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Gangs of Wasseypur | වශීපූර් හි කල්ලි

ලිපිය පලකරන ලද්දේ Chamika
                                   

  වශීපූර්හි කල්ලි කියන ෆිල්ම් එකත මේ දවස් වල චිත්‍රපට ක්ෂේත්‍රයේ විශාල පෙරලියක් සිදු කරමින් තිරගතවන චිත්‍රපටයක් කිව්වොත් මම නිවැරදියි කියල මම විශ්වාස කරනවා...මොකද යාලුවනේ මේ ෆිල්ම් එකත ඉන්දියාවේ සිදු වන දූෂණ,භීෂණ,මැර ක්‍රියාකාරකම්,කෝලහාල වැනි දෑ පිළිබඳව සත්‍ය වශයෙන්ම නිර්මාණය වුනු කතාවක්...එහෙනම් මේ අපූරු චිත්‍රපටයත් බාගෙනම බලන්නකෝ මගේ යාලුවනේ...එහෙනම් අලුත් ලිපියකින් ආයෙත් හමුවෙමුකො.

 700 MB ෆිල්ම් එක මෙතනින් බාගන්න

මෙතනින්  ට්‍රේලර් එක බලන්න






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ආහ...අමතක වුනා..පහලින් තියෙන්නේ විකිපීඩියා වල සහ තවත් වෙබ් අඩවි වල මෙම චිත්‍රපටය පිළිබඳව පළවුණු ආකාරයයි.....
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Gangs of Wasseypur
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This article is about the film. For the actual place, which is located in Dhanbad, see Wasseypur.
Gangs of Wasseypur


Theatrical Release Poster of Gangs of Wasseypur
Directed by     Anurag Kashyap
Produced by     Anurag Kashyap
Sunil Bohra
Written by     Zeishan Quadri
Akhilesh
Sachin Ladia
Anurag Kashyap
Starring     Jaideep Ahlawat
Manoj Bajpai
Richa Chadda
Nawazuddin Siddiqui
Jameel Khan
Syed Zeeshan Quadri
Aditya Kumar
Reemma Sen
Music by     Sneha Khanwalkar (soundtrack)
G. V. Prakash Kumar (score)
Cinematography     Rajeev Ravi
Studio     Viacom 18 Motion Pictures
Release date(s)    


    May 2012 (Cannes)
    June 22, 2012 ((Part-I))
    August 10, 2012 ((Part-II))


Country     India
Language     Hindi
Budget     INR18.4 crore (US$3.67 million)(2 parts budget)[1]
Box office     INR21.25 crore (US$4.24 million)(10 days domestic)[2][3][4]

Gangs of Wasseypur (stylized as: GANGS OF वासेपुर) is an Indian crime film co-written, produced and directed by Anurag Kashyap. The film features an ensemble cast including Jaideep Ahlawat, Manoj Bajpai, Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Richa Chadda in the lead roles. The five-hour long film was screened at the 2012 Cannes Directors' Fortnight.[5][6][7][8] However, as far as the commercial release of Gangs of Wasseypur is concerned, the makers have decided to screen it in two parts of roughly 150 minutes each. The movie received an 'A' certificate from the Indian Censor Board due to its coarse language and bloody violence [9] and released in India on June 22, 2012 on 1000 screens. Viacom18 and Anurag Kashyap decided to have a different strategy vis-a-vis the release of the two parts in India and Overseas.While the first part released in India on June 22,2012, it wasn't released in Overseas the same day.[10] The first part international release dates are- Middle East on 28 June and France on 25 July,2012.[11]
Contents

    1 Plot
        1.1 Part-I
        1.2 Part-II
    2 Cast
    3 Production
        3.1 Development
        3.2 Filming
    4 Themes and Portrayals
        4.1 Style
        4.2 Theme
    5 Soundtrack
        5.1 Reception
    6 Marketing
    7 Release
        7.1 Critical Reception
        7.2 Boxoffice
    8 References
    9 External links

Plot
Part-I
Main article: Gangs of Wasseypur Part 1

Towards the end of colonial India, Shahid Khan loots the British trains, impersonating the legendary Sultana Daku.Shahid gets exiled from the village when the furious Sultana finds out. Now outcast, Shahid becomes a henchman for Ramadhir Singh .A coalmine owner, Ramadhir Singh kills Shahid Khan (Jaideep Ahlawat) on learning his ambitions to rule the coalmine someday. Shahid’s son Sardar (Manoj Bajpayee) somehow escapes with Farhan, the seed of vengeance sown deep within his dark soul and bald head.Years pass, India gets independence, and coal mining becomes less lucrative than sand mining than car parts.Shahid’s brother Farhan(Piyush Mishra) takes Shahid’s son Sardar Khan (Manoj Bajpayee) to safety.Sardar (Manoj Bajpayee) shaves his head, swearing not to grow his hair back till he has had revenge, it sets off the revenge trail that lasts between the Khans and the Qureshis over generations. The years pass. Ramadhir becomes a powerful politician who controls the district while the wily and philandering Sardar becomes a ganglord and the most feared man of Wasseypur. Staying true to its real life influences, the film explores this revenge saga through the socio-political dynamic in erstwhile Bihar (North India), in the coal and scrap trade mafia of Wasseypur, through the imprudence of a place obsessed with mainstream 'Bollywood' cinema.
Family Tree of the Khan Family.
Part-II
Main article: Gangs of Wasseypur Part 2

Wasseypur is no more the town that was once consumed by the raging war between Sardar Khan and Ramadhir Singh. It has spawned a new generation of money squandering lobbyists, turning into foolhardy gangs overnight. With illegal profiteering through scrap trade auctions over the Internet, corrupt government officials, election rigging and hooliganism, the town got murkier. Everyone wanted alliance with the most powerful man of Wasseypur, Faizal Khan. His sole ambition however, is to annihilate Ramadhir Singh, the man with the grand scheme. Gangs of Wasseypur-Part 2 is a fitting conclusion to this story of vengeance, which by now, not just the family but also this town has come to inherit. Part 2 will be releasing on August 10 2012.
Cast

    Manoj Bajpai as Sardar Khan

    Sardar Khan (Manoj Bajpayee) forms the core of the chronicle, whose only aim in life is to avenge the death of his father by the hands of the capitalist-turned-politician Ramadheer Singh (Tigmanshu Dhulia)by making him endure many silent deaths through humiliation and the fear of being stalked. The film unveils as his biographical account encapsulating his marriage to Nagma (Richa Chhada), second marriage to Durga (Reema Sen) It explores diverse facets of Sardar Khan making his character and the narrative multidimensional. His revenge is brutal, his romance reeks of lust and he has an unapologetic approach towards both. He is vicious, womanizer, merciless, immoral.[12] Khan has an insatiable appetite for sex and power.[13] The randy and over-virile Sardar Khan, justifying polygamy as an altruistic gesture to support two families, a man his fiery wife declares should have been born a horse instead.[14] The best way to describe Manoj Bajpayi’s crackling performance would be to say that you can’t separate the character from the actor. Sardar is brutal when he kills, he cowers when he’s caught cheating by his wife Nagma, and is in a trance of lust when he first sets eyes on ‘womaniya’ Durga, who becomes his second wife.[15] Sardar is crafty and comical, almost a goofball. When he’s killing, he doesn’t blink, but is beaten up at home by his wife Nagma Khatoon (Richa Chadda) for cheating on her. [16]

    Piyush Mishra as Farhan

    Farhan is a cousin of Shahid Khan, who takes care of his child after Shahid's death. He is also the narrator of the film.Mishra says that Anurag Kashyap had given him a choice to play either Farhan or Ramadhir Singh. Mishra decided to go with Farhan.Mishra has also written three songs in the film -- Keh Ke Loonga, Ik Bagal and Manmauji. The first song has become such a hit that even Mishra is surprised with it.[17]

    Jaideep Ahlawat as Shahid Khan

    Shahid Khan is the father of Sardar Khan.When he is murdered by Ramadheer Singh, it sets off the revenge trail that lasts between the Khans and the Qureshis over generations.The actor says that "People in Cannes compared my character to Don Vito Corleone (from The Godfather), which is the biggest compliment I've received". Alhawat's character lasts barely 20 minutes in the film but that does not bother the actor,according to him "My character starts the film, and that's a special feeling in itself."[18]

    Richa Chadda as Nagma Khatoon

    Nagma Khatoon is a motormouth and firebrand who doesn't shy away from the ugliest street slang, and isn't beyond chasing her husband with a stick when he cheats on her.[19] Richa Chaddha has been applauded as Sardar’s steely wife[15] and even hailed as a definite discovery.[20] She ages by about 40 years, and brings that out as much in her body language and facial expressions as in her voice.[16] Some of the film’s best scenes are those between Bajpai and Chadda like when she finally just accepts that he will have other lovers and so tells him to eat well, saying, 'Bahar jaake bezati mat karana (Don't go out and disgrace yourself)'[13][21] The humour element exists by virtue of the situation, at times crass and also clever repartee.[22] What makes Chadda's Nagma Khatoon astoundingly believable is her accent.People were shocked to see me as Nagma Khatoon because in real life, I'm a city girl. As far as getting the accent right is concerned, it just takes four-five days of work. All you have to do is get the pronunciations right. Manoj helped me a lot there," Chadda says. "Like you say Phaijal (Faizal) ki saadi (shaadi) hai. Also, my nani (maternal grandmother) is from Patna. So I spent some time with her too."[23]

    Reemma Sen as Durga

    Durga,initially coy, shows her true colours when Sardar needs to see them.

    Nawazuddin Siddiqui as Faizal Khan
    Tigmanshu Dhulia as Ramadhir Singh

    The actor balances anger, desperation and vile with perfection. [21]

    Huma Qureshi as Mohsina
    Pankaj Tripathi as Sultan Qureshi

    Sultan Qureshi is a butcher and a henchman to Ramadhir Singh.He is from the Qureshi clan who exiled Shahid Khan.Sultan's reign in Wasseypur is overthrown by the arrival of Sardar Khan.Now Sultan's only agenda is to kill Sardar.Unlike other characters, there isn't any story behind the character,there is no emotional or romantic angle that builds up the character. Also, on one hand, Sultan is a terror for Wasseypur and on the other, he is a harmless creature in front of Ramadhir Singh.[23]

    Vipin Sharma as Ehsaan Qureshi
    Vineet Kumar as Danish Khan.[24]
    Shankar as Shankar
    Zeishan Quadri as Definit Khan
    Tilak Raj Mishra as Sanjeev
    Syed Khan as Iqbal Khan
    Satya Anand as J.P Singh
    Naman Tiwari as Ajay Singh
    Aniket Raj as Vijay Singh
    Jaikumar Solanki as Jatin
    Sanjay Varma as Inspector Aman Khan
    Sandeep Arora as ACP Jadhav

Production
Development

Anurag Kashyap said he had wanted to make a film on Bihar with the name BIHAR for some time but for various reasons it didn't took off.In 2008 he met Zeishan Quadri, writer of GANGS who told him about Wasseypur's story.He found it unreal to believe that mafia activity and gang war existed at such high level.Zeishan narrated enough stories but what really attracted him was,not gang war, the entire story of emergence of mafia. According to him to tell the story through a few families is what interested him but that also meant a longer reel."We all know mafia exists but what they do, how they operate, why they do we don't know and that is something which forms the basis of the film".[25]
Filming

During filming in Varanasi in December 2010, film's chief assistant director Sohil Shah was killed on shoot while performing one of the stunt shot scene which was an accident.[26] The Movie has been dedicated to Sohil Shah as is seen in the opening titles. The film finished production in late March 2011, with Anurag Kashyap moving on to direct his next film immediately due to that accident.[27] Anurag Kashyap, who co-produced the film with Sunil Bohra, has said that it is his most expensive film and he reportedly had to spend INR 15 crore on paying the actors.[28] Both parts of Gangs Of Wasseypur together cost just INR 18.4 crore to make,which makes one film at INR9.20 crore.Anurag Kashyap,the director of film tweeted: "45 crore as reported in the media is false." INR 26 crore was spent on marketing the film.[29]
Themes and Portrayals
Style

The filming style adopted by Anurag Kashyap in Gangs of Wasseypur bears a striking similarity to the styles of Sergio Leone and Sam Peckinpah.The scenes are short in length, several in number and often a series of montages take the story forward.Anurag Kashyap never has to resort to extraneous elements like stylized entries, editing patterns or camera motions to add to the effect because the story has an intrinsic impact of its own. However the film doesn't fall short of any technical finesse. There's unabashed blood, gore and abuse wherever the scene demands. As per the dialogues, Kashyap gives a feel of Vishal Bharadwaj. Lines like "Tum sahi ho, woh marad hai," ("You are right, he is male") said in resigned agreement to a wronged wife stand out for their cruel truths of rural life.[14] The rise of the protagonist and the re-union scenes in the second half gives a feel of Francis Ford Coppola and Mani Ratnam. Kashyap's use of occasional bursts of music and comedy to punctuate the slowly augmenting tension at different junctures is highly reminiscent of Spaghetti Westerns. Kashyap's use of dark humor to judiciously propagate violence bears an uncanny similarity to Quentin Tarantino’s style of movie-making. [30] Absorbing styles as diverse as those of old-school Italo-American mafia classics a la Coppola, Scorsese and Leone, as well as David Michod's taut crime thriller "Animal Kingdom," Kashyap never lets his influences override the distinct Indian color. The pacing is machine-gun relentless, sweeping incoherence and repetitiveness under the carpet as it barrels forward with hypnotic speed.[31]
Theme

" The film is essentially about two families from Wasseypur and one from Dhanbad. In the process, it explores the larger chunk of the coal and mafia activity. The film deals with the emergence of Mafia. I didn't want to limit to coal activity so family story had to be shown and what the mafia is doing there now. What we have done with this film is even if it's a fictional film we have taken actual shots of sand mining. In the film nothing is recreated. Everything here is real shots. The entire river has been turned into sand mine as there is not an ounce of water. "[32]
—Kashyap on the theme of the movie

The movie chronicles the journey of the saga associated with coal mines.Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN calls the movie, a gang warfare and notes that " On the surface, Gangs of Wasseypur is a revenge saga, a tableau of vengeance between generations of gangsters. Scratch that surface and you’ll discover more than just a grim portrait ". "[33] While some of some of the critics noted that the film, is a powerful political film, which underlines the party politics system (at that time) allowing the growth of illegal coal trading and mafias in the region (Bihar) and their use as a political tool, thus making the allotment of coal blocks , one of the most powerful expressions of controlling power in the region. [34] Despite its grim theme, the film also has an inherent sense of humour that comes quite naturally to it from its series of events. The scene where Reema Sen is charmed by Manoj Bajpayee over her daily chores or the one where Nawazuddin goes on a formal date with Huma Qureshi are outrageously hilarious.[12] The household politics is one of the many subplots rendering layers to the story. You realise Sardar's family is emerging into a Corleone set-up of sorts. His sons - the brooding Danish and the doped-out Faizal (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) from Nagma, and the enigmatic Definite Khan (Zeishan Qureishi) from Durga - will become key players in this revenge story, after Sardar is killed by the Qureishis, an ambitious clan of butchers.[35] Violent as his screenplay is, Kashyap reveals wit while narrating his tale. Ample black comedy is used to imagine the gang war milieu. The humour lets us relate to the intrinsic irreverent nature of men who live by the gun.[35] Character development can best justify the length of GOW I[16]
Soundtrack
Main article: Gangs of Wasseypur (soundtrack)
Gangs of Wasseypur
Soundtrack album by Sneha Khanwalkar
Released     May 23, 2012
Genre     Feature film soundtrack
Length     56:12
Label     T-Series

Music of Gangs of Wasseypur was launched on 23 May. Music for the album is composed by Sneha Khanwalkar and Piyush Mishra. Lyrics for the album are written by Varun Grover and Piyush Mishra.
Tracklist    
No.     Title     Singer(s)     Length    
1.     "Jiya Tu"       Manoj Tiwari     5:19
2.     "Ik Bagal"       Piyush Mishra     5:28
3.     "Bhoos"       Manish Tipu, Bhupesh Singh     5:09
4.     "Keh ke lunga"       Amit Trivedi,     4:47
5.     "O Womaniya Live"       Khusboo Raaj,Rekha Jha     4:49
6.     "Hunter"       Vedesh Sokoo,Rajneesh,Munna,Shyamoo     4:17
7.     "Humni ke Chhodi ke"       Deepak Kumar     4:17
8.     "Loonga Loonga"       Ranjeet kumar Baal Party Akshay Verma     2:52
9.     "Manmauji"       Usri Banerjee     2:53
10.     "Womaniya"       Khusboo Raaj,Rekha Jha     5:22
11.     "Aey Jawano"       Ranjeet Baal Party(Gaya)     1:54
12.     "Soona kar ke gharwa"       Sujeet(Gaya)     2:01
13.     "Tain Tain To To"       Sneha Khanwalkar     3:59
14.     "Bhaiyaa"       The mushahar of Sundarpur     3:06
Total length:
    56:12    
Reception

Raja Sen of Rediff gave a five star rating to the soundtrack calling it a "a strikingly flavourful and headily authentic collection of quirky music[36] ."Purva Desai of Times of India said "the music is brilliant and this album deserves all the praises[37] ".Shivi Reflections in her favourable review wrote that "Gangs Of Wasseypur is a soundtrack which should be acknowledged for its experimentation and uniqueness"[38] .
Marketing
Cast of the film, along with director Kashyap at the audio release of the film.

The marketing of Gangs of Wasseypur was noted for its uniqueness.Gamucha,a thin traditional north east(Assam) Indian towel was taken to Cannes,the GOW team danced on the streets wearing red gamchhas, after the Cannes Film Festival and has been making public appearances in them ever since.While most music launches in India happen with a big party in a 5-star banquet hall in a metropolitan city, and formal announcements before the press, the music of this film, was launched in second largest city in eastern India which is Patna.

In another effective way of building the world of Wasseypur for the audience,a fictitious newspaper was made available online. named Wasseypur Patrika.

In keeping with the language and setup of the film, wall paintings instead of posters Goli nahi marenge, keh ke lenge' - Gangs Of Wasseypur were painted on walls across 20 cities.

GOW momentos The GOW team has made a momento consisting of bullets of different era. While all sorts of weapons have been used in the film, this is the best thing one could give as momento. [39]
Release
Critical Reception
Main article: Gangs of Wasseypur Part 1

India

[hide] Review Scores
Critic     Rating
IANS     4/5 stars
Zee News     4/5 stars
Times of India     3.5/5 stars
Bollywood Hungama     3.5/5 stars
CNN-IBN     3.5/5 stars
NDTV     3.5/5 stars
DNA     3.5/5 stars
Yahoo!     3/5 stars
Hindustan Times     3/5 stars
Rediff.com     2.5/5 stars

Subhash K. Jha of IANS gave the movie 4 out of 5 stars, saying that "Brutal, brilliant, dark, sinister, terrifying in its violence and yet savagely funny in the way human life is disregarded “Gangs Of Wasseypur” is one helluva romp into the raw and rugged heartland."[40]Madhureeta Mukherjee of Times Of India rated the movie 3.5 stars out of 5, saying that "Director Anurag Kashyap, in his trademark style of storytelling - realistic, with strong characters, over-the-top sequences, and unadulterated local flavour (crude maa-behen gaalis galore), gruesome bloody violence and raw humour - interestingly spins this twisted tale."[41] Giving the film 3.5 star out of 5 Blessy Chettiar of DNA said that "Here’s a film that demands 100% attention and it won’t stop till it has it." Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN gave the movie 3.5 stars out of 5, concluding that "Bolstered by its riveting performances and its thrilling plot dynamics, this is a gripping film that seizes your full attention."[42]Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama gave the movie 3.5 stars out of 5, saying that "On the whole, GANGS OF WASSEYPUR symbolizes the fearless new Indian cinema that shatters the clichés and conventional formulas, something which Anurag Kashyap has come to be acknowledged for".Pointing to the violence in the film he said "GANGS OF WASSEYPUR is for that segment of spectators who seek pleasure in watching forceful, hard-hitting and gritty movies."[43]Saibal Chatterjee of NDTV rated the film 3.5 out of 5 stars noting that "It may not be for the faint-hearted and the prissy. Gangs of Wasseypur is a heavyweight knockout punch."[44]Anupama Chopra of Hindustan Times gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and said that she " really enjoyed the snatches of humour in between the explosive violence." Kunal Guha of Yahoo! noted the underlying philosophy of the movie as "Ain’t no sunshine when… you’re on the wrong side of a loaded gun." while giving the film 3 stars out of 5.He said the film manages to "terrorize, titillate and create cinematic icons who will dictate how any actor would approach an anti-hero character in the future."

Finally ,legendary Indian actor Amitabh Bachchan lauded the film as "Indian Cinema at its best".Noting the film as "stark" and "painfully real" the actor praised the director for the authenticity of its portrayal of North India.He also praised the actors for their performances and Manoj Bajpayee in particular for his role as Sardar Khan.[45]

On the contrary, Raja Sen of Rediff.com gave the movie 2.5 stars out of 5, pointing out that "It is the excess that suffocates all the magic, originality dying out for lack of room to breathe. Kashyap gets flavour, setting and character right, but the lack of economy cripples the film. There is a lot of gunfire, but like the fine actors populating its sets, Wasseypur fires too many blanks."[46]

International

The film met positive international reviews.Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter called the film "an extraordinary ride through Bollywood’s spectacular, over-the-top filmmaking".Referring to the violence and pace of the film she says "Gangs of Wasseypur puts Tarantino in a corner with its cool command of cinematically-inspired and referenced violence, ironic characters and breathless pace".[47] Maggie Lee of Variety notes Kashyap never lets his diverse influences of old-school Italo-American mafia classics a la Coppola, Scorsese and Leone, as well as David Michod's taut crime thriller "Animal Kingdom,override the distinct Indian color.Calling the film "the love child of Bollywood and Hollywood," she felt the film was "by turns pulverizing and poetic in its depiction of violence."[48] Lee Marshall of Screen International writes "the script alternates engagingly between scenes of sometimes stomach-churning violence and moments of domestic comedy, made more tasty by hard-boiled lines of dialogue like “in Wasseypur even the pigeons fly with one wing, because they need the other to cover their arse” ".He describes song lyrics "as if mouthed by a Greek chorus of street punks" commenting sarcastically on what’s happening onscreen.[49]

REDIFF MOVIES

onil Dedhia, Nishi Tiwari in Mumbai
It's been a week since Anurag Kashyap's Gangs Of Wasseypur hit movie screens all across India. And what a week it has been! The response from almost all quarters can be described as manic, passionate, polarizing, much like the movie itself.

It's hardly surprising considering there are just too many things to rave about in Anurag Kashayp's latest epic.

One of the film's biggest highlights is its actors and their brilliant performances. Would you like to know them better? Here's a closer look at the brilliant supporting cast of Gangs Of Wasseypur.
Pankaj Tripathi

Character: Sultan Qureshi, butcher and henchman. Sultan's only agenda is to kill Manoj Bajpayee's Sardar Khan.

Tripathi comes from a small village called Belsan, in the Gopalganj district in Bihar.

His village still does not have television, and the nearest theatre is 25 kilometers away. His parents are farmers and don't know much about the film their son has done such marvellous work in.

"It is unfortunate that my parents have never seen in any of my films," Tripathi says. "Whenever I visit them, I show them some of my works on the laptop which makes them happy and proud about me."

Now, the actor wants to show his latest film to his parents, and plans to make a trip as soon as the DVD of GOW is out.

Getting the role, however, was not easy.

"My auditions lasted eight hours," he says. "I was asked to act out a couple of scenes. I was very tired but I didn't give up. Anurag later saw my work and offered me the role."

Tripathi has never visited Wasseypur or Dhanbad but he claims that some of the gangsters from those places called him before the start of the shoot. "Three to four gangsters contacted me as they were curious to know about the film. But they didn't mean to harm anyone. In fact, I would say I was fortunate to listen to them as that helped me in the preparation of my character."

The shoot had its own share of challenges. Since he played a butcher, one of the scenes (pictured above) actually made him vomit.

"We shot in a real butcher factory in Allahabad. The people working at the factory were so excited that a film was being shot there, that they started cutting buffaloes in front of us in order to show blood and flesh everywhere. The shoot lasted for four hours, and the whole unit started vomiting then. For the next seven days, no one ate non-vegetarian food!" he exclaims.

Sultan was the toughest role in Tripathi's life yet. "If you see the film, unlike other characters, there isn't any story behind my character. I don't have any emotional or romantic angle that builds up my character. Also, on one hand, Sultan is a terror and on the other, he is a harmless creature in front of Ramadhir Singh. It was pretty tough to create a balance."

Before Tripathi bagged GOW, he had been struggling for 12 years, doing theatre. A graduate from National School of Drama, Delhi, Tripathi landed in Mumbai five years ago.

"I did not become an actor to earn money -- that I could have done it in my village by becoming a farmer. I wanted to show my craft which I am so passionate about," he says. Earlier this year, the actor was seen in a small role in Agneepath.

Now, Tripathi is overwhelmed with the response GOW has got. "It's completely unexpected for me," he says. "A lot of people have complimented me on my performance. I became very emotional and even cried a couple of times on Friday, when the film released."

Image: Pankaj Tripathi in Gangs of Wasseypur

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