Ek Hasina Thi
Ek Hasina Thi
| 16 January 2004 (USA)
Ek Hasina Thi Trailers

A woman falls for a charming and mysterious businessman. The whirlwind romance turns sour when she is framed for his underworld crimes. Now, finally out of prison she is ready for sweet revenge.

Reviews
Nicole

I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.

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Freeman

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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Edwin

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Phillipa

Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.

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silvan-desouza

RGV a superb filmmaker who gave us RANGEELA(1995) and several more great films, not forgetting SATYA(1998). He had several heroines who were his muse, Urmila was one of them. She was a constant fixture since RANGEELA till Antra Mali took her place followed by Nisha Kothari. RGV used to experiment with films and make quality films, especially since COMPANY, SARKAR his films were looked for by the audience, he introduced new talents too with his films, one such talent is Sriram Raghavan.Urmila too after doing roles which exposed her looks and dance, changed herself and took roles of substance. EK HASEENA THI came when she had started doing roles of substance with Bhoot and Pinjar and the disaster Tehzeeb notwithstanding. Ek Haseena Thi reminds us of Bangkok Hilton(which was remade as Gumrah(1993) starring Sridevi, Sanjay Dutt and Rahul Roy). Also takes scenes from The Bone Collector and other films but the film is treated brilliantly. The film starts off quite well though it's bit hard to digest the way Urmila suddenly gets close to Saif without knowing much of him, but then the story shifts gears and the way things are handled is superb, The jail scenes are simply superb, her escape(hardly anything filmy, thankfully no disguises). The first half is simply superb, The second half too is superb, Saif's murky business, The way he gets trapped, Urmila's revenge are brilliantly portrayed, even the end is unconventional and superbDirection by Sriram Raghavan is simply superb, he does give tribute to his mentor whose touch is visible but yet carves his niche superbly Sriram is a 70s filmy buff though and gives tribute to old films, here done subtely compared to Johny Gaddar and Agent Vinod, There is a small clip showing Mehmood dancing to Maaf Karo from Do Phool(1974). There is only 1 song which is in the background and thankfully no naach gaana Camera-work is superb, Background music is awesomeUrmila Matondkar who proved her talent with Bhoot, Pinjar does a superb job, conveying all emotions, revenge perfectly, She is perfectly cast only quibee is her make up in jail portions, it would be better if she was shown without make up and also her dress change, but that doesn't take anything from her performance. Saif Ali Khan too turned a new leaf since DCH and started experimenting, He plays a villain perfectly and shows his versatility, he never overacts or makes faces, giving a true natural performance He had done a negative role in Kya Kehna but this one is different and does a superb job, after this he played a villain in Omkara again and rest is history. Seema Biswas is superb as the cop, Pratima Kazmi is again brilliant, The Late Rasika Joshi is simply brilliant, Aditya Shrivastav again proves his mettle, he is fabulous, Kavita Kaushik has a cameo, Madan Joshi is apt, Zakir Hussain is terrific in a scene Abhay Bhargav is perfect, The jail mates are all terrific Gopal Singh as Abhijit is superbSadly the film didn't do well at the B.O. as Saif still didn't have a solo hit but he got it with Hum Tum in the same year, rest assured

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springsunnywinter

I'm very keen in revenge thrillers and Ek Hasina Thi was quite different & interesting about Sarika, a happy, independent, single girl working in Mumbai. Karan a globe trotting financial whizz who sweeps Sarika off her feet. Life is beautiful, until one day a chance even plunges Sarika into a nightmarish situation with the police. Charged under the Maharashtra control of organised crime act, Sarika finds herself in jail. Karan assures Sarika that he will get her out very soon. But a tough as nails lady cop is determined to break Sarika. Prison, thrown in with a bunch of hardened women, Sarika has to kill the person she once was and discover herself anew. That is why the film is called Ek Hasina Thi and she really was looking beautiful with her long hair but when she cut it in jail then she was looking like a different person. The running length was far too long although it was about 140 minutes and with only one song but still it could of been cut down to about 90 minutes. The first half was straight forward then it got slow in the second half. Overall it is OK to be watched once and I can not watch it again.

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nikhil7179

Although the plot of EHT would be regarded as the usual 70's exploitation/revenge fare, there's nothing typical about the fact that it is a Bollywood movie.Female protagonists are rare enough, but avenging angel avatars are rarer still. Sriram Raghavan weaves an intriguing game of cat and mouse – where hunter and prey constantly switch roles.Add to this another layer of players - that of cops and robbers, and you have a veritable maze of secrets and lies.Although the film follows genre conventions, it does so with a sense of playful cynicism, always toying with the audience's expectations. It topples various Bollywood boy-meets-girl clichés and asks us to reexamine our preconceived notions.EHT's main underlying theme reflects the evolving tastes and preferences of the Indian middle class - Prissy girl, though reluctant at first, is eventually seduced by mysterious stranger who delivers her deep dark fantasy – escape from a safe and mundane existence, but at the ultimate price – her very freedom. Death drive overdrive.Possibly the most fascinating aspect of the film though is the undercurrent of masochism that runs through it. Sarika is submissive, conformist and physically weak and defenseless. Even her beauty is a liability and is more than once cause for undue attention.She is always confined (repressed) – first by convention and culture, and later literally when she is wrongfully jailed.She must come to terms with her own femininity (sexuality) and only then can she be liberated. Although her metmorphosis in the film is not entirely believable, that's the general idea.Though Sarika is the submissive party in the first half and is constantly victimized physically and emotionally, the tables are turned in the end when the dominant Karan is tied up in the cave – a return to the womb as it were, and left to be devoured by ravenous rodents – messengers of the wrathful goddess herself.But the film is far from being some kind of feminist diatribe. This is still Bollywood.The cat and mouse scenario perpetuates itself in all sorts of interesting ways. In probably the most memorable scene in the film, Karan and Sarika engage in a game – of questions and answers, of truth and lies, a sort of icebreaker. This is in fact a piece of a bigger puzzle - a larger game they seem to enacting – one of role-playing – Karan as the mysterious predator, Sarika as the poor defenseless damsel.Another interesting scene occurs when, after flying the coop Sarika sees Karan in the arms of another girl and her reaction is one of agony and loathing – totally understandable – however, the context renders it ambiguous. Is the emotion the result of being betrayed and falsely imprisoned or being two-timed by another woman? Moments like these elevate the film from being mere revenge play.EHT is not perfect – it has pacing issues and even comes close to imploding in the third act with a hastily assembled climax, but it's assured sense of direction and strong performances by the lead and supporting cast save it from self-destructing.But my main complaint has little to do with plot machinations. The film provides a great canvas for tackling taboo topics like sexual dynamics, gender roles, etc. and even takes a stab at them every now and then, but it fails to draw blood. It feels like the film is holding back for some reason.Although EHT's subversive potential is largely untapped, Sriram Raghavan is clearly a talent to watch out for. I for one am curious to see what he comes up with next.

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beany82

What makes this movie so good and convincing is that it strays from every Bollywood stereotype out there. The plot moves quickly and does not lag. There are no forced song and dance scenes as this is not the type of movie for that and I am glad that the director did not force these into this movie. The acting is superb and there are many western elements such as storyline and direction that make this piece fabulous and a piece for people that are not familiar with Bollywood films to watch.It does get a bit cheesy when Saif Ali Khan breaks out the martial arts moves but Urmilla's acting is wonderful. You can see her character transform convincingly and Saif Ali Khan as the menacing bad guy is quite the fit! It's a revenge story finally told right in the fluff that clutters the few gems of Bollywood cinema. It's a movie that did not have it's vision compromised for the sake of trying to fit in to Bollywood. I would definitely recommend this movie to everybody, especially those that have not seen an Indian film before and who are curious.

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