29 Aug 2017

Top 10 Bollywood inspirational movies.

Today, I bring you a list of top Bollywood films that are highly inspirational and motivational for Indian audience. Based on the real lives Of people or sometimes inspired from true story, so here is  LIST of Movies and I think this is the best one.


1. Udaan


Udaan is a 2010  coming of age-drama film produced by Sanjay Singh, Anurag Kashyap and Ronnie Screwvala; and directed by Vikramaditya Motwane. It is roughly based on the real life of Anurag Kashyap. The film was officially selected to compete in the Un Certain Regard (A Certain Glance) category at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival. The film was not immediately successful at the box office when released, but is regarded as a cult classic in Indian cinema.

“Joh lehron se aage nazar dekh paati, toh tum jaan lete main kya sochta hoon ... woh awaaz tumko bhi joh bhed jaati, toh tum jaan lete main kya sochta hoon ... zid ka tumhare joh parda sarakta, khidkiyon se aage bhi tum dekh paate ... aankhon se aadaton ki joh palke hatate, toh tum jaan lete main kya sochta hoon”
(If you could see beyond the waves, then you would have known what I think ... if you would have heard that voice, then you would have known what I think ... if the curtain of your stubbornness moves, then you would have seen beyond the window ... if you would have moved the eyelids of your habits from your eyes, then you would have known what I think)

2. 3 Idiots 


3 Idiots is a 2009 Indian coming of age comedy-drama film co-written, edited, and directed by Rajkumar Hirani and produced by Vidhu Vinod Chopra. Abhijat Joshi wrote the screenplay. It was inspired by the novel Five Point Someone by Chetan Bhagat. The film stars Aamir Khan, Kareena Kapoor, R.Madhavan, Sharman Joshi, Omi Vaidya, Parikshit Sahni, and Boman Irani.

“Life is a race ... if you don't run fast ... you will be like a broken undaa”
(Life is a race ... if you don't run fast ... you will be like a broken egg)
“Bachcha kabil bano, kabil ... kamyabi toh saali jhak maarke peeche bhagegi”
(Be capable my son, capable ... success will follow you no matter what)
“Aal izz well ... Aal izz well”


3. Manjhi - The Mountain Man


Manjhi - The Mountain Man is a 2015 Indian biographical film, based on the life of Dashrath Manjhi. Manjhi, widely known as the "Mountain Man", was a poor labourer in Gehlaur village, near Gaya in Bihar, India, who carved a path 9.1 metres (30 ft) wide and 110 metres (360 ft) long through a hill 7.6 metres (25 ft) using only a hammer and chisel. The film is directed by Ketan Mehta, jointly produced by Viacom 18 Motion Pictures and NFDC India. Upon release the film received positive critical acclaim.

"Bhagwan ke bharose mat baithye ... kya pata bhagwan humre bharose baitha ho"
(Don't sit and wait around for God to do something ... who knows God is probably waiting for us to do something)

"Jab tak todenge nahi ... tab tak chhodenge nahi"
(Until I break it ... till then I won't leave it)
"Shandar, zabardast, zindabad!" 
(Splendid, amazing, live long!)


4. Bhaag Milkha Bhaag


Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is a 2013 Indian biographical sports drama film directed by Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra from a script written by Prasoon Joshi. The story is based on the life of Milkha Singh, an Indian athlete who was a national champion runner and an Olympian. It stars Farhan Akhtar in the lead role with Pavan Malhotra and Art Malik in supporting roles and Sonam Kapoor in a cameo. Sports was coordinated by the American action director Rob Miller of ReelSports. 

Made on a budget of ₹300 million (US$4.7 million), the film released on 12 July 2013 and gathered a positive response from critics and audiences alike. It performed very well at the box office, eventually being declared a "super hit" domestically and hit overseas. Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is the sixth highest grossing 2013 Bollywood film worldwideand became the 21st film to gross ₹1 billion (US$16 million).

"Log burre nahi hote hai ... haalaat burre hote hai"
(People are not bad ... the situations are bad)




5. Lagaan




Lagaan is a 2001 Indian epic sports-drama film written and directed by Ashutosh Gowariker. Aamir Khan, who was also the producer, stars along with Gracy Singh; British actors Rachel Shelley and Paul Blackthorne play the supporting roles. Made on a then-unprecedented budget of ₹250 million (equivalent to ₹700 million or US$11 million in 2016), the film was shot in an ancient village near Bhuj, India.

The film is set in the Victorian period of India's colonial British Raj. The story revolves around a small village whose inhabitants, burdened by high taxes, find themselves in an extraordinary situation as an arrogant officer challenges them to a game of cricket as a wager to avoid the taxes. The narrative spins around this situation as the villagers face the arduous task of learning the alien game and playing for a result that will change their village's destiny.

"Hamaar pasina hamre tann mein khoon banke daudega"
(Our sweat will run as blood in our veins)

"Gore pataloon pehen ke ee khel ka cricket kahat hai ... aur hum langoti baandh ke gilli-danda"
(Whites wear pants and call this game cricket ... and we wear loincloths and call it gilli-danda)

6. Anand


Anand is a 1971 Indian drama film co-written and directed by Hrishikesh Mukherjee. It stars Rajesh Khanna in the lead role with and supporting cast includes Amitabh Bachchan, Sumita Sanyal, Ramesh Deo, Seema Deo. Khanna played the title role. The dialogues were written by Gulzar. The film won several awards including the Filmfare award for best film in 1972. In 2013, it was listed in Anupama Chopra's book "100 Films To See before You Die".This film is counted among the 17 consecutive hit films Rajesh Khanna between 1969 and 1971, by adding the two hero films Marayada and Andaz to the 15 consecutive solo hits he gave from 1969 to 1971. This movie remade in Malayalam as titled Vida Parayum Munpe in 1981 and become blockbuster in market and gained a bunch of awards including best actor for Nedumudi Venu and special Jury award to Prem Nazir for his performance.

"Babumushoi, zindagi badi honi chahiye ... lambi nahin"


(My friend, life should be big ... not long)

"Babumushoi, zindagi aur maut upar waale ke haath hai ... usse na toh aap badal sakte hai na main ... hum sab to rangmanch ki kathputliyan hai jinki dor upar waale ki ungliyon mein bandhi hai"


(My friend, life and death is in the hands of God ... you can't change it and neither can I ... we all are puppets of the theater whose string is tied in the fingers of God)
"Jab tak zinda hoon tab tak mara nahi ... jab mar gaya sala main hi nahi" 
(Until I am alive I am not dead ... when I die bloody I won't be there)
"Hum aane waale gham ko kheench taan kar aaj ki khushi pe le aate hai ... aur us khushi mein zehar ghol dete hai"
(We stretch and pull the sadness of the future and bring it onto today's happiness ... and we mix poison in that happiness) 

7. Chak De! India 



Chak De! India is a 2007 Indian sports film, directed by Shimit Amin and Rob Miller (sports scenes), produced by Aditya Chopra, with music by Salim–Sulaiman and a screenplay by Jaideep Sahni. It explores religious bigotry, the legacy of the partition of India, ethnic and regional prejudice and sexism in contemporary India in a fictional story about the Indian women's national field-hockey team which was inspired by the team's win at the 2002 Commonwealth Games. The film stars Shahrukh Khan as Kabir Khan, former captain of the Indian men's national field-hockey team. After a disastrous loss to Pakistan, Khan is ostracized from the sport and he and his mother are driven from the family home by angry neighbors. Seven years later, to redeem himself, Khan becomes the coach of the Indian national women's hockey team and aims to turn its sixteen contentious players into a championship unit.

Chak De! India won a number of awards, including the National Film Award for Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment. On 30 August 2007, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences requested a copy of the film's script for a place in its Margaret Herrick Library. When the Indian Hockey Federation was reorganised in April 2008, former player Aslam Sher Khan said that he wanted "to create a 'Chak De' effect" in Indian hockey. The film was screened in New Delhi on August 17, 2016, as part of the week long Independence Day Film Festival. The festival was jointly presented by the Indian Directorate of Film Festivals and Ministry of Defense, commemorating India's 70th Independence Day.

“Peeche se nahi mardo ki tarah aage se ladoo ... woh kya hai, hamari hockey mein chakke nahi hote”
(Not from the back, fight like a man from the front ... it's because our hockey cannot have eunuch)

“Mujhe states ke naam na sunai dete hai na dikhai dete hai ... sirf ek mulk ka naam sunai deta hai I-N-D-I-A”
(I can't hear nor see name of the states ... I can only hear one country name
 I-N-D-I-A)


“Jo nahin ho sakt ... wahi tho karna hai”
(What is not possible ... is what I want to do)
8. A Wednesday!



A Wednesday! is a 2008 Indian thriller film written and directed by Neeraj Pandey. It stars Naseeruddin Shah and Anupam Kher. Set between 2 pm and 6 pm on a Wednesday, the film depicts an about-to-retire police commissioner (Anupam Kher) narrating a sequence of events that unfolded on a particular Wednesday. There does not exist any written record. The awareness of the incident exists only in his mind and in those of several individuals who were involved, willingly and unwillingly, and how those events affected the lives of all the concerned people. It was the inspiration for Tamil movie Unnaipol Oruvan , Telugu movie Eeenadu, with Kamal Hassan in the role played by Naseeruddin Shah in the original and Mohanlal and Daggubati Venkatesh playing the role acted by Anupam Kher in the original in Tamil and Telugu respectively and also Hollywood movie A Common Man (film). Directed by Chandran Rutnam with actor Ben Kingsley portraying the role played by Nasseruddin Shah and Ben Crossportraying the role played by Anupam Kher.

The film, made at a small budget, was a sleeper hit at the box office grossing over Rs. 340 million worldwide. Despite its low promotion, it was a box office success due to critical acclaim and positive word-of-mouth. Box Office India declared it a hit. Critics praised the movie for its effective storyline and its twist ending. Subsequently, it won a number of awards including the Indira Gandhi Award for Best First Film of a Director at the 56th National Film Awards.
“Koi ********** button dabakar mere liye yeh faisla nahin karega ... ki mujhe kab marna hai”
(No ************ can press a button and decide for me ... that when I should die)

“Aapke ghar mein cockroach aata hai toh aap kya karte hai Rathore Sahab? ... aap usko paalte nahi maarte hai” 
(Rathore Sir, what do you do when a cockroach comes in your house? ... you don't nourish him you kill him) 
“Aam aadmi ki tarah jiyo, aam aadmi ki tarah bardaash karo aur aam aadmi ki tarah marro”
(Live like a common man, tolerate like a common man and die like a common man)
9. Swades



Swades  is a 2004 Indian drama film written, produced and directed by Ashutosh Gowariker. It stars Shah Rukh Khan in the lead role. The film received widespread critical acclaim and a cult following from Indian and other South Asian audiences around the world. 


“Main nahi manta hamara desh duniya ka sabse mahaan desh hai ... lekin yeh zaroor manta hoon ... ki hum mein kabliyat hai, taqat hai, apne desh ko mahaan banane ki”
(I don't believe our country is the best country in the world ... but I do believe ... that we have the potential and the strength, to make our country the best)
"Mann se Raavan joh nikale ... Ram uske mann mein hai"
(Ram lives in the heart of one ... who removes Raavan out from their heart)
“Hum sab ek doosre ko dosh de rahe hai ... jab ki sachchai yeh hai ki ... hum sab hi doshi hai” 
(We all are blaming each other ... when the truth is that ... we all are culprits) 


10. I Am Kalam 


I Am Kalam is a 2011 Indian Hindi drama film produced by Smile Foundation and directed by Nila Madhab Panda. The character of Chhotu has been performed by Harsh Mayar. The film was screened in the market section at the 63rd Cannes Film Festival on 12 May 2010.It has been showcased in various film festivals and has received many awards and honours.The film was screened retrospective on August 17th 2016 at the Independence Day Film Festival jointly presented by the Indian Directorate of Film Festivals and Ministry of Defense, commemorating 70th Indian Independence Day. The film was released to universal critical acclaim, and is widely regarded as one of the best movies of the past decade.

























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