12-653: Anil Sharma may refer to: Anil Sharma (director) (born 1960), Indian film director and producer Anil Sharma (Himachal Pradesh politician) (born 1956), Indian politician, member of the Himachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly Anil Sharma (Uttar Pradesh politician) (born 1963), Indian politician, member of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly Anil Kumar Sharma (born 1971), Indian politician, member of
24-466: Is a 1998 Indian Hindi superhero film directed by Anil Sharma . It stars Govinda and Manisha Koirala in the title roles. Fearing his death, Ranbir Singh ( Salim Ghouse ) decides to kill Kohinoor when he is a child, though in vain. After 20 years, Kohinoor ( Govinda ) returns to claim his rightful place in the kingdom. He has developed advanced powers over matter and animals, which he uses to his advance to free his nanny, Ameenabi ( Aruna Irani ) who
36-412: Is being held by Ranbir and his associates. Kohinoor must pass numerous tests, including being exploited by a television reporter, Shaili Mathur ( Manisha Koirala ), who claims that she loves him; and fight hungry, blinded, man-eating lions. The music of Maharaja has been composed by Nadeem-Shravan with lyrics by Sameer . Tracks like 'Jab Tum Aajaate Ho Saamne'and 'Maharaja ki kahani' became famous during
48-450: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Anil Sharma (director) Anil Sharma is an Indian film director and producer . He is known for films like Gadar: Ek Prem Katha (2001) and Gadar 2 (2023) and Gadar 3 (2026). Sharma was born and brought up in Mathura , Uttar Pradesh, India. His grandfather, Pt. Dalchand,
60-737: The Delhi Legislative Assembly Anil Kumar Sharma (Rajasthan politician) , Indian politician, member of the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly from the Sardarshahar constituency Anil Sharma (Indian Airlines Flight 814) , steward and survivor of the Indian Airlines flight 814 hijacking Dr. Anil Kumar Sharma (Assistant Director, TV & Radio) at Communication Centre of Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
72-451: The biggest blockbusters in the history of Hindi cinema and the most successful film of the 2000s. He subsequently directed The Hero: Love Story of a Spy (2003), starring Sunny Deol and Preity Zinta . At that point, It was considered to be the most expensive film ever made in Hindi at that time and went on to become the third highest grosser of the year. Ab Tumhare Hawale Watan Saathiyo
84-434: The critics and audience, alike. It became a huge disaster at the box-office. Five years later in 2023, he made a huge career comeback with Gadar 2 , the sequel to Gadar: Ek Prem Katha . He reunited with Sunny Deol, Ameesha Patel, and Utkarsh Sharma. Though it received mixed reviews, it had a tremendous opening weekend and became the sixth highest-grossing Hindi film of all-time . Maharaja (1998 film) Maharaja
96-405: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anil_Sharma&oldid=1185556300 " Category : Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
108-529: The success of Tahalka , Sharma took a break from filmmaking for a few years and dedicated himself to open a studio in Mumbai on the lines of Universal Studios in Los Angeles . However, it did not materialize and Sharma returned to filmmaking with Maharaja . In 2001, Sharma directed Gadar: Ek Prem Katha , starring Sunny Deol and Ameesha Patel . It was a huge commercial success and went on to become one of
120-533: Was an astrologer. He later moved to Mumbai and did his B.Sc. at Khalsa College . He got his first break in the Hindi film industry at the age of 18 as an assistant director. He assisted Baldev Raj Chopra on Pati Patni Aur Woh (1978), The Burning Train (1980), and Insaf Ka Tarazu (1980). In 1980, at the age of 21, he debuted as a director with Shradhanjali , starring Raakhee . In 1983, he directed Bandhan Kuchchey Dhaagon Ka , and followed it up with Hukumat (1987) and Tahalka (1992). After
132-430: Was his next directorial. It is remembered for its patriotic fervor. Apne (2007), his next film, was critically praised for its depiction of family emotions and values. It garnered Anil critical and box office success, and was the first film starring all three Deols- Dharmendra, Sunny Deol and Bobby Deol. In 2010, his next Veer , starring Salman Khan, Mithun Chakraborty , Jackie Shroff and Zarine Khan . The movie
SECTION 10
#1732948492626144-620: Was much talked-about for its massive scale and depiction of the Indian Rajputana's war with the British. After this, he made Singh Saab The Great with Sunny Deol and Prakash Raj . In Genius (2018), he introduced his son Utkarsh Sharma as the lead, though he had already introduced him as a child artist in Gadar . For the first time in his career he shot in his hometown, Mathura. Upon release, it received overwhelmingly negative reviews from both
#625374