Bang Bang! is a 2014 Indian Hindi-language action comedy film directed by Siddharth Anand and produced by Parth Arora of Star Studios.[3] The film is an official remake of the 2010 American film Knight and Day and stars Hrithik Roshan, Katrina Kaif, Javed Jaffrey, Danny Denzongpa and Pavan Malhotra.[4] In the film, a mysterious thief encounters with an unassuming bank receptionist, which sets off a chain of events resulting in a series of escapades.

In December 2012, it was confirmed that the official remake of Knight and Day would be titled Bang Bang.[10] In March 2013, the film's Kashmir schedule was cancelled.[11] Shooting for the film began on 1 May 2013, with the film scheduled for release on 1 May 2014.[12] Unique water action sequences were shot in Thailand and Greece. In an interview with Mumbai Mirror, Roshan spoke about the action sequences in the film stating, "I have pushed myself to the extreme for this stunt. This sequence called for mental and physical tenacity. The rush that I experienced while training and executing the sequence was out of the world. I was hooked to a sea plane while I did the stunt. I had trained non-stop to even attempt the sequence". Roshan refused to use any body double to perform the stunts.[13]


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Talking about another water action sequences, the film's director Siddharth Anand revealed, "We can control the action we shoot on land, but while shooting at sea, you're at the mercy of the tide. Three days before the shoot, Hrithik started practicing the stunts for five-six hours daily. It took us eight days to shoot the sequences in water. For another water action sequence, Hrithik trained for four days, before the shooting. He learnt to jetski with a speed boat pulling him along first. Then, an antiquated plane was brought in with an experienced pilot at the controls, so that it could be slowed down and speeded up at will."[14][15][16]

In July 2013, one of the songs of the film, "Meherbaan" was shot in the city of Santorini in Greece and choreographed by Ahmed Khan.[17][18][19] In Phuket, Roshan performed a stunt where he had to use a water jetpack called a Flyboard and go 45 feet high in the sky and then dive down in the water. Roshan thus became the first actor in Hollywood or Bollywood to do a flyboarding stunt in a film.[20][21] He was injured during this schedule and subsequently had to undergo a brain surgery for removal of a blood clot from his brain.[22] Also, the Kashmir schedule of the film was delayed because of unrest in the valley.[23]

The Abu Dhabi schedule of shooting was intense and action-packed. In Abu Dhabi, filming started early May, and took place at various locations in Abu Dhabi including the Corniche, Liwa oasis, Hyatt Capital Gate Hotel, Qasr al Sarab, Emirates Palace and Yas Island. In one of the chase sequences in the film, 120 cars were involved. The film also had used Formula 1 cars.[34][35] Even after the brain surgery, all the stunts were performed by Roshan himself. The stunts were designed by Andy Armstrong[36][37][38] and shot in Abu Dhabi.[39] The Abu Dhabi segment of shooting was completed on 20 May in collaboration with twofour54.[40][41] It is the first Bollywood film to be shot and co-produced in Abu Dhabi.[40] The last leg of the film was scheduled in Prague. One stunt in which Roshan is on water skis while being pulled along by a sky plane was shot in a lake in Prague. He trained for four days to shoot this scene.[42] Shooting wrapped on 15 July 2014.[43][44]

To protect the film from piracy, the makers of the film approached the Court of Piracy with the plea that the film should not be viewed on any device or broadcast on any platform through the Internet without their permission and submitted a list of 90 websites. The Court responded positively on that and restrained them all from making the film available on the Internet.[56]

The first look of the song "Tu Meri" was revealed on 20 August 2014 featuring Roshan and Kaif.[61] On 21 August 2014, its official music video was released. The song was written and sung by Vishal Dadlani.[62][63] The second song of the film "Meherbaan" featuring Hrithik Roshan and Katrina Kaif was released on 3 September 2014. This song was written by Anvita Dutt Guptan and sung by Ash King, Shilpa Rao and Shekhar Ravjiani.[64][65] The teaser of the title song was released on 15 September 2014 featuring Roshan and Kaif.[66] On 17 September 2014, the official music video of the song was released. The track was written by Dadlani, who also performed backing vocals on it, and sung by Benny Dayal and Neeti Mohan. It was choreographed by Bosco-Caesar. The song experience was "fun" for Roshan, who said, "It's my ode to the inspiration he [Michael Jackson] has been", while Kaif described her experience as "the biggest challenge. His flexibility is incredible. It is at a different level altogether. You have to be really good to match up to his energy. He has natural energy when he dances. It comes to him so effortlessly".[67][68][69][70] All the songs were well received by audiences.[71][72]

Mohar Basu of Koimoi gave 2.5/5 stars and wrote "Bang Bang is a plain film that is mounted on a breathtaking canvas and remains steady at the superficial level only."[77] Rajeev Masand on IBN Live gave 2/5 stars and comments that "the film isn't unwatchable, but will certainly tests your patience."[78] Paloma Sharma of Rediff gave 1.5/5 stars and wrote "A worse official remake of an already bad original, Bang Bang is more noise and less sound."[79]

Bang Bang! earned $4.89 million overseas in its opening weekend. The biggest debut came from the UAE ($1.8 million), North America ($3.35 million), United Kingdom ($922,000).[85] At the end of its theatrical run overseas, the film earned $13.97 million. The highest revenue came from Gulf ($4.46 million), US/Canada ($2.62 million), UK (1.165 million) and Australia (Aus $457,000).[86]

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is a 1968 American-British musical-fantasy film directed by Ken Hughes, produced by Albert R. Broccoli, and with a screenplay co-written by Roald Dahl and Hughes. It is loosely based on the children's novel Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang: The Magical Car (1964) by Ian Fleming. The film stars Dick Van Dyke, Sally Ann Howes, Lionel Jeffries, Gert Frbe, Anna Quayle, Benny Hill, James Robertson Justice, Robert Helpmann, Heather Ripley, and Adrian Hall.

Van Dyke was cast in the film after he turned down the role of Fagin in the 1968 musical Oliver!. The role of Truly Scrumptious was originally offered to Julie Andrews to reunite her with Van Dyke after their success in Mary Poppins (1964), but Andrews rejected the part because she felt it was too similar to Poppins;[8] Sally Ann Howes, who had replaced Andrews as Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady on Broadway in 1958, was then offered the role, and she accepted.

The novel was initially published in three volumes, the first in October 1964, which was two months after Fleming's death.[10] It became one of the best-selling children's books of the year.[11] Albert R. Broccoli, producer of the James Bond films (which were based on novels by Fleming), read the novel and was not initially enthusiastic about turning it into a film, but the success of Mary Poppins (1964) changed his mind.[9]

In December 1965, it was reported that Earl Hamner had completed a script based upon the novel.[12] The following July, it was announced the film would be produced by Broccoli, without Harry Saltzman, who was his producing partner on the James Bond films.[13] By April 1967, Ken Hughes was set to direct the film from a screenplay by Roald Dahl,[14] and Hughes claimed he subsequently rewrote Dahl's script.[9]

Broccoli announced the casting of Dick Van Dyke in December 1966.[15] The film was the first in a multi-picture deal Van Dyke signed with United Artists.[16] Sally Ann Howes was cast as the female lead in April 1967,[14] soon thereafter signing a five-picture contract with Broccoli,[17] and Robert Helpmann joined the cast in May.[18] Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was the first film for both of its child stars, Heather Ripley and Adrian Hall, who were cast after an extensive talent search.[19]

The songs in the film were written by the Sherman Brothers, who had also worked as the songwriters for Mary Poppins.[20] Poppins' musical supervisor and conductor Irwin Kostal would also work in the same capacity for this movie, as well as the choreographers Marc Breaux and Dee Dee Wood. John Stears supervised the film's special effects, and Caractacus Potts' inventions were created by Rowland Emett. An article about Emett that appeared in Time magazine in 1976 mentioned his work on the film, saying that no term other than "'Fantasticator' [...] could remotely convey the diverse genius of the perky, pink-cheeked Englishman whose pixilations, in cartoon, watercolor and clanking 3-D reality, range from the celebrated Far Tottering and Oyster Creek Railway to the demented thingamabobs that made the 1968 movie Chitty Chitty Bang Bang a minuscule classic."[21]

Ken Adam designed the film's titular car[22] and six Chitty Chitty Bang Bangs were created for the film, though only one was fully-functional. At a 1973 auction in Florida, one Chitty sold for $37,000, equal to $243,912 today.[23] The original "hero" car, in a condition described as "fully functional" and "road going", was put up for auction on 15 May 2011 by a California-based auction house.[24] Expected to fetch $1 million to $2 million, it was purchased for $805,000[25] by New Zealand film director Sir Peter Jackson.[26]

United Artists promoted the film with an expensive, extensive advertising campaign, hoping to reproduce the success of The Sound of Music (1965), and it was initially released on a roadshow basis.[4]

Renata Adler of The New York Times wrote that "in spite of the dreadful title, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang [...] is a fast, dense, friendly children's musical, with something of the joys of singing together on a team bus on the way to a game." She called the screenplay "remarkably good" and said the film's "preoccupation with sweets and machinery seems ideal for children", and ended her review on the same note as Time saying: "There is nothing coy, or stodgy or too frightening about the film; and this year, when it has seemed highly doubtful that children ought to go to the movies at all, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang sees to it that none of the audience's terrific eagerness to have a good time is betrayed or lost."[30] 2351a5e196

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