Sunny (1984) Poster

(1984)

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7/10
Sunny's Betaab Days
superindrajit1 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
After Sunny Deol debuted in Betaab which was a superhit, his second release was Sunny. This movie went unoticed and director Raj Kholsa thought he would make a hit movie if he bought the hit pair Sunny and Amrita together after the success of Betaab. Although Sunny was a flop, it is a good touching movie. Sunny is about emotions, love, romance. It is a tale told a million times before. But, the handling of the movie is what makes it unique. The young Sunny Deol proved he could act. Even though the film was a flop, critics praised Deol's performance. Sunny Deol is the action king of Bollywood but he acted in some romantic movies during his lean phase. After Betaab, Arjun was his next success. The movie is pretty good. It's definitely worth watching for those who want romantic movies and those who want to see Sunny Deol in a romantic movie. Also, there is one action scene where 4 guys try to tease Amrita. The action was just an add on and those days Sunny was more of a Romantic hero. But, Arjun changed all of this. Overall, this movie is another good movie which flopped.
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6/10
An emotion-soaked saga covering two generations
jmathur_swayamprabha11 June 2013
Women have several virtues which men can only envy for. However jealousy and hatred towards a woman who is supposed to be own rival for a man's love is a vice whose dominance is found more in womenfolk only. When a woman finds that her man is a prisoner of the arms of some other woman, her womanly jealousy and possessiveness can play havoc. Such a woman can be the man's wife or the sweetheart but the status hardly affects the destructive feeling hidden within. Thus her hatred for the second woman becomes the other side of her love for the man. Sunny (1984) tells such a story only in which one woman's wrath is directed towards another woman who has snatched her man from her.

The story covers two generations and it starts with the first, senior, generation containing Inder (Dharmendra), his wife - Gayatri (Waheeda Rehman) and his sweetheart - Sitaara (Sharmila Tagore). Gayatri has not been able to conceive in her conjugal life and perhaps this fact created a distance between herself and husband, i.e., Inder. Inder develops an affair with Sitaara (Sharmila Tagore) and she gets pregnant through him. Suddenly Inder dies in the crash of his private plane. And post his death only, his wife - Gayatri comes to know of his affair with Sitaara. She also comes to know that Sitaara is carrying the child fathered by Inder in her womb.

The real story takes off from here. Burning in womanly jealousy on one hand and being concerned with the business empire and wealth of Inder with no one to inherit it on the other, Gayatri conspires against Sitaara. She deceives her by arranging her confinement in her supervision and charge at some faraway place and then tells her that she has given birth to a dead child, carrying that child to her home and declaring it as her own. That child grows up as Sunny (Sunny Deol). Sunny has inherited not only his father's wealth but also his father's habits, hobbies (flying plane and listening to music) and nature. He starts the story pertaining to the second generation by falling in love with Amrita (Amrita Singh) who is a singer. Since she has been fostered by Sitaara, Sunny comes into contact with Sitaara and since the very first meeting of theirs, a motherly affection emerges between the two with the reality being unknown to both that they are actually the mother and the son.

However when the proceedings for matrimonial alliance of Sunny and Amrita start, the two ladies who had a common man in their life, come into the contact again after a long time span. Sitaara comes to know that Sunny is her son only and she begs before Gayatri to return her son to her but Gayatri who is still not able to forgive Sitaara for snatching away her husband, becomes even more stern and stony (without realizing the gravity of her own sin of separating a mother from her child) and creates blocks between Sitaara and Sunny. Sunny feels that her mother is not happy with his decision to marry Amrita but the truth is not limited to this fact only and there's something more that is hidden from his knowledge. And he compels his mother, i.e., Gayatri to reveal the truth. He gets his biological mother in the end but loses his fostering mother simultaneously.

R.D. Burman's musical score is a very big plus point of this movie. It contains gems like Aur Kya Ahd-e-Wafa Hote Hain (Asha Bhosle) and Jaane Kya Baat Hai Neend Nahin Aati (Lata Mangeshkar). I also like a very romantic song of this movie very much - Hum Aashiq Hain Mit Jaayenge Par Ishq Se Baaz Na Aayenge which has been sung by Anand Kumar.

The brilliant performances of the artists have helped the director in pulling the flat and not-so-strong script off as a decent movie. Seasoned actresses Waheeda Rehman and Sharmila Tagore have infused life into the sentimental story with their great performances. Waheeda especially is outstanding in her seemingly negative role. This is the only the second movie of both Sunny Deol and Amrita Singh after Betaab (1983) but both have given their best shot throughout the movie. Sunny especially impresses with the different shades of his performance and proves that he's the horse of a long race. Dharmendra is master-class in his cameo. The supporting cast is okay.

Technically the movie is up to the mark. The cinematography, the art direction, the action; everything is in order. The movie has been edited well. Considering the sentimental drama being the essence of the movie, the editor could not do any better.

Raj Khosla could have arranged a regular Bollywood style climax for this movie and gone for a convenient happy ending but he has not done so and ensured that the story ends on a tragic but more convincing and more impressive note. The movie does not prove to be very entertaining but it ends by leaving a throbbing in the heart of a sentimental viewer.

Sunny was a commercial failure. However I recommend this relationship-based romantic as well as emotional drama to those who like neat and clean sentimental movies. Sunny Deol now commands a huge fan-following. I also recommend this movie to his admirers who might not have seen him much in such intense roles. It's a showcase of his talent.
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4/10
Little of Sunny, and not a sunny fare anyway
Peter_Young6 October 2021
Post the wonderful Betaab, the fantastic couple of Sunny Deol and Amrita Singh reunite in another film, only that this time too much focus is given not to the young couple but those who play his parents in the film: Dharmendra as the unfaithful husband, Waheeda Rehman as the infertile wife, and Sharmila Tagore as the mitress who conceives his child - three of the seasoned actors are given a weird love triangle which is as typical as you know, and it's really quite boring. In many ways it's just a rehash of one of the director's previous ventures Main Tulsi Tere Aangan Ki, and quite a poor one at that. The result is Sunny, our title character played by Sunny Deol himself, who is as young and dashing as you can imagine, and that he's so effortless in front of the camera only helps. The sultry Amrita Singh, whose screen presence is also undeniable, contributes to the pairing.

Sadly, these two have very little to work with. I'm not sure I dislike this film as much as I think it's a very bad follow-up to Betaab which makes me automatically reject it. The fact that the fresh pairing of Deol and Singh was given less importance for the benefit of a most clichéd story with Rehman and Tagore is disappointing. Tagore, in particular, rehashes her Aradhana/Amar Prem roles. It's sad that a Satyajit Ray regular was reduced to such melodramatic parts of priggish and self-righteous women in Hindi cinema. Rehman, a brilliantly authentic actress at her best, is equally given a thankless role which requires one straight expression throughout. The dynamic between them is not as impressive as one would expect - the writing is just too corny. R. D. Burman does well with the music. "Meri Yaad Aayegi" and "Aur Kya Aheda Wafa" in its two versions are melodious, but the film is stale.
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