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Mangal Pandey: The Rising Dvd

Mangal Pandey and William Gordon become friends during a war in Afghanistan. But when the East India Company introduces a rifle that uses objectionable cartridges, Mangal Pandey rises in revolt.

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Mangal Pandey: The Rising (internationally known as The Rising: Ballad of Mangal Pandey) is a 2005 Indian historical biographical drama film based on the life of Mangal Pandey, an Indian soldier known for helping to spark the Indian rebellion of 1857 (also known as The First War of Indian Independence).

It is directed by Ketan Mehta, produced by Bobby Bedi and with a screenplay by Farrukh Dhondy. The lead role is played by Aamir Khan, marking his comeback after he had gone into hiatus after Dil Chahta Hai (2001).

It premiered in the Marché du Film section of the 2005 Cannes Film Festival.[3][4] It was the fourth highest-grossing film of 2005.

Plot

In April 1857, a large part of the Indian subcontinent is under the control of the British East India Company. Mangal Pandey (Aamir Khan), a sepoy (soldier of Indian origin) in the 34th Bengal Native Infantry of the company’s army, is being led to his execution by hanging for fomenting mutiny against company rule. Witnessing the execution is Pandey’s friend, Captain William Gordon (Toby Stephens), who is relieved when the execution is delayed due to the hangman’s refusal to hang Pandey.

The film then flashes back to four years earlier. While fighting in Afghanistan, Pandey saves Gordon’s life by dragging him to safety when the two were targeted by Afghan snipers. Afterwards, while both recover at a camp, Gordon seeks out Pandey and gives him his pistol as a token of appreciation. Three years later, during a New Year’s Eve ball at the governor-general’s palace in Calcutta, Pandey angers Captain Hewson (Ben Nealon) when he attempts to stop him from severely beating an Indian servant for inadvertently touching the daughter of Mr. Kent (Kenneth Cranham), an influential British businessman. Gordon witnesses the assault but does not stop it, leading to tension with Pandey. However, Gordon apologizes to Pandey during a wrestling match with him, and a friendship is formed, transcending rank and race.

The company then introduces a new weapon for its troops: the Enfield rifled musket. Rumours spread among the sepoys that the paper cartridges holding the powder and ball for the rifle are greased with either pig fat or beef tallow; the process of loading the rifle requires the soldier to bite down on the cartridge, and the soldiers believe that this would cause them to consume pork or beef — acts abhorrent to Muslim and Hindu soldiers for religious reasons.[6] A low-caste labourer named Nainsukh teases Pandey, a Brahmin, that he has lost his caste by using such a gun, but Pandey dismisses Nainsukh’s taunts. The sepoys, led by Pandey, express their concerns to General Hearsey (Jeremy Clyde), but he reassures them that no such cartridge exists. The sepoys remain concerned when they are asked to test-fire the new rifle at musketry drill, but Gordon, after talking to Hearsey, reiterates that no such cartridge exists and asks a sepoy to test-fire the rifle. Pandey volunteers, and his fellow sepoys chastise him afterward. However, demonstrating his trust in Gordon, he states his belief that the rumours are untrue.

Meanwhile, Gordon stops a sati ceremony from occurring and rescues a widow, Jwala (Ameesha Patel). He arranges for her to be treated, and the two gradually become closer, eventually having an affair. Also, Pandey further earns Captain Hewson’s ire by stopping him from trying to rape a tawaif named Heera (Rani Mukerji), who was sold to a brothel run by Lal Bibi (Kirron Kher). He suffers a serious beating from Hewson and two other officers the next day, but Gordon intervenes. Pandey meets Heera at the brothel afterwards, and they begin to fall in love with each other. Some time later, Nainsukh takes Pandey and some other sepoys to see the factory, owned by Mr. Kent, where the cartridge grease is made; indeed, the grease turns out to be pig fat and beef tallow. Pandey, believing Gordon lied to him, returns Gordon’s pistol and ends their friendship.

Hearing of the 34th Regiment’s refusal to use the rifles, the 19th Regiment at Berhampore also refuses to use them, and mutiny brews among the sepoys. Gordon unsuccessfully attempts to dissuade Pandey and the mutineers from rebelling, and is likewise unsuccessful at convincing Major General George Anson (Christopher Adamson), the Commander-in-Chief, India, to abandon using the cartridges. The mutineers, meanwhile, meet with Tatya Tope (Deepraj Rana) and his messenger Azimullah (Shahbaz Khan) and they all agree to unite under the leadership of the elderly Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar (Habib Tanvir) and rise in rebellion. Anson decides to send the Queen’s Regiment from Rangoon to intercept and subdue the rebels; it is scheduled to arrive in Berhampore on 1 April. Heera informs Pandey of this plan, having spent the previous night with Hewson. The rebels revise their timetable to march on 30 March, but the wife of one of the rebels, angry at her husband after an argument in which he tells her of the impending revolt, informs her British employer woman of the plans. As the employer woman is having an affair with Hewson at the time, he overhears the conversation and later tortures the rebel into revealing the date of the march.

On 29 March, the mutineers are informed of the Rangoon Regiment’s arrival. Pandey attempts to rally them into fending off the attack, and when the officers, including Gordon, inquire as to what they are doing, the rebels turn on them. With the regiment’s arrival, the mutineers want to throw down their weapons; Pandey, however, fires at the opposing forces, killing two and injuring four, then attempts to shoot himself when the regiment surrounds him. Captured alive, he is court-martialed, and Gordon testifies on his behalf, passionately defending his actions and warning of bloody rebellion if he is hanged. Despite Gordon’s warning, the court-martial imposes a death sentence on Pandey. The night before Pandey’s execution, Heera visits him in his jail cell and has him place sindoor on her forehead, marking their marriage.

The next day, in front of Gordon, the British officers, his fellow sepoys, and the townspeople, Pandey is hanged. Inspired by his execution, the spectators break out in revolt. The film ends with drawings of the Indian Rebellion of 1857, and footage of the later Indian independence movement.

Cast

 

The film marked the comeback of actor Aamir Khan who went into a hiatus after Dil Chahta Hai which was released in 2001.
Actor/Actress Role
Aamir Khan Sepoy Mangal Pandey
Rani Mukerji Heera
Ameesha Patel Jwala
Toby Stephens Captain William Gordon
Coral Beed Emily Kent
Kirron Kher Lal Bibi
Om Puri Narrator
Ben Nealon Captain Hewson
Habib Tanveer Bahadur Shah Zafar
Varsha Usgaonkar Rani Laxmibai
Shrirang Godbole Nana Saheb
Kenneth Cranham Kent
Tom Alter Watson
Mukesh Tiwari Bakht Khan
Shahbaz Khan Azimullah
Deepraj Rana Tatya Tope
Sanjay Sharma Shivram
Amin Hajee Vir Singh
Sohrab Ardeshir Sohrabjee,Parsi Trader
Steven Rimkus Colonel Mitchell
Sanjay Swaraj Ishwari Prasad
Murli Sharma Shiekh Paltu
Lalit Mohan Tiwari Davar Ali
Anupam Shyam
Simon Chandler Lockwood
Christopher Adamson General Anson
Disha Vakani Yasmin
Subrat Dutta Mangal’s Friend
Amit Waghere Supporting Actor
Mona Ambegaonkar Kamla,Wife of Vir Singh
Sulabha Arya Old Woman,Mother of Vir Singh
Ian Jackson Extra
Sophiya Haque Special appearance in “Rasiya” song
Ravi Jhankal Sufi Singer Singing song of Al Madad Maula
Kailash Kher Sufi Singer Singing song of Al Madad Maula
Vivek Mishra cameo

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