Film: The Kashmir Files. Director: Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri. Cast: Anupam Kher, Darshan Kumaar, Pallavi Joshi, Mithun Chakraborty, Chinmay Mandlekar, ...
It’s through the four friends – an IAS officer, a doctor, a cop and a reporter that the film recounts the 90s. While one has read and seen the news, the pathos of being displaced makes a lasting impression. It’s the rather marathon speech which loses the momentum at the end. Vivek Agnihotri’s directional (The Tashkent Files was his last in 2019), The Kashmir Files flits between Kashmir, on the fateful January 19, 1990 and Delhi 2016. From a Pandit having faith in his land and hoping to live a regular life, to his ashes coming back to his ‘home’, The Kashmir Files goes a full circle encompassing the harrowing, traumatic, unbearable turn of events. The love for your land, of being wronged, and not heard at that...the storyline, touches different sore points – how the entire police, hospitals, media, judiciary was rendered helpless.
Filmmaker Vivek Agnihotri has a truth to tell and he has dared to tell it through his latest film, 'The Kashmir Files'.
It is the truths that we hide that destroy us. As one of the characters in the movie, himself a journalist, observes, it is not the lies that we tell that are so reprehensible. Though a feature film, The Kashmir Files retains a documentary feel, like Schindler’s List. Also, like the latter, Agnihotri’s object is not to push propaganda but tell a human story. There is a PIL in court seeking to block its release. Agnihotri wrote and directed the film, which he asserts is based on facts and testimonies. The film is too hot to handle for our political class, even if some of them might support it tacitly. For in this movie, even their children have acted, played parts or characters which are so difficult even to watch that they must have been even more challenging to enact. Seven times they have been scattered across their ancestral lands of Bharatvarsha. Their descendants still go by the name of “Sarasvat Brahmins” and can be found in distant corners of India, from the North to the South, from the West to the East. Living in the enchanting vale of Kashmir in the Himalayas, they too seemed like Shiva’s own or chosen ones. A tiny minority already, they were attacked, killed, and hounded out by India’s largest minority, the Muslims, in this case of the Valley, under directions from Pakistani-trained local and cross-border terrorists who went by the euphemistic misnomer “freedom fighters” or “militants”. As narrated in the movie, five hundred thousand were displaced; thousands lost their lives; many women were raped or dishonoured; even children were not spared. Even today, when the film is ready for its commercial release, there are attempts to ban it. Only this that they were Hindus in a state which our enemies, both external and internal, wanted to break from India and turn into an Islamic republic. Was it a just God who allowed this to happen to them?
The Kashmir Files box office collection Day 2: From Friday's Rs 3.55 crore to Saturday's Rs 8.50 crore, this Vivek Agnihotri movie made a huge jump.
“Congratulations @vivekagnihotri for #TheKashmirFiles. You have succeeded outside the system, on your own terms. East, West, North, South, #BO is on 🔥🔥🔥… This film is UNSTOPPABLE… Fri 3.55 cr, Sat 8.50 cr. Agnihotri has penned the script with Saurabh M Pandey.
The Kashmir Files box office day 2 collection: The Anupam Kher-starrer film directed by Vivek Agnihotri saw a huge jump in earnings on Saturday, ...
The trend in Gujarat / Saurashtra is looking extraordinary on Sunday and it could be that the film easily crosses 1 crore nett in the state which you could not even imagine for a film like this," the report stated. Krishna’s journey and the story of finding the truth about what happened to his family needed more conviction and clarity." Just when you are feeling terrible for what happened to Pushkar and his family, Krishna’s quest to find the truth about his family’s massacre takes over and you immediately switch to present-day. (Also read: The Kashmir Files movie review: Anupam Kher is the soul of this gut-wrenching film that's brazen and brutal) East, West, North, South, #BO is on (fire emoji)… This film is unstoppable… Film trade analyst Taran Adarsh took to Twitter on Sunday morning to share the news about The Kashmir Files' box office run.
It could have been a stunning tribute to the Kashmiri Pandits' cause, but Agnihotri's personal opinions tank the film's credibility.
Vivek Agnihotri called the film “truth of Kashmir ” and rightly shows the infamous Nadimarg massacre of 2003 when 24 Kashmiri Pandits were reportedly killed. But Agnihotri’s ‘truth’ shows his involvement in the Nadimarg massacre, which had actually involved another terrorist called Zia Mustafa of an altogether separate terrorist organisation. They are shocked to know that Krishna didn’t know the true story of his father’s death. He is caught in the middle of two opposing narratives of the Kashmiri Pandit exodus of 1990. The Kashmir Files then becomes a journey of discovering the truth for Krishna. In one among many traumatic scenes, Krishna’s father, hiding in a container of rice, is killed by a local terrorist. One side is represented by the pro-Azaadi JNU professor (Pallavi Joshi) who is gaining a lot of support on the campus for her ‘Kashmir cause’. On the other side is Nath, who has been struggling for 30 years to get justice for the exodus, which the professor claims is a sham.
'The Kashmir Files' team, including producer Abhishek Agarwal, director Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri and actor Pallavi Joshi, met Prime Minister Narendra Modi on ...
The film, which was released in theatres on March 11, earned Rs. 3.55 crores on its opening day. Thank you Modi Ji." The film, which was released in theatres on March 11, earned Rs. 3.55 crores on its opening day.