

A dacoit with a dog, a horse, and socialist fever dreams—1970s Bollywood goes FULL Robin Hood chaos.
Conflict between the "haves" and "have nots" in a feudal state, is spearheaded by an outlaw, with his band of associates, horse and dog, providing all action, suspense and tempo. The chief minister and his supporters try their best to thwart the revolt which ultimately succeeds in unexpected way. - It was a unique world for "Baazigar", where the pattern of society was thrilling, fascinating and with liberty - a strange socialistic pattern!. . The chief Minister of State Mansingh believed that Baazigar is a dangerous blood-thirsty dacoit of notorious indetification in society!
Practical Effects
Actual horses doing actual stunts—no CGI cowboys here.
Production
Feudal sets so extra you'll smell the synthetic royalty.
Director
Karunesh Thakur
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
This predates Shah Rukh Khan's 1993 'Baazigar' by 21 years, proving Bollywood will recycle ANYTHING—including socialist dacoit fever dreams.
The 'strange socialistic pattern' description in promotional materials suggests someone in marketing was either very passionate or very confused about political theory.