonali Bendre, Puru Rajkumar, Anupam Kher Studio: Eros Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: $16.00 Buy New: $7.57 as of 2/10/2010 07:26 EST details You Save: $8.43 (53%)
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Seller: Mantra Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 80986
Format: Full Screen, NTSC Language: English (Published) Region: 0 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.2
UPC: 883629079653 EAN: 0883629079653 ASIN: B000IZJR3S
Release Date: September 22, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Starring: ANIL KAPOOR, AISHWARYA RAI, SONALI BENDRESynopsis: This is a story of Avinash (Anil Kapoor) and Priti (Aishwarya Rai) who are living happy lives with their children, until one day the Police show up at their front door, arrest Priti, and charge her with "Prostitution without license". This accusation against Priti has been levied by Rajguru, Avinash's own father. It all started one day when Priti witnessed a stabbing on the streets - in front of a passive crowd. Nobody comes to the aid of the victim, Master Parmanand, except for Avinash. She stands as witness against the assailant Bhawani Pandey, who is put behind bars. In order to take revenge Babloo Pandey, Bhawani's brother, rapes Priti. Due to this Priti is unjustly ostracized by society and family. Nobody but Avinash accepts her and invites her to come and live in his house with the two children that belong to his father's illegitimate wife, who has since died. Priti treats the children like her own children. Avinash's liking for Priti fosters into love, and soon he proposes to her. Will Priti agree to marry Avinash? Priti's friend Ashwani is getting married, and when Priti and Avinash arrive at the marriage function, who should the groom be but Babloo. The same man that raped Priti. What will Avinash do, when faced with the nemesis of his family's happiness? This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.
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| Customer Reviews: perfect match July 25, 2008 Work of Life (Miami, Florida USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is the genre of film that fits Aish's unique beauty and talent. She shines in her role. The varied cast of characters in this movie is entertaining and funny, yet no lack of Bollywood melodrama. Bollywood fans will enjoy.
Excellent Film December 1, 2007 Em (Los Angeles, CA USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This film is one of my favorite Indian movies.. I just love the 2 main characters, and the main song that's still stuck in my head. It's got a little bit of everything, and I'd highly recommend it. Not exactly a typical Indian movie, and there are a few boring bits with the side characters, but overall, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
my review October 11, 2007 M. N. Haque (new jersey) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
HI
THIS IS A WONDERFUL FILM. IT HAS GREAT PERFORMANCE BY ANIL KAPOOR, AISHWARYA RAI, AND SONALI BANDRE. THE MUSIC IS GOOD ESPECIALLY THE SONG SUKHRIYA SUKHRIYA.
This film has a mixed message September 16, 2006 H. Bala (Carson - hey, we have an IKEA store! - CA USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
***Lots of SPOILERS here***
I'm not quite sure how to respond to Hamara Dil Aapke Paas Hai; it was a hard film to pinpoint. I'm a devoted fan of Aishwarya Rai and will always check out everything she chooses to be in. But films like this one and Dil Ka Rishta are unsettling to watch. I'm not of Indian persuasion, so I can't really comment on how true to life the shabby treatment was, which Aishwarya Rai's character received from her parents (her character's dad is a callous punk!) and from her quick-to-judge neighbors. I doubt very much that this is true to form in India, but, in this instance, Priti, a rape victim, is treated as used goods by the father, who unequivocally believes that the girl has brought dishonor to the family by being raped. She is, more or less, cast aside by family and shunned and castigated by society. Aish's character Priti also is portrayed as meek and unempowered for the entire length of the film, leaving it to Anil Kapoor's decisive Avinash to take her in hand and set things right. The women's lib would have a cow over this film.
The movie starts out innocently enough as we see opening scenes of Priti (Aishwarya Rai) and Avinash (Anil Kapoor) engaged in domestic contentment. These scenes further encompass Avinash and (we assume) Priti's two kids as they frolic in an amusement park and a bowling alley. The plot thickens when, with Avinash having driven the kids away, the police arrive at their home and shockingly arrests Priti on the charge of "prostituting without a license," an accusation apparently made by Avinash's father. Upon her release, we are then taken to a lengthy sequence of flashbacks as Priti narrates past events to a friend.
The flashbacks commence with Priti witnessing a brutal street crime and testifying against the assailant, who is held for trial. Seeking revenge, the assailant's brother rapes Priti. Her rape causes Priti to be ostracized by everyone, but especially by her father. Avinash (Anil Kapoor), a wealthy businessman, is the only one who reaches out and offers her solace and a place to stay. Priti meets and gets along so well with Avinash's two children that they soon are calling her "mother."
Priti gains employment in Avinash's milk company and she soon ascends to the level of General Manager, causing her erstwhile scornful neighbors to toady up to her for jobs. It's also not long before Priti and Avinash begin to have feelings for each other. But Priti's low sense of self-esteem threatens to spoil the happy ending. A subplot surfaces when Avinash's beautiful, childhood friend, Khushi (Sonali Bendre), comes a-calling, now desiring a more romantic relationship with Avinash. It all comes to a head when Priti and Avinash attend the wedding of Priti's friend and who should the groom turn out to be but Priti's rapist?
As I've said, this was a tricky film. I watched this one with a female friend and she hated it. She deplored the director's lack of sensitivity (and I concur). The seriousness of the premise was also undermined greatly by the director's infusion of broad comedy (which, to add further insult, wasn't at all funny). I didn't give one freakin' fig for Avinash and Priti's two-faced neighbors and their dubiously funny antics. Too, I wish that Priti's cold-hearted father would've gotten some kind of comeuppance. Just, shame on him.
By the way, this is not to put down Aish and Kapoor's performances as they did the best they could with the script and the character outlines they were given. The fact that Aish was able to still charm me despite her wishy washy role is a testament to her emoting skills. Anil Kapoor, I thought, was also pretty good as an ethical man with a strong code of honor, with a secret of his own. As usual, he played his role with fiery conviction and a virile intensity, though he wasn't as good here as he was in Taal. And, boy, can he throw down in a fisticuff! I actually chuckled quite a bit at his propensity to brawl with reckless abandon. He reminded me a lot of the Energizer bunny; he just kept on going. And his character actually had the balls to slap down a policeman! This unintentional bit of levity was 20 times more humorous than the deliberate, insipidly placed humor. Sonali Bendre - it's worth mentioning - turns in a nice, upbeat performance as the other girl who competes for Avinash's attention.
Sorry to say but the songs weren't memorable, either, although I kinda liked the peppy "It's My Family" number and the pensive "Gham Hain Kyon." If nothing else, the songs were worth enduring for the pleasure of marvelling at Aish's intoxicating dancing, which is not to be confused with Anil Kapoor's seemingly intoxicated dancing. Fred Astaire, he ain't. Bonus features in this Eros International-released dvd contain a songs menu, a chapters index, a 20-minute long "making of" featurette (although the subtitle function was disabled, so I found it hard to understand what the cast was saying), and a theatrical trailer.
So, it's a mixed review from me. If this film's aim was to showcase a woman's truimph over adversity, then, at some important levels, it missed the boat. Priti's re-validation and "redemption" mostly seem to come from the actions of Avinash, a man, which, to me, nullifies the whole point of the film. If the director's message is that a woman's ultimate salvation is achieved not thru her own deeds, but thru a man's, I really beg to differ. Not that I'm an enlightened dude, but, c'mon, that's too much chauvinism, even for my taste. Oh, I still recommend Hamara Dil Aapke Paas Hai to hardcore Aishwarya Rai fans, but, to others, especially women of independent demeanors - well, this film will drive 'em batty. Two and a half stars, the low rating mostly because of Director Satish Kaushik's ultimately failed vision of a portrayal of a rape victim. Don't blame the actors for this one.
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