Dhoom 3
2013

Dhoom 3

Iqbal Haroon Khan (Jackie Shroff), the owner of "The Great Indian Circus" in Chicago, is forced to shut it down in 1990 because of debts. His request for a bank loan is rejected, and unable to find a solution, Iqbal commits suicide in front of the bank manager. Iqbal's son, Sahir (Aamir Khan), a little boy at the time of his father's death, decides to take revenge twenty-three years later. He robs several Western Bank of Chicago branches as a form of retaliation for what the bank did to his father. A team of three: officer Victoria (Tabrett Bethell), ACP Jai Dixit (Abhishek Bachchan), and sub-inspector Ali Akbar Fateh Khan (Uday Chopra) become involved in the investigation. Sahir now reopens "The Great Indian Circus" and appoints a new acrobat artist named Aaliya Hussain (Katrina Kaif).

After a robbery, Jai chases Sahir and fires at him. The bullet wounds Sahir, but he manages to escape. During one of his circus performances, Jai and his team surround Sahir, knowing he is the thief. They are confident of nailing him with evidence of the gunshot wound, but discover to their shock that there is no trace of a wound on Sahir's body. The film then reveals how Sahir has an autistic twin named Samar, who helps his brother.

Very soon, Jai and his team find out that it was not Sahir but Samar who got wounded. After many twists and complicated plans to deceive the police, Samar and Sahir are finally accosted. Sahir wants Samar to be spared so he can live his life with Alia. Sahir tries to jump off the edge of a dam, but Samar manages to grab his hand. Unable to hold on for long, even as Sahir begs him to let him die, the two brothers fall into the deep waters. The Western Bank of Chicago is forced to close because of the robberies, and "The Great Indian Circus" is taken over by Aaliya.

Locations in Europe: Contra Dam, Switzerland
Storyline
  • Star(s): Aamir Khan, Abhishek Bachchan, Uday Chopra, Katrina Kaif, Jackie Shroff
    Songs/Dance/Action: Switzerland

    Indian/ International Crew: Gian-Andrea Albin (Location Manager: Switzerland)
    Language: Hindi
    Line Producer/Executive Producer/Associate Producer: Aman Chouhan (Executive Producer) Rengarajan Jaiprakash (Line Producer- Switzerland) Ilana Rossein (Line Producer)
    Director/Producer: Vijay Krishna Acharya (Director)/Aditya Chopra (Producer)


    Film Location Analysis

    By Kaushik Bhaumik

    The climax is a straightforward sequence where battling sides that have until seconds ago fought on the streets of Chicago, now meet atop the Contra Dam in Switzerland, commonly known as the Verzasca Dam (since located in the Val Verzasca of Ticino) or Locarno Dam (since located near Locarno). The dam was the epic setting of the opening sequence of the Bond comeback film Goldeneye, post the fall of the Soviet Union. It then went on to become a popular bungee jumping site.

    The sequence involves a couple of Indian police officers chasing Sahir and Samar atop the narrow ledge of the dam. A SWAT team on helicopters surrounds the dam, as well cordons off the brothers on both ends of the dam. They also bring in Aaliya to negotiate with the scamsters. The brother who has been the face of the scam throughout the film strikes a deal with the Indian police officer where he would give himself up and all evidence of past crimes in exchange for his brother’s freedom. An agreement is thus reached. Following this, the brother who has struck the deal jumps off the dam, the other hanging from the ledge of the dam, holding on to his falling brother’s hand. Finally, they both fall down the dam, face into the abyss below. This rather sombre and sad drop down the dam’s height is in contrast to the triumphalism of the Bond sequence shot at the same site. While the Bond action sequence is widely considered as one of the greatest action sequences in film history, Dhoom 3 ends on a note of heroes giving up after a lifetime of planning revenge and scamming the world. Not without a sense of a last hurrah for homoerotic twin-sibling incest vibes though.

    The sequence is short and does not scintillate with action bravura with clashing machines, stunt antics, dashing camera work, and so on, which marks the rest of the film quite dramatically. The drone is used to emphasise the expanse of the dam from all angles and heights. There is a stress on the narrowness of the dam top, which adds a sense of ‘no way out’ for the cornered brothers. It rehashes a standard Bollywood moral metaphor in action films—the scamsters of the piece have run out of options to carry on tricking the law and history. There is also a sense of irony where the entire human drama happening on the dam is rendered puny by the gorgeous scale of nature and the dam. Ultimately, the cat-and-mouse chase between the cops and the robbers seems futile, given the actual scale of things—a tone that runs through the franchise. Given that this, the third film in the series, is all about magic, smoke, and mirrors, it ends on a rather ironic yet strange redemptive note—against the nonsense of history and the scale of nature, the only way out is the memory of familial love. The height of the dam and its endlessly grey neutral surface allows this sense of the choice of the brothers to go down together, shining through clearly—two bodies freed of any visual mooring in symbolic space, and thus utterly redeemed and free to do ‘anythingwhatsoever’—making death a happy thing.

    Another interesting fact about the sequence is that the SWAT team in the sequence is American, as is the shooting and stunt crew, although the sequence was shot in Switzerland.

    Additional Information & Links

    https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/topic/3576702 

    https://www.berlinglobal.org/index.php?screening-of-the-movie-dhoom-3-at-indian-embassy-in-berlin

    Tourism

    https://www.orangesmile.com/extreme/en/greatest-dams/contra-dam.htm https://www.klook.com/en-US/blog/bollywood-film-locations-switzerland/ 

    https://www.travelseewrite.com/bond-beyond-discovering-lugano-in-the-ticino-region-of-switzerland/

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