| 1 | '''Mohra''' |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | 1994 177’ col/scope Hindi |
| 5 | d/s/e Rajiv Rai pc Trimurti Films p Gulshan Rai |
| 6 | co-sc Shabbir Boxwalla dial Dilip Shukla |
| 7 | lyr Anand Bakshi, Indivar c Damodar Naidu |
| 8 | m Viju Shah |
| 9 | lp Naseeruddin Shah, Akshay Kumar, Sunil |
| 10 | Shetty, Raveena Tandon, Pononam Jhawar, |
| 11 | Raza Murad, Paresh Rawal, Gulshan Grover, |
| 12 | Sadashiv Amrapurkar |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | Vishal Agnihotri (Shetty), jailed for having |
| 16 | murdered his wife’s rapists and killers, is |
| 17 | rescued when the journalist Roma Singh |
| 18 | (Tandon) reveals the truth. Roma’s employer, |
| 19 | the blind publisher Jindal (Shah), hires Vishal |
| 20 | to kill the gangsters Gibran (Murad) and Tyson |
| 21 | (Grover). The fearless policeman Amar Saxena |
| 22 | (Kumar), who is after the same gangsters, |
| 23 | arrests Vishal. Eventually it emerges that Jindal |
| 24 | is the main criminal and mastermind, and Amar |
| 25 | joins forces with Vishal to get him in a climax |
| 26 | providing considerable exposure to both stars’ |
| 27 | much touted training in the martial arts. The |
| 28 | film features the major hit song Tu cheez badi |
| 29 | hai mast mast, an unacknowledged adaptation |
| 30 | of Nusrat Fateh Ali’s Mast kalandar mast mast. |
| 31 | |
| 32 | [[Film]] |