Hero No. 1
1997

Hero No. 1

Rajesh (Govinda) is the son of Dhanraj Malhotra (Kader Khan), a rich businessman. Rajesh runs away from home to Europe, where he meets Meena (Karisma Kapoor), a young woman with a scholarship for higher studies abroad. She is the granddaughter of Dinanath Tripathi (Paresh Rawal). Raj and Meena fall in love. Dhanraj goes to Europe and brings the two back for their wedding, but things take a different turn. Dinanath is enraged when he finds out that Rajesh is Dhanraj's son. Rajesh disguises himself as a servant to live in Dinanath's house, while Dhanraj, at some point, pretends to be the security guard. A series of comic encounters follow, but Rajesh manages to ingratiate himself into the family. His sacrifice to win Dinanath's trust is recognised, and Meena and Rajesh are finally allowed to reunite.

Locations in Europe: Geneva International Airport, Zytglogge Watch Tower, Bern (Switzerland); other Swiss locations mostly in the Canton of Bern; the Eiffel Tower, Place de la Concorde, the Seine (Paris); and Europa Park, Rust (Germany)
Storyline
  • Star(s): Govinda, Karisma Kapoor
    Songs/Dance: Switzerland, Germany, France
    Indian/ International Crew: Indian
    Language: Hindi


    Film Location Analysis

    By Kaushik Bhaumik

    The film enters Switzerland in the 21st minute, at Geneva International Airport with the song ‘Saaton Janam Tujhko’. The song continues through sequences set in picturesque Swiss Rail stations (on the Aigle-Leysin Railway in the Chablais region) and a sequence in a scenic railway car that allowed the action to unfold ‘indoors’ against green panoramic landscapes passing by. This entire sequence of the song undoubtedly repeats the highlights of the Swiss sequences in Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, made two years before Hero No. 1. It undoubtedly rides on the cinematic and touristic success of the earlier film, emphasising the fact that Switzerland was here to stay as an exotic location for Bollywood films. Also, important was the fact that the film was produced on less muscle power than Yash Raj Films, starring actors who were considered cheap thrills for front benchers, and yet spent a lot on the European location shoot ($60000 on the 15-day schedule).

    The scene then moves to what might be the famous tourist destination Grindelwald, in the Interlaken, since we see the protagonists approach a Hotel Cabana.

    The European shoot highlights include two set piece songs—‘Sona Kitna Sona Hai’, shot in Bern, Switzerland, and ‘Mohabbat Ki Nahi Jati’, shot between Paris and Europa Park, Rust, Germany.

    ‘Sona Kitna Sona Hai’ begins with the hero of the film walking off in a huff on a Bern street, which turns out to be the area in front of the 13th Century UNESCO Heritage Zytglogge Watch Tower—one of the iconic landmarks of the Swiss capital city. The song has a long sequence in the area in front of the tower. The area was cleared off for the shoot of the song, allowing the hero and heroine to perform freely and flamboyantly. Then we see the song turn to the lakeside with the obligatory view of a motorboat carrying a Swiss flag swishing past. Another sequence in a lush green park is followed by a penultimate sequence in front of what might be the Hotel-Restaurant Bernerhofer at the Kandersteg resort village, in the Bernese Oberland region. One of the interesting features of the city centre sequence of the song is the use of Bernese trams, against which the actors are shot, and through which they weave in and out.

    The song Mohabbat Ki Nahi Jati’ starts with probably the most spectacular moment in Bollywood cinema in Europe—the hero and heroine gyrating suggestively with the Eiffel Tower in the backdrop in full glory, a gaggle of bystanders stand around and watch the dance unfold on the pavement, cleared of usual pedestrian traffic. The song then moves to the Seine, to the Pont de Grenelle with the Statue of Liberty model, and the Eiffel Tower in the background. The next sequence of the song moves to Europa Park in Germany. It winds its way through various amusements—a toy train, dancing figures costumed as animals, a dancing dinosaur, and the obligatory shot of the CanCan Coaster Dome. The song then moves back to Paris to the Place de la Concorde, where in one shot, we briefly see the Arc de Triomphe in the horizon. The song finishes in what is likely a Swiss snowed-upon mountain scene.

    Both songs mix historic landmarks of European cities, readily identifiable locations, and general picturesque landscape to sell a vision of Europe that is a mix of grand history and pristine clean nature.

    Additional Information & Links

    Song ‘Sona Kitna Sona Hai’:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXuKwkGX8SQ

    Song ‘Mohabbat Ki Nahi Jati’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QymYLX9Plc4 

    https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/society-and-the-arts/story/19961115-filmmakers-go-in-for-exotic-locations-abroad-in-a-bid-to-hit-box-office-jackpot-833324-1996-11-14

    https://wherewasitshot.com/hero-no-1/

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