
Parwane
- Director
- Ashok Gaikwad
- Release Date
- 12 November 1993
- Language
- Hindi
- Budget
- ₹0.70 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹2.12 Cr
Review
Parwane operates in that rare territory where commercial viability and artistic integrity converge, though not without friction. Director Vipin Sharma crafts a morality play that punishes its protagonists with unsparing severity—the four college rowdies transition from cocky harassers to condemned men with a momentum that feels almost Shakespearean in its inevitability. The performances, particularly in the final act, carry genuine weight; you sense the suffocating dread as these characters realize their youthful indiscretions have become inescapable. However, the middle sections occasionally sacrifice character development for plot machinery, and the portrayal of police brutality, while thematically deliberate, sometimes tips into melodrama rather than grounded naturalism. Sharma elevates himself considerably above his directorial average here, crafting something with genuine dramatic heft.
What's most impressive is how Parwane refuses catharsis or redemption—a structural choice that alienates some viewers but proves narratively courageous. The death penalty verdict in the final stretch isn't presented as a triumph of justice or a tragedy to overcome, but rather as the inevitable endpoint of a trajectory set in motion during that first encounter with Inspector Basheer Khan. The violence, when it arrives, lands with brutal specificity rather than sensationalism. That said, the film's box office performance (₹2.12Cr with respectable ROI) suggests audiences responded to its da
Storyline
These four college rowdies—Avinash, Henry, Avtar, and Aslam—think they've dodged a bullet when Inspector Basheer Khan lets them off with a warning after catching them harassing a girl in Pune. They breeze through their exams and scatter back to their hometowns, absolutely clueless that their carefree days are numbered. Little do they know that fate's already written a brutal script for them.
Things spiral into absolute chaos when Basheer Khan resurfaces in Bombay, determined to track them down, while two other relentless cops—Sub-Inspectors Tawde and Damodar—join the hunt with their own agendas. The foursome find themselves entangled in a web of violence and crime that spirals completely out of control. Two of them end up dead in horrifyingly violent ways, leaving the survivors staring down the barrel of capital punishment.
What makes this such a killer film is how it transforms these reckless kids into tragic figures—you watch them careen toward their doom with an almost Greek-tragedy inevitability. The final act delivers some genuinely devastating moments as the surviving duo faces the death penalty, their youthful arrogance shattered into smithereens. It's dark, it's unflinching, and it absolutely refuses to let anyone off easy!




