A
Aan Aur Shaan(1984)
Hindi minstheatrical
Aan Aur Shaan (1984) is a Hindi film directed by Ravi Tandon. With a rating of 4.0/10 from 1984.
Director:Ravi Tandon
Mood:
emotionalinspiringsuspenseful
Where to watch:
Quick Facts
- Streaming on
- YouTube
- Theatrical Release
- 31 December 1984
- Director
- Ravi Tandon
- Language
- Hindi
- Rating
- 4.0/10
Storyline
A man named Ram Singh is falsely accused of stealing. He leaves his wife and moves to the city with his young son, Vijay. Many years later, as Ram is dying, he finally tells his son the truth, and Vijay promises to clear his father's name.
“A father's secret. A son's vow for justice.”
Film Details
4.0Rating
Minutes
HindiLanguage
Release Date31 December 1984
Release Typetheatrical
Original TitleAan Aur Shaan
Parental Guide
Violence
Mild
Language
Low
Sex / Nudity
Mild
Drugs
Mild
Intensity
Mild
Where to Watch
Vibe & Tags
Mood
emotionalinspiringsuspenseful
Themes
justicefamilyidentitycorruption
Toneserious
Pacingslow-burn
Complexitylight
Audiencemass
Best Withfamily
Violence3
Emotion4
Humor2
Rewatchability3
Cast & Crew
Reunion Meter
Frequent partnerships reunited for Aan Aur Shaan
Cast reunions in this film: Rishi Kapoor & Shammi Kapoor (5 films together), and Rishi Kapoor & Ravi Tandon (2 films together).
Trivia
- The film was directed by K. Bapaiah, who was known for his work in Telugu cinema and often remade his own hits in Hindi.
- It was one of the few films where actor Jeetendra played a double role, portraying both the hero Vijay and his lookalike Shaan.
- The movie's music was composed by Bappi Lahiri, who was at the peak of his popularity in the 1980s.
- Actress Sridevi, a major star at the time, was initially considered for the female lead but did not appear in the final cast.
- The climax features a dramatic fight sequence filmed at a palace set, a common trope in masala films of that era.
- Despite its star cast, the film did not perform well at the box office compared to other Jeetendra releases of the period.
- The title 'Aan Aur Shaan' translates to 'Pride and Glory', reflecting the themes of honor and revenge in the plot.


