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Sholay at 50: A cinematic masterpiece that also glorifies violence, masks social oppression

By Harsh Thakor* 
On August 15, we mark the 50th anniversary of the legendary film Sholay. Watching it at Minerva theatre with a friend on its release day remains unforgettable. Sholay is widely regarded as the most impactful Indian film of the millennium, a movie that captured audiences with a magnetic force rarely seen before. No other film has so deeply embedded itself in Indian folklore or shaped the collective psyche with such permanence.
The movie arrived in an era when Hindi cinema was beginning to experiment with action-driven plots and antiheroes. In an industry steeped in traditional, conservative narratives, Sholay reflected the political turbulence of its time. Directed by Ramesh Sippy, the film featured Amitabh Bachchan as the quiet Jai and Dharmendra as his boisterous partner Veeru, two small-time criminals hired by retired police officer Thakur Baldev Singh (Sanjeev Kumar) to capture the dreaded bandit Gabbar Singh (Amjad Khan), who terrorises Ramgarh village.
Sholay became the Indian interpretation of the spaghetti Western, borrowing liberally from films like The Magnificent Seven, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and Once Upon a Time in the West. Yet it was rooted in the Indian countryside, seamlessly adapting Western tropes to a village setting. The way the film was made was itself epic, involving painstaking efforts by its writers, directors, and cast.
What distinguished Sholay was its ability to hold back before unleashing its plot, building anticipation and releasing it in explosive fashion. It created a near-perfect synthesis of comedy, tragedy, and action, weaving them together with imaginative precision. Moments of pathos were interspersed with humour, giving audiences an emotional roller-coaster that alternated between laughter and heartbreak. Its cinematography expanded the horizons of Bollywood, with sweeping landscape shots and action sequences that matched Hollywood standards.
Iconic scenes remain etched in memory: the train raid at the start, the dacoits’ assaults on Ramgarh, Gabbar Singh mocking his gang, Jai’s silent romance with Radha, Veeru’s drunken antics wooing Basanti, the comic episodes with Asrani as the jailer, Imam Saab’s moral courage despite personal tragedy, Jai’s death scene, and Thakur’s final confrontation with Gabbar. The film masterfully built suspense and entertainment, culminating in the classic triumph of good over evil. Although the original ending, where Thakur crushed Gabbar to death, was censored and replaced with police intervention, the climactic impact remained powerful.
Dharmendra and Bachchan played Western-style outlaws with contrasting temperaments—Veeru the exuberant extrovert, Jai the quiet introvert—yet their bond gave the film its soul. Amjad Khan’s Gabbar Singh redefined villainy in Indian cinema, embodying cruelty and sadism with chilling intensity. Sanjeev Kumar’s Thakur carried moral gravitas and quiet rage. Dharmendra excelled both in comedy and in his quest for vengeance, while Bachchan’s understated performance made Jai’s sacrifice unforgettable. The women added depth: Hema Malini’s Basanti was vivacious and talkative, Jaya Bhaduri’s Radha silent and tragic, expressing volumes through her eyes.
The film also touched on ethical themes. Imam Saab, played by A.K. Hangal, declared that he would gladly sacrifice more sons for justice after his own was killed, embodying resilience against oppression. Jai and Veeru, though mercenaries, evolved morally by choosing to stay and fight for Thakur’s cause. Such touches gave the story its moral texture, though subtly.
Yet despite its brilliance, Sholay is flawed. It transplanted a Western framework onto Indian soil without truly engaging with local realities. Unlike Mother India, Ganga Jamuna, or even Mera Gaon Mera Desh, it avoided probing the roots of rural distress, landlordism, and the socio-economic conditions that bred dacoity. Instead, it reduced dacoits to sadistic caricatures and glorified the Thakur–bandit conflict without exploring the villagers’ collective resistance. In doing so, it bypassed the struggles of peasants and presented urban gangsters settling in a village in ways that lacked realism.
The film is heavy on shootouts, chases, and melodrama, often glorifying machismo and individual heroism while obscuring systemic oppression. The Thakur is portrayed as a wronged patriarch rather than a landlord complicit in exploitation. Gabbar Singh’s character, though unforgettable, masks the social dimensions of banditry. Asrani’s Hitler-inspired jailer and slapstick comedy scenes distract from the central narrative. Some dialogues slip into mediocrity, and several action sequences—especially hand-to-hand combat—appear crudely staged.
Thus, while Sholay stands as an unrivalled cinematic achievement and cultural phenomenon, it also embodies the contradictions of Indian cinema. Its celebration at 50 years is not just about remembering a glorious film but also about recognising how it glorified violence, upheld patriarchal landlordism, and ignored the deeper realities of injustice and exploitation.
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*Freelance journalist

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