Players
2012

Players

Charlie Masceranhas (Abhishek Bachchan) and Riya (Bipasha Basu) are thieves. During a friend's funeral, Charlie learns that a train from Russia to Romania will be transporting gold. Charlie and an imprisoned con artist named Victor Braganza (Vinod Khanna) create a team to help with the robbing of the gold. This team consists of a hacker named Spider (Neil Nitin Mukesh), an explosives expert named Bilal Bashir (Sikander Kher), Sunny (Omi Vaidya), a make-up artist, and an illusionist named Ronnie (Bobby Deol). Victor's daughter, Naina (Sonam Kapoor), receives her father after he is released from prison and extracts a promise from him that he will never go back to a life of crime. When the robbery is successful and Charlie calls Victor to inform him, Naina overhears the conversation. The film then stages a series of betrayals, deceptions, and double crossings. Ronnie is killed when he tries to stop Spider from running off with the gold. Spider's assassins also murder Riya and Victor.

The team reconvenes after a year when they have some information about Spider's whereabouts. Naina joins the team to avenge her father's murder. They hatch a clever plan, and after several twists and turns involving Spider and the Russian Mafia, they successfully collect and transport the gold to India. The money from the heist is used to realise several dreams: Bilal opens a car business; Sunny manages to become an actor; Naina and Charlie establish an orphanage that was always Victor's desire; and Ronnie's daughter, now an orphan, is adopted by Charlie.

Locations in Europe: Russia, The Netherlands
Storyline
  • Star(s): Abhishek Bachchan, Vinod Khanna, Bipasha Basu, Bobby Deol, Neil Nitin Mukesh, Sonam Kapoor
    Songs/Dance: India, Russia, New Zealand
    Indian/ International Crew: Kira Sinelshikova (First Assistant Director) Aleksandr Solovyov (Push Canon Fx) (Stunt Driver)
    Language: Hindi
    Line Producer/Executive Producer/Associate Producer: Nirang Desai (Line Producer)
    Director/Producer: Abbas Alibhai Burmawalla, Mastan Alibhai Burmawalla (Directors)


    Film Location Analysis

    By Kaushik Bhaumik

    The heist film is divided into two clear halves—one, set in Russia, is a James Bond film, and the second, set in New Zealand, is an adaptation of The Italian Job (2003), for which the filmmakers bought rights from the Paramount Pictures.

    The Russian sequence begins in St. Petersburg, where a number of tricks involving fooling the Russian army with masks, etc. take place, very much in the order of a James Bond film. We see some neo-classical buildings and some streets of the city. Otherwise, not much of St. Petersburg is highlighted in the film. 

    Around the 1-hour mark, we have the crown gem of the film—a 10-minute breath-taking sequence of the robbing of a troops train carrying gold from Russia to Romania. The train is robbed of the gold it is carrying by the ‘Players’, a team of scamsters, who chase down the troops train in another train and manage to pilfer the gold. The sequence begins in Murmansk in Siberia, with the Players commandeering a train and fitting it with all the gadgets they would need for the heist. The heist sequence itself takes place along the Trans-Siberian line with both the trains dashing through snowfields. The main trick in the heist involves spraying the train windows with a solution that makes people inside the train see another landscape altogether, a ploy that masks the other train alongside. This allows the heist to happen across trains. The sequence ends with an extended dispute between the Players, a typical scene of betrayal and retribution resulting in bloodshed.

    Parts of the Russian sequences were apparently shot near the Arctic Ocean, close to the Pole. However, there are no indications as to which sequences these were.

Videos & Trailers
Search 100+ European locations analysis in Indian cinema

Press Enter / Return to begin your search or hit ESC to close

New membership are not allowed.

All Rights Reserved. © 2024 India Europe Film Connections. Terms and Conditions