Dastak (transl. Knock) is a 1996 Indian Hindi language Psychological thriller film edited and directed by Mahesh Bhatt, produced by Mukesh Bhatt with a script written by Vikram Bhatt starring Sushmita Sen in her debut film co-starring Mukul Dev with Sharad Kapoor as the villain.[1][2] The film was shot in South Africa and Seychelles.[3]

Dastak
Poster
Directed byMahesh Bhatt
Written byVikram Bhatt
Produced byMukesh Bhatt
StarringSushmita Sen
Mukul Dev
Sharad Kapoor
Bhavna Datta
Manoj Bajpayee
Vishwajeet Pradhan
Tiku Talsania
CinematographyBhushan Patel
Edited byWaman Bhonsle
Music byRajesh Roshan
Production
company
Release date
  • 29 November 1996 (1996-11-29)
Running time
135 minutes
LanguageHindi

Plot

edit

Dastak is the story of a mentally unstable genius, Sharad Sule and his obsession for Miss Universe, Sushmita. Sharad is so obsessed with Sushmita that he starts killing her near and dear ones in order to get to her. ACP Rohit Malhotra meets Sushmita, provides her high-level security detail and starts an investigation. Meanwhile, Sushmita faces another incident at an event, Rohit protects her and while calming down her, he calls her "Sush" (Sushmita's nickname which is known to only her parents and best friends) and from there she learns that Rohit is her childhood friend who adores her since school days. She rejoices and eventually fall in love with him. They start seeing each other; she starts feeling protected and happy, but faces another terrible incident of her best friend's death (murdered by Sharad) which breaks her down. Rohit makes a plan of moving Sushmita to another country for a while and gets the news circulated in the media, so that Sharad follow hers and gets in a trap. He joins her in Seychelles along with his trusted sub-ordinate and is supported by local authorities. Their plan went successful as Sharad showed up and Rohit shoots him while chasing him. As his body is found Sushmita rejoices and celebrates with Rohit. But the happiness is short-lived as Sharad turns out to be alive, he kidnaps Sushmita and takes her to a distant isolated island in the Seychelles. There, he makes her life miserable. Sushmita tries every trick to get out of that hell. But ultimately, everything falls apart.

Sushmita tries to reform Sharad by telling him that he should face his problems rather than inflicting the same physical and mental pain (that he went through in his childhood) on other people. But Sharad refuses to listen and amend his ways. She tries to contact Rohit (who was devastated and keeps searching for her madly), plans to escape but fails every time. One day while Sharad was going to city for getting some things she gets a chance of coming out and writes "Help" on the speed boat. Her plan succeeds as Rohit and his subordinates see it and start chasing him. Sharad saw the word "Help" and gets enraged and shoots down everyone; including Rohit. In the climax, he tries to kill Sushmita as he believes that she betrayed him by contacting Rohit. Sushmita tries to run away but Sharad catches her and when he is about to hit her, Rohit (who survived the gun shot) jumps on him and saves Sushmita. Both men fight hard and Rohit gets stabbed by Sharad; while seeing Rohit in this condition Sushmita gets enraged and kills Sharad with an axe in self-defense. As she and Rohit return to India, she writes a self-help book and dedicates it to people like Sharad and eventually settles down happily with Rohit.

Cast

edit

Soundtrack

edit
Dastak
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedSeptember 1996
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelSaregama

The album was composed by Rajesh Roshan with lyrics by Javed Akhtar. All the songs were very popular and singers Kumar Sanu, Udit Narayan, Abhijeet and Alka Yagnik rendered their voices in the album.

# Title Singer(s)
1 "Tumhe Kayse Main Bataoon" Abhijeet
2 "Tumhe Kayse Main Bataoon" (Sad) Abhijeet
3 "Jaadu Bhari" Udit Narayan
4 "Milne Se Pehle" Udit Narayan, Preeti Uttam
5 "Piya Piya" Hema Sardesai
6 "Pal Beet Gaya" Kumar Sanu & Alka Yagnik
7 "Sheeshay Se" Kumar Sanu

References

edit
  1. ^ Vijiyan, K.N (20 January 1997). "Beauty queen the target of a crazed fan". New Straits Times. Kuala Lumpur. Archived from the original on 19 January 2024. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
  2. ^ Chopra, Anupama (15 December 1996). "The beauty and the beast". India Today. New Delhi: Living Media. Archived from the original on 22 August 2023. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
  3. ^ Chopra, Anupama (15 November 1996). "Westward bound". India Today. New Delhi: Living Media. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
  4. ^ Chakraborty, Juhi (28 November 2021). "Mukul Dev on 25 years of Dastak: It was a dreamy red carpet launch for me". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 31 December 2021. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
edit