Box Office Collection

Chhapaak Box Office Collection Report, Review and Rating

Chhapaak Box Office Collection Report, Review and Rating

Chhapaak is a Hindi film directed by Meghna Gulzar and produced by her as well as Deepika Padukone in collaboration with Fox Star Studios. Based on the life of Laxmi Agarwal, it stars Padukone as an acid attack survivor, alongside Vikrant Massey.

The film was announced on 24 December 2018 by Padukone on her Twitter account; it marks her first production venture. Filming took place from March to June 2019 in New Delhi and Mumbai. Days before the film’s release, Padukone visited students who were brutalized during the 2020 JNU Attack, which led to a divided response on Twitter. A few right-wing magazines later wrongly reported that the religion of the acid thrower in the film was changed from a Muslim into a Hindu character. The film was theatrically released on 10 January 2020. It received positive reviews from critics.

Chhapaak Box Office Collection Report

Chhapaak Day Collection Gross
Worldwide1 4.77 crore 4.77 crore
Worldwide26.90 crore11.67 crore
Worldwide37.35 crore19.02 Crore
Worldwide43 crore22.02 crore

Chhapaak Cast and Crew Details

Chhapaak Cast and Crew details

ChhapaakCast and Crew details ,News, Complete Details
Director of ChhapaakMeghna Gulzar
Producer Fox Star Studios
Deepika Padukone
Govind Singh Sandhu
Meghna Gulzar
Release date of Chhapaak10 January 2020
Hero of ChhapaakVikrant Massey
Heroine of ChhapaakDeepika Padukone
StoryAtika Chohan
Meghna Gulzar
MusicShankar–Ehsaan–Loy
CinematographyMalay Prakash
LanguageHindi
CountryINDIA
ScreenplayMeghna Gulzar
Edited Nitin Baid
Production companyFox Star Studios
Ka Productions
Mriga Films
Running time120 minutes
Budget35–40 crore

Chhapaak Movie Review

 Meghna Gulzar’s ‘Chhapaak’ is inspired by the story of real-life acid attack survivor, Laxmi Agarwal, who has become a symbol of strength and inspiration for many women. The film is a fictionalized account with Deepika Padukone playing the central character Malti, who is attacked in broad daylight on the streets of Delhi by a friend of the family, Bashir Khan aka Babbu and his aide.

As the narrative chooses a non-linear route, we first meet Malti when she is on a job hunt – consciously trying to move on from the emotional scars that the heinous crime has left her with. For the physical scars, she has to go through a number of complicated surgeries. In fact, far from the dreams, she nursed of being a singer, her life is now an intersection of her work with an NGO for acid victims, her multiple surgeries and her court cases. Yet, the film steers away from melodrama or manipulation and instead gives us a powerful protagonist whose resolve to fight is punctuated with her determined smiles, the pain in her eyes and her indomitable spirit.

As support from her family dwindles owing to her brother’s illness and father’s death, it is Malti’s lawyer Archana (Madhurjeet Sarghi), who stands by her through her arduous journey. From Malti’s PIL to ban the sale of acid to amendments in the acid violence legislation, her team of women lawyers, take on the system. Her other main support comes from Amol (Vikrant Massey), who employs her to work for his NGO.

Deepika Padukone is the soul of the film, delivering a brilliant, immersive performance. In fact, there are many scenes where her act will move you to tears – like the one where she holds up an earring to her face but realizes now she can’t put it on. Or her piercing cry when she sees her face for the first time in a mirror after the attack. And one where she determinedly tells Amol, “Mujhe party Karni hain.” Precisely why Malti’s character is a winner because at no point does she succumb to self-pity. And as Deepika embraces her character completely, her transformation is enhanced through effective prosthetics. Devoid of even a hint of glamour, all we see is Malti throughout.

Both Vikrant Massey and Madhurjeet Sarghi pitch in very commendable performances. The story sends out a strong message and is undoubtedly a brave attempt, however, the edit seems choppy in places and certain parts of the narrative seem a tad stretched in the second half. The music tracks stand out – with ‘Chhapaak’ title track and ‘Nok Jhok’ (soundtrack by Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy, lyrics by Gulzar) adding to the poignancy of the mood. ‘Chhapaak’ is not a film that lets you go easy, just as one begins to settle in to think Malti has managed to get better of her perpetrator, it jolts you with a few grim.

Chhapaak Movie HD Photo Gallery

 

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