Uri: The Surgical Strike
Uri: The Surgical Strike is a 2019 Indian Hindi-language military action film.[6] It is directed and written by debutant Aditya Dhar.[7] Produced by Ronnie Screwvala, the film stars Vicky Kaushal, Paresh Rawal, Yami Gautam, Mohit Raina and Kirti Kulhari.[8][9] The plot is a dramatised account of the retaliation to the 2016 Uri attack, following Major Vihaan Singh Shergill of the Indian Army, who plays a leading role in the events.[10][11]
Uri: The Surgical Strike | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Aditya Dhar |
Produced by | Ronnie Screwvala |
Screenplay by | Aditya Dhar |
Starring | Vicky Kaushal Paresh Rawal Yami Gautam Mohit Raina Kirti Kulhari |
Music by | Shashwat Sachdev |
Cinematography | Mitesh Mirchandani |
Edited by | Shivkumar V. Panicker |
Production company | |
Distributed by | RSVP Movies |
Release date |
|
Running time | 138 minutes[2] |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹25 crore[3] |
Box office | est. ₹342.06 crore[4][5] |
The film was released on 11 January 2019[12] and grossed ₹342.06 crore (US$49 million) worldwide.[4][5] It has received generally positive reviews from critics and ranks among the highest-grossing Indian films.[13] The film has been a recipient of various accolades.[14]
Plot
The film is divided into five chapters.
The Seven Sisters (North-east India)
The first chapter opens up with an ambush in June 2015 on the convoy of the Indian Army troops in Chandel, Manipur by NSCN(K) militants. In retaliation, Major Vihaan Singh Shergill (Vicky Kaushal), a Para SF officer and his unit including his brother-in-law, Major Karan Kashyap (Mohit Raina), infiltrate and attack the Northeastern militants and also kill the key leader responsible for the ambush. After a successful strike the Prime Minister of India (Rajit Kapur), congratulates him and the whole unit at a formal dinner. Vihaan requests an early retirement as he wants to be close with his mother, who is suffering from Stage VI Alzheimer's, on which the Prime Minister offers him a desk job at New Delhi near his mother instead of retirement, to which he agrees.[15]
An Unsettling Peace (New Delhi)
The second chapter shows Vihaan taking a desk job at the Integrated Defence Staff HQ in New Delhi and him spending time with his family. This segment also shows a brief description of the Pathankot attack. A nurse named Jasmine D'Almeida (Yami Gautam) is assigned to take care of Vihaan's mother. Vihaan meets an Indian Air Force pilot named Flight Lieutenant Seerat Kaur (Kirti Kulhari), who is trying to prove her patriotism to her martyred husband, who was an army officer who died in an ambush. One fine day, his mother goes missing. He searches for her and he blames Jasmine for ignorance and tells Jasmine that there is no need for her security. Vihaan's mother is found under a bridge and Jasmine reveals herself as an intelligence agent. The film reveals a note of why the families of the special forces soldiers were given security due to the threat from the North-eastern terrorists.
Bleed India with Thousand Cuts (Uri, Jammu and Kashmir)
On 18 September 2016, four heavily armed militants attack the brigade headquarters at Uri, Jammu and Kashmir at dawn, killing 19 soldiers in their sleep. The terrorists are killed but Karan dies in grenade explosion due to accidentally pulling the pin which was attached to the terrorist's rifle, which he picked up to examine. The whole family becomes devastated including Vihaan. The Ministry decides to take strict action against the perpetrators of the attack. National Security Advisor Govind Bharadwaj (Paresh Rawal) suggests the idea of a surgical strike. The Prime Minister gives it a go and gives ten days for the strike. Vihaan leaves his desk job and leaves for Northern Command base in Udhampur. He requests Chief of the Army Staff General Arjun Singh Rajawat (Shishir Sharma) to count him in the operation to which he agrees. Vihaan chooses the elite Ghatak Force commandos from the Bihar Regiment and the Dogra Regiment along with the special forces as most of the soldiers killed in the attack were from these regiments. Vihaan informs them that they are no longer able to use their phones, and disguises the mission as regular training exercises. The commandos begin their training.[15][16][17][18][19]
Naya Hindustan (New India) (New Delhi)
During the planning, Govind ropes in ISRO (for providing satellite images), DRDO (for drone surveillance) and RAW (for intelligence). When he goes to meet the DRDO Chief Brian D'Souza (Ivan Rodrigues), he chances to meet an intern named Ishaan who has developed a drone called Garuda which looks and is shaped like an Eagle.[20] With the help of the drones and satellite images they are able to get the exact location of the hideouts and training camps of the terrorists. Jasmine reveals her true name as Pallavi Sharma to Vihaan and during an interrogation, the two are able to extract information about who planned the attack. He chooses Seerat to be his pilot, who agrees wholeheartedly. Govind also suggests to intensify the artillery shelling at the border for distraction and also to paint their assault helicopters with Pakistani Air Force markings. The commandos also start training under Vihaan. The Pakistani officials suspect the Indian activities but dismiss it due to underestimation.
The Surgical Strike (Pakistan Occupied Kashmir)
On the night of 28 September, the commandos leave for the strike in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir in Mi-17 helicopters. During the mission Vihaan's helicopter is forced not to cross the Line of Control due to latest intelligence from spies in Pakistan that the Pakistani Army has deployed an "AWAC" Early Warning Radar-based Surface to Air Missile system in Muzafarabad sector to bring their helicopter down. He and his team improvise by going on foot through a cave (which was very risky due to darkness and the unknown presence of other terrorists). His team successfully infiltrate and kill all the terrorists on the two launchpads. Similarly, other commando teams also manage to kill all of the terrorists. Vihaan kills Idris and Jabbar, who are the perpetrators of the Uri attack. The local police are alerted and the commandos who are low on ammunition and time escape. On their way back, they are heavily rained down upon by gunfire from both a nearby machine gun bunker and a Pakistani Air Force Mi-17 Helicopter which was scrambled to intercept Vihaan's team. Flight Lieutenant Seerat comes to their rescue by firing back both at the Pakistani gunship thus driving it away and eliminating the machine gun bunker. His team successfully crosses LoC on the Indian side with no casualties. The rest of the assigned teams are also successful and are back with no casualties. Vihaan lands at Hindon Air Force Station at Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh. The film ends with him, Pallavi, Govind and the commandos happily having a formal dinner with the Prime Minister.
In a post-credits scene, Zameer, a Pakistani minister wakes up and shouts in frustration while seeing the news of India's successful surgical strike and the scene cuts to a title card reading "Jai Hind" (Victory to India).
Cast
- Vicky Kaushal as Major Vihaan Singh Shergill (Para SF team leader)
- Mohit Raina as Major Karan Kashyap, Vihaan's brother in law (Para SF sniper)
- Paresh Rawal as National Security Advisor Govind Bhardwaj (character based on Ajit Doval)
- Yami Gautam as Pallavi Sharma / Jasmine D'Almeida, an undercover Intelligence Bureau agent
- Kirti Kulhari as Flight Lieutenant Seerat Kaur (IAF officer)
- Rajit Kapur as Prime Minister of India (character based on Narendra Modi)
- Rajvir Chauhan as Uday Singh Rathod (SF officer)
- Ivan Rodrigues as Brian D'Souza (DRDO chief)
- Akashdeep Arora as Ishaan Bhattal (Intern at DRDO)
- Yogesh Soman as Defence Minister of India Ravinder Agnihotri (the character based on Manohar Parrikar)
- Manasi Parekh as Neha Shergill Kashyap, Karan's wife and Vihaan's sister
- Swaroop Sampat as Suhasini Shergill, Vihaan's mother
- Shishir Sharma as COAS General Arjun Singh Rajawat (the character based on General Dalbir Singh Suhag)
- Satyajit Sharma as Lt. General Ajay Garewal (character based on Lt. General Deependra Singh Hooda GOC Northern Command (India))
- Riva Arora as Suhani Kashyap, Vihaan's niece
- Dhairrya Karwa as Captain Sartaj Singh Chandhok (SF officer)
- Padam Bhola as Vikram Dabas (SF commando)
- Anurag Mishra as K. S. Venkatesh (SF commando)
- Navtej Hundal as Home Minister of India (character Based on Rajnath Singh)
- Kamal Malik as Interior Minister of Pakistan
- Sukhwinder Chahal as a Pakistani police officer of POK
- Akashdeep Arora as Ishaan (DRDO intern, "Garuda" drone operator)
- Ujjwal Chopra as Shahid Khan, Aasma's husband
- Rukhsar Rehman as Aasma Khan
- Abrar Zahoor as Idris Khan
- Sunil Palwal as Jabbar Firozi
- Rakesh Bedi as Senior Pakistani ISI officer
- Nishant Singh as Rahil Hussain
- Ajit Shidhaye as Zubair Mehmood, a Pakistani officer
- Aamir Yaseen as Uri Attacker
- Adarsh Gautam as Major Afzal Lateef
- Anil George as Zameer, Pakistani minister
Production
Uri was announced by producer Ronnie Screwvala one year after the surgical strike in September 2017. The film was to be directed by debutant Aditya Dhar. He said that the film is "the story of what was imagined to have happened in those eleven days."[21] The principal photography began in June 2018 and was finished in September.[22][23] Kaushal went through extensive military training for five months and gained weight. He trained for five hours a day and three to four hours of military training to enhance the stamina. He also received gun training at the naval base in Cuffe Parade in Mumbai.[24] He called it "physically the most challenging film for me".[25] He injured his arm while filming an action sequence in it.[26]
Kaushal and the supporting cast trained at Mumbai's Navy Nagar with Captains and Majors teaching them slithering, using arms and ammunitions and other drills used by the armed forces.[27] Uri was largely shot in Serbia and was wrapped up in Mumbai.[25] The Indo-Pak border, the LOC and other areas resembling military posts and terrorist camps were recreated in Serbia.[27] Yami Gautam underwent mixed martial arts training.[28] She called the process of shooting as "exhausting yet enjoyable." The film also stars Paresh Rawal, Mohit Raina, Ivan Rodrigues and Kirti Kulhari.[29] Screwvala said that the film has elements of "war, action, and strategy based on a true story" that the "Indian audience is yet to watch such experience in cinema."[30]
Marketing and release
The film was released on 11 January 2019.[1] The film was digitally premiered on ZEE5 Platform on 19 March 2019.[31] To curtail piracy, the makers of Uri: The Surgical Strike deployed a 3.8 gigabyte fake version of the film over networks like torrent.[32] However, the film was leaked by the bootleg website Tamil Rockers within a week of release.[33] The Telugu dubbed version of the film was released with the same name on 14 June 2019.[34]
Reception
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 67% based on 12 reviews, with an average rating of 6/12.[35] Namrata Joshi, writing for The Hindu, stated: "Whichever side of the political divide one may stand, one can't dismiss Dhar's canniness and craft, despite knowing that he is lionising the obvious and providing a one-sided narrative." Amman Khurana of Times Now News, giving 3 stars out of 5, comments: "Uri: The Surgical Strike is a rather mature film. It somehow knows that it is catering to the viewer that is tired of watching the men in uniform who thump their chests to show their love and passion for the country." He further has to say: "The stunning cinematography and the VFX work ensure that Uri: The Surgical Strike does not pass off as a comic-book account of the operation." He concludes: "Uri: The Surgical Strike is a good one-time watch. If not for anything else, watch it for Vicky Kaushal, who brings the right amount of intensity to his role and drives the film from start to finish."[36] Taran Adarsh rated the film 3.5 stars out of 5, says "Uri is one film that *should* be watched… Absorbing screenplay, superbly executed combat scenes, efficient direction Aditya Dhar… Uri is thrilling, gripping, instils patriotism, without getting jingoistic."[37] .[38] Rajeev Masand of News 18 gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and said, "Vicky Kaushal is in especially good form as the protagonist, looking every bit the army man. He brings both the bulked-up physicality and the sort of steely determination that the part requires."[39]
Anupama Chopra of Film Companion gave the film 2.5 out of 5 stars and said, "The film alternates between fact and fiction, between gritty re-creations of combat and Top Gun-style, slow-motion shots of soldiers getting out of helicopters. For the first half, Aditya manages this tight-rope walk efficiently, aided by the strong work of DOP Mitesh Mirchandani. The story-telling has scale and the narrative beats are predictable but satisfying."[40] Raja Sen of Hindustan Times gave the film 2.5 out of 5 stars and said, "Uri is a decent looking film — though the cinematographer appears to have been told to highlight the lens-flare in every single shot of nighttime combat — and while the action is convincing, the proceedings are unmistakably dull. The film doesn’t thump its chest as hard as the ones made by JP Dutta, but merely keeping its shirt on doesn’t make this an actual movie. There is no tension to be found here, and any attempts to manufacture breathlessness are childish."[41]
Box office
Uri: The Surgical Strike in opening weekend earned ₹35.73 crore from domestic circuit. In the first weekend, the film collected ₹70.94 crore from India. It grossed ₹289.68 crore from India and ₹52.38 crore (US$7.3 million) from overseas, taking the worldwide gross collection to ₹342.06 crore (US$49 million).[4][5]
The film crossed the ₹100 crore (US$14 million) mark in gross collection on 8th day of its release. It took 15 days to gross ₹200 crore (US$28 million) and in its fourth week of release, it grossed ₹300 crore (US$43 million). It took seven weeks to gross ₹342 crore (US$49 million) worldwide.[4][5]
Box office performance | ||
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Days to achieve | Worldwide gross | Notes |
8 | ₹100 crore (US$14 million) | [4] |
15 | ₹200 crore (US$28 million) | |
28 | ₹300 crore (US$43 million) |
Uri: The Surgical Strike is the 4th highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2019. Based on box office collection, the film became the tenth highest-grossing film by 5 March 2019 produced in Bollywood until that date.[13]
Awards and nominations
Ceremony | Date | Category | Recipient | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
National Film Awards[42][43] | 9 August 2019 | Best Director | Aditya Dhar | Won |
Best Actor | Vicky Kaushal | |||
Best Audiography | Bishwadeep D. Chatterjee | |||
Best Music Director (Background Score) | Shashwat Sachdev | |||
Screen Awards[44] | 8 December 2019 | Best Actor | Vicky Kaushal | Nominated |
Best Director | Aditya Dhar | Nominated | ||
Best Film | RSVP Movies | Nominated | ||
Most Promising Debut Director | Aditya Dhar | Won | ||
Best Sound Designer | Bishwadeep Chatterjee | Won | ||
Filmfare Awards[45][46] | 15 February 2020 | Best Film | RSVP Movies | Nominated |
Best Director | Aditya Dhar | Nominated | ||
Best Actor | Vicky Kaushal | Nominated | ||
Best Background Score | Shashwat Sachdev | Nominated | ||
Best Cinematography | Mitesh Mirchandani | Nominated | ||
Best Action | Stefan Richter | Nominated | ||
Best Editing | Shivkumar V Panicker | Won | ||
Best Production Design | Aditya Kanwar | Nominated | ||
Best Sound Design | Bishwadeep Dipak Chatterjee Nihar Ranjan Samal |
Won | ||
Best Special Effects | YRF Studio | Nominated | ||
Best Debut Director | Aditya Dhar | Won | ||
R. D. Burman Award For Upcoming Music Talent | Shashwat Sachdev | Won | ||
IIFA Awards | TBA | Best Film | RSVP Movies | Pending |
Best Director | Aditya Dhar | Pending | ||
Best Story | Pending | |||
Best Actor | Vicky Kaushal | Pending | ||
Best Background Score | Shashwat Sachdev | Won | ||
Best Sound Design | Bishwadeep Dipak Chatterjee | Won | ||
Impact
The protagonist in the film asks his squad "How's the Josh?" (Hinglish for "How's the spirit?") The squad replies "High, Sir!".[47] This question is asked to the cadets in military academies in India to test their enthusiasm. This dialogue went viral over Indian social media.[48] The dialogue was quoted by several individuals and institutions. The Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, while inaugurating the National Museum of Indian Cinema of Films Division of India in Mumbai, asked this question at the beginning of his address to the film fraternity attending the ceremony.[49] The Indian Cricket Team, after winning ODI series in New Zealand, raised the morale of the team by asking "How’s the Josh?" for the coming Twenty20 series;[50] and Mumbai Police used the slogan to raise awareness about cybersecurity.[51]
Soundtrack
Uri: The Surgical Strike | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Soundtrack album by | |||||||
Released | 4 January 2019[52] | ||||||
Recorded | 2018 | ||||||
Genre | Feature Film Soundtrack | ||||||
Length | 20:05 | ||||||
Language | Hindi | ||||||
Label | Zee Music Company | ||||||
Shashwat Sachdev chronology | |||||||
| |||||||
|
Shashwat Sachdev composed songs for the film. Kumaar, Raj Shekhar and Abhiruchi Chand are the lyricists.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Challa (Main Lad Jaana)" | Kumaar | Romy, Vivek Hariharan, Shashwat Sachdev | 3:27 |
2. | "Beh Chala" | Raj Shekhar | Yasser Desai, Shashwat Sachdev | 5:24 |
3. | "Jigra" | Kumaar | Siddharth Basrur, Shashwat Sachdev | 4:00 |
4. | "Manzar Hai Ye Naya" | Abhiruchi Chand | Shantanu Sudame, Shashwat Sachdev | 4:03 |
5. | "Jagga Jiteya" | Kumaar | Daler Mehndi, Shashwat Sachdev, Dee MC | 3:11 |
Total length: | 20:05 |
References
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- Bhanot, Saurav (9 January 2019). "The real story of 'Uri: The Surgical Strike' Movie: What happened in the Uri attack and how did India respond?". GQ India. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
- "Check out Vicky Kaushal's intense soldier look from Uri, a film based on surgical strike". Mumbai Mirror. Retrieved 28 September 2018.
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- "National Film Awards 2019: 'Andhadhun', 'Uri:The Surgical Strike' bag awards". The Hindu. 9 August 2019. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
- Ata Hasnain, Syed (24 January 2018). "Ex-Uri Brigade Commander: "You Watch a Film for Fun, Not Facts"". The Quint. Archived from the original on 31 January 2019. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
- Ajaz, Mahwash (12 January 2019). "We asked a Pakistani Bollywood buff to review Uri & she has a request for Indian directors". The Print. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
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- Rangan, Baradwaj (17 January 2019). ""Uri: The Surgical Strike"… Not so much a war movie as a 'Hukumat'-style revenge drama, but it works". Baradwaj Rangan. Archived from the original on 31 January 2019. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
- Bamzai, Kaveree (13 January 2019). "NSA Ajit Doval hasn't seen Uri, but will be more than pleased when he does". The Print. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
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