Naina

This article is about the 2005 film. For the 1973 film, see Naina (1973 film). For the village in Iran, see Naina, Iran.
Naina

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Shripal Morakhia
Produced by Sagar Pandya
Anjum Rajabali
Rakesh Mehra
Screenplay by Shripal Morakhia
Starring Urmila Matondkar
Anuj Sawhney
Amardeep Sinha
Shweta Konnur
Kamini Khanna
Music by Salim-Sulaiman
Cinematography C.K. Muralidharan
Edited by Amitabh Shukla
Sanjay Shukla
Distributed by iDream Productions
Release dates
  • 20 May 2005 (2005-05-20)
Running time
103 minutes
Country India
Language Hindi

Naina is a Hindi horror film released in India in 2005. It stars Urmila Matondkar. The film was premiered in the Marché du Film section of the 2005 Cannes Film Festival.[1][2] The film is a remake of the 2002 Hong Kong-Singaporean horror film The Eye directed by the Pang brothers.

Its release caused controversy in India because its depiction of the protagonist seeing ghosts after receiving a corneal transplant was similar to existing fears in India surrounding corneal transplants and it was feared the film would discourage people from donating corneas or seeking corneal transplants.[3][4][5]

Plot

During a solar eclipse in 1986, young Naina Shah, while traveling in the backseat of her England-based dad's car, is struck by glass from the shattered windshield during an accident, and loses her eyesight. Her parents do not survive, and she is brought up by her paternal grandmother. Years later, Naina gets a successful corneal transplant, and is able to see. She complains of vision problems, seeing hooded persons, and people dying, which a psychiatrist, Samir Patel, diagnoses as hallucinations. But when Naina reports seeing someone else in her mirror reflection, Sameer decides to investigate who the original cornea actually belonged to. This investigation will lead them to an impoverished village in New Bhuj, Gujarat, where she will find her life endangered by hostile villagers who believe that the donor of her cornea was cursed.

Cast

Reception

Naina mostly got good reviews from the critics. Taran Adarsh from Bollywood Hungama said, "NAINA is one of the most imaginative and pulse-pounding horror films to come along in recent times. It leaves the viewer frightened, terrified and petrified. As a horror movie, it packs one genuine scare after another, right till its finale". Urmila Matondkar was especially praised for her performance.

Box office

The film got a 50% opening in the first week, but its collections increased heavily. At last it was given an 'hit' tag.

References

  1. "The Hindu : Entertainment / Cinema : Indian films a `nonentity' at Cannes".
  2. "The Hindu : Entertainment Bangalore / Cinema : Cannes premier for Naina". Archived from the original on 4 February 2010.
  3. Chandra, Anjali (2005-05-24). "Seeing is not believing". The Times of India. Retrieved 2007-10-06.
  4. "NAB also fails to see eye-to-eye with 'Naina'". Afternoon, Bombay, India. Cybernoon. 2005-05-20. Retrieved 2007-10-06.
  5. "Eye doctors see red over spooky movie.". IOL. 2005-05-21. Retrieved 2007-10-06.
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