Table No. 21

Table No. 21 is a 2013 Indian thriller film directed by Aditya Datt and produced by Eros International. It is named after Article 21 of the Indian Constitution, which talks about the protection of life and personal liberty.[1] The movie features Rajeev Khandelwal, Tina Desai and Paresh Rawal and touches upon the pertinent social issue of ragging. The movie's soundtrack was composed by Gajendra Verma, Neeraj Shridhar and Sachin Gupta.[5] The film performed below average at the box office.[4]

Table No. 21
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAditya Datt
Produced bySunil Lulla
Viki Rajani
Written byAbhijeet Deshpande (Additional Screenplay And Dialogues)
Screenplay byShantanu Ray Chhibber
Sheershak Anand
Story byShantanu Ray Chhibber
Sheershak Anand
Based onArticle 21 of Indian Constitution[1]
StarringRajeev Khandelwal
Tina Desai
Paresh Rawal
Dhruv Ganesh
Music byGajendra Verma
Neeraj Shridhar
Sachin Gupta
CinematographyRavi Walia
Edited byDevendra Murdeshwar
Production
company
Distributed byEros International
Release date
  • 4 January 2013 (2013-01-04)
[2]
Running time
108 mins[3]
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget85 million[4]
Box office177.95 million[4]

Plot

Vivaan and Siya Agasthi struggle to make ends meet. The couple win a trip to the beautiful island nation of Fiji in a lucky draw. The holiday is fully sponsored, with luxurious hotel accommodation and fine dinners. The duo fly to Fiji to celebrate their wedding anniversary and encounter the charming Mr. Khan at the resort. Mr. Khan invites the couple to participate in a live game show called Table No. 21. He tells them that the winner of the game bags a staggering amount of 210 million as prize money. He outlines the rules which are eight personal questions asked that must be answered truthfully, and following this, one must complete a task related to the question. The couple decides to enter the game show. At first, the questions seem easy, but as the game progresses, the tasks become increasingly horrific connected to their college life. Vivaan's final task is to murder an individual. He is led to a room, where he is to face his target. When he sees the person he must kill, he recognises him from his past. A flashback shows Vivaan and his friends ragging a boy, named Akram. The severe bullying made Akram mentally challenged. Back in the present, it is revealed that Akram is Mr. Khan's son, and that Mr. Khan's intention was to exact revenge and show Vivaan and Siya the damage inflicted on Akram by their actions. Mr. Khan tells them that they are free to go but their sins will follow them everywhere. The movie ends as Vivaan and Siya are still shocked – crying and regretting their choices.

Cast

Soundtrack

Song TitleSingerLength
"If You Lie You Die"Neeraj Shridhar, Jaspreet Jasz04:01
"Man Mera" (Remix)Gajendra Verma03:19
"Man Mera"Gajendra Verma02:43
"O Sajna" (Remix)Gajendra Verma, Puja Thaker02:47
"O Sajna"Gajendra Verma, Puja Thaker04:59

Reception

Critics have praised the story but have criticised the way the issue of ragging is kept under wraps.[6][7] On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 54% based on 3 reviews.[8] Indiaglitz.com says that "Table No. 21 keeps you engaged right from start to the finish. If the beginning portions are frothy, middle portions turn thrilling, post interval is dramatic and ultimately the narrative turns dark before reaching a shocking end."[9] Ankur Pathak of Rediff.com says that "Table No. 21 should be watched for the reactive social commentary that it is, and should not be misconceived as a vigilante film." Rated it 3 out of 5 stars.[10] Madhureeta Mukherjee of The Times of India rated the film 3/5 stars.[11] Rajeev Masand of IBNLive.com says that "Table No. 21 squanders its potential. The film's ending is bold, but little else is consistent or gripping".[12] Mansha Rastogi of Nowrunning.com says that "Table No. 21, although may not be a completely out of the box, never before concept but it's the execution of the story and the acting that makes this film a one time watch."[13] Prasanth of Movieorange.com says that "Table No 21 is an excellent thriller, with a good message." Rated it 8 out of 10.[14]

Box office

Upon release, Table No. 21 saw a slow start at the Box Office in its first week. It collected ₹157.5 million net over the weekend, while the four-day collection was approximately ₹67.5 million net.[15] The movie earned ₹101.0 million in the first week of its release,[16] and after a two-week-long run, 2013′s first release stood at a total of ₹121.0 million in India and ₹180.0 million worldwide.[17]

References

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