Club Dancer Cast & Crew:     Banner     Film Magic Productions Pvt. Ltd.     Status     Completed     Release Date   ...



Club Dancer Cast & Crew:

    Banner
    Film Magic Productions Pvt. Ltd.

    Status
    Completed

    Release Date
    8 Apr 2016

    Genre: Action

    Producer:    S. Mukerji


    Star Cast:
    Rajveer Singh
    Nisha Mavani
    Ajaz Khan
    Shakti Kapoor
    Aryan Vaid
    Zarina Wahab
    Judi Shekoni

    Publicity Pro
    Himanshu Jhunjhunwala
    Dwapar Promoters

    Censor Details:

    Censor Dates
    Not Available.

    Censor Certificate No
    Not Available.

    Runtime
    131 Minutes

    Certification
    U/A

    Reels
    Not Available.

    Length in metres
    0.0

Music Director:Varinder Vizz

Color
C
Language
Hindi
Director

    B. Prasad


Singers:Amit Kumar
    Rimi Dhar
    Sunidhi Chauhan
    Varinder Vizz
    Jhanvi Shimankar
    Ryan Victor

    
Lyricist:Paramjeet Singh Sajan
    Diksha Jyoti
    
Cinematography

    Ravikant Reddy

Action:Riyaz Khan
    Yusuf

Art: Pappu

    Music Company: Zee Music Company
   

Storyline and Review:
Ria (New find Nisha Mavani) is a young vivacious night club dancer in Mumbai. Aware of her parents concern (Shakti Kapoor and Zarina Wahab) she has told them a concocted story that she has married a young man in Mumbai and is a house wife. But, when she receives an urgent call from her mother informing her of her fathers heart attack and their visit to Mumbai for further medical treatment, Ria finds herself in a logjam and in order to veil the deception she needs a husband to suffice her ailing father. She soon comes in contact with a dreaded killer by the name of Monty, who has killed the chief Minister and is on the run and needs a temporary shelter to hoodwink the pursuing cops. They both come to a tacit understanding where she will provide him shelter at her home provided he plays the role of her husband. The deception worth for a while but prior to her fathers heart surgery, Monty disappears, leaving behind an anxious Ria. But, a young educated man by the name of Amit (Rajbeer Singh) comes to her rescue and has an uncanny physical resemblance to Monty, minus the beard and moustache. After hearing Rias story, the young man agrees to replace Monty as her husbands lookalike and the deception works to her advantage. Amit, with his congenial behaviour and amiable disposition wins over Rias parents and unknowingly and unwittingly, Ria falls in love with him without the latters awareness. Soon her parents leave for Patiala and Amit collects his money and leaves for his native place Goa, leaving behind a crestfallen, flummoxed Ria. She decides to quit dancing for good and start a new life when suddenly, Amit appears on the horizon, with a preposterous proposal that stuns her. What is this proposal ? Are Monty and Amit the same person ? All this and more is answered in a gripping, action-packed climax that shall engage the attention of the viewers till the very end. 


The first feature from director Richard Raymond, from a script by Jon Croker, “Desert Dancer” gets off on its particular foot by morphing Farsi characters into English ones, and enacting its Iran-based drama with a largely English-born cast, speaking in English. Okay, then; international-headline socially-conscious movies tend to do better business in English-speaking countries if they’re in English. Good thing Iran is such a cosmopolitan country, as it makes the language seem less forced. I’m making a joke, but not entirely—Iran IS a cosmopolitan country even in its current oppressed form. “The home to great poetry,” an opening-text title says (shades of the pre-action apologia for “Argo”). There are ever different currents flowing in its culture, and the movie shows young, dance-crazy Afshin Ghaffarian taken up by one of those currents. Punished at his official school for dancing in front of classmates—dancing, while not officially “illegal” in the country, is highly frowned upon by the “morality police” of particular administrations—Afshin is then invited to attend an underground arts school, where he sees on film for the first time Rudolf Nureyev. He’s then hooked, and when he gets to the University of Tehran about a decade later, he’s ready to hook up with a new group of friends who introduce him to secret dance clubs.