Reviewer's Rating 3 out of 5
Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose: The Forgotten Hero (2005)
15Contains infrequent strong language

Acclaimed Indian director Shyam Benegal is best known for his intimate portraits of Indian women, so it comes as some surprise that his latest offering is a biopic of one of India's most famous male icons, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. Sachin Khedekar plays Bose, a revolutionary whose mission is to rid India of the British Empire, even if it means going against Gandhi's non-violent ideology. Informative and fascinating, this is one cinematic history lesson worth sitting through.

The final five years of Subhas Chandra Bose's life marked not only an important phase in his own personal and political existence, but also the turning point in India's struggle for independence from British rule. Right from his daring escape from India to Afghanistan in 1940, to his historic meeting with Adolf Hitler in Germany, alliances with the Russians, Italians and Japanese, and finally the formation of the Indian National Army, there is enough drama to keep you absorbed.

"TESTS EVEN DEDICATED CINEMAGOERS"

Neatly divided into three chapters, Benegal ensures Bose's amazing but complex life story is peppered with just the right amount of detail so as to be easily understood. But what stops this film from becoming a hit is its marathon length. At nearly three and a half hours, Bose: The Forgotten Hero tests even the most dedicated of cinemagoers. While breaks from battle scenes are provided in the form of flashbacks to Bose's relationship with his Bengali mother and Austrian wife, even Khedekar's gallant performance isn't enough to make this a rousing affair.

In Hindi with English subtitles.

Music: A R Rahman

End Credits

Director: Shyam Benegal

Writer: Atul Tiwari, Shama Zaidi

Stars: Nicolas Chagrin, Divya Dutta, Rajit Kapoor, Kulbhushan Kharbanda, Sachin Khedekar

Genre: Bollywood

Length: 208 minutes

Cinema: 20 May 2005

Country: India

Cinema Search

Where can I see this film?

New Releases