Gunday – Popular
“I fix radios in a village. Nobody knows me.”
Frequently cited as the film's "voice of sanity," delivering a towering performance as the antagonist cop. gunday
By 1985, they were no longer coolies. They were Gunday . Bikram and Bala. The name was spat like a curse and whispered like a prayer. They controlled the coal, the illegal timber, and the desi liquor. Their rule was simple: “Mazdoor ko mazdoori milni chahiye, maalik ko apni jaan ki fikar karni chahiye.” (The worker gets his wage; the owner worries about his life.) “I fix radios in a village
Simultaneously, (Irrfan Khan) arrives with a mission to bring them down. He exploits their growing rift, eventually revealing that Nandita is actually an undercover operative working with the police to entrap them. Climax and Ambiguous Ending They were Gunday
Bala took a sip. “We were gunday, Bikram. We trusted nothing. That was our strength. When we started trusting—her, the money, the power—we became weak.”