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Added on: 2020-09-28 11:26:07 Total Views: 1,764
Description: Video details - nvuz1kXMMeg: In college, Farhan and Raju form a great bond with Rancho due to his refreshing outlook. Years later, a bet gives them a chance to look for their long-lost friend whose existence seems rather elusive. Initial release: December 23, 2009 (USA) Director: Rajkumar Hirani Screenplay: Rajkumar Hirani, Vidhu Vinod Chopra, Abhijat Joshi Story by: Chetan Bhagat, Abhijat Joshi 3 Idiots is a 2009 Indian Hindi-language coming-of-age comedy-drama film directed by Rajkumar Hirani, and also co-written by him with Abhijat Joshi. The film stars Aamir Khan, R. Madhavan, Sharman Joshi, Kareena Kapoor, Boman Irani and Omi Vaidya. The film follows the friendship of three students at an Indian engineering college and is a satire about the social pressures under an Indian education system.[6][7][8] The film is narrated through parallel dramas, one in the present and the other ten years in the past Directed byRajkumar HiraniProduced byVidhu Vinod ChopraScreenplay byAbhijat Joshi Rajkumar Hirani Vidhu Vinod ChopraStory byRajkumar Hirani Abhijat JoshiBased onFive Point Someone by Chetan BhagatStarring Aamir Khan R. Madhavan Sharman Joshi Kareena Kapoor Boman Irani Omi Vaidya Narrated byR. MadhavanMusic byScore: Sanjay Wadnarekar Atul Raninga Shantanu Moitra Songs: Shantanu MoitraCinematographyC. K. MuraleedharanEdited byRajkumar Hirani Production company Vinod Chopra Films Distributed byReliance BIG Pictures Release date 25 December 2009 (India) Running time 170 minutes[1]CountryIndiaLanguageHindiBudget₹ 550 million[2][3]Box officeest. ₹ 4.60 billion[4][5] Produced by Vidhu Vinod Chopra under the banner Vinod Chopra Films, and based on Chetan Bhagat's novel Five Point Someone: What not to do at IIT! for which author was not suitably credited,[9][10][11] the film incorporated real Indian inventions created by Remya Jose,[12] Mohammad Idris,[13] Jahangir Painter[14] and Sonam Wangchuk.[15] It received widespread critical[16] and commercial success upon its release on 25 December 2009. It was also the highest-grossing film in its opening weekend in India, had the highest opening day collections for an Indian film up until that point and also held the record for the highest net collections in the first week for a Bollywood film. It also became one of the few Indian films at the time to become successful in East Asian markets such as China[17] and Japan,[18] eventually bringing its worldwide gross to ₹3.92 billion ($90 million)[a][4][5] — it was the highest-grossing Indian film ever at the time.[19] The film also had a social impact on attitudes to education in India,[20] as well as education in other Asian countries such as China.[7] The film won six Filmfare Awards including Best Film and three National Film Awards including Best Popular Film. Overseas, it won the Grand Prize at Japan's Videoyasan Awards[21][22][18] while it was nominated for Best Outstanding Foreign Language Film at the Japan Academy Awards[23][24] and Best Foreign Film at China's Beijing International Film Festival.[25] This film was remade in Tamil as Nanban (2012), which also received critical praise and commercial success.[26][27] Nanban had a Telugu dubbed version titled Snehitudu. A Mexican remake, 3 idiotas, was also released in 2017 and an Israeli remake, 3 idiotim, will also be released in 2021. [28]