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Veer-Zaara is the soundtrack to the 2004 film of the same name directed by Yash Chopra under the production of Yash Raj Films, starring Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta and Rani Mukerji. The film features 11 songs with music based on old and untouched compositions by the late Madan Mohan , that was revised by his son Sanjeev Kohli.
Veer-Zaara is a 2004 Indian Hindi-language romantic film directed and produced by Yash Chopra, and written by his son Aditya Chopra.It stars Shah Rukh Khan and Preity Zinta as the titular star-crossed lovers: Veer Pratap Singh is an Indian Air Force officer, and Zaara Hayaat Khan is the daughter of a Pakistani politician.
It is considered one of the best songs sung by Lata Mangeshkar, ever. Madan Mohan's son Sanjeev Kohli recreated 11 of his late father's unused compositions for the soundtrack of the 2004 Yash Chopra film Veer-Zaara. Later on, Kohli brought out an album "Tere Baghair" which contains some of Madan Mohan's songs.
The re-release will include the previously unreleased song “Yeh hum aa gaye hai kahaan,” marking its first inclusion in the theatrical cut of the film. “Veer Zaara” was the highest ...
Rakesh Budhu of Planet Bollywood in his review gave the album 8.5 stars out of 10. [12] Darr's soundtrack marked one of the earliest instances of Udit Narayan supplying his voice for Shah Rukh Khan. Narayan's voice went on to be featured in the soundtracks of every single one of Khan's collaborations with Yash Raj Films until Veer-Zaara (2004).
In 2004, Dutta made her breakthrough in Hindi cinema with the role of Shabbo with Yash Chopra's epic love saga Veer-Zaara, alongside Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta and Rani Mukerji. The film received widespread critical acclaim and emerged an all-time blockbuster at the box office.
Main Hoon Na was the second-highest grossing Indian film of 2004 behind Veer-Zaara (also a Shahrukh Khan-starrer set against India-Pakistan backdrop). [15] It made ₹ 480 million (US$5.5 million) in India and an additional ₹ 19 million (US$220,000) in the overseas market.
It clashed with three other major releases: Veer-Zaara, the coloured version of Mughal-e-Azam, and Naach. The film opened to excellent occupancy in metros and decent at other places. It was the second-best playing release of the week after Yash Chopra's Veer-Zaara.