| 1 | '''Raja''' |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | 1995 168’ col/scope Hindi |
| 5 | d/co-p Indra Kumar pc Maruti International |
| 6 | co-p Ashok Thakeria sc Rajiv Kaul, Praful |
| 7 | Parekh dial Tanveer Khan lyr Sameer c Baba |
| 8 | Azmi m Nadeem Shravan, Naresh Sharma |
| 9 | lp Sanjay Kapoor, Madhuri Dixit, Mukesh |
| 10 | Khanna, Dalip Tahil, Rita Bhaduri, Mushtaq |
| 11 | Khan, Adi Irani, Paresh Rawal |
| 12 | |
| 13 | |
| 14 | Raja (Kapoor) supports his elder brother |
| 15 | Brijnath (Rawal) when the latter’s business |
| 16 | empire is ruined by a fire and he is crippled. |
| 17 | The film’s villain, Ranasaab (Khanna), had |
| 18 | promised his daughter Madhu (Dixit) to Raja |
| 19 | when Brijnath was rich, but now callously |
| 20 | refuses to let the young couple meet and |
| 21 | perpetrates all manner of evil. As adults, Raja |
| 22 | and Madhu meet and fall for each other again |
| 23 | and eventually marry while bringing the |
| 24 | villains to book. Dixit outperforms hero |
| 25 | Kapoor with numerous solo ‘highlights’ - |
| 26 | Manmohan Desai’s phrase for autonomous |
| 27 | vignettes with little relation to plot and |
| 28 | designed mainly to showcase the star’s |
| 29 | versatility - and two major song hits, Nazrein |
| 30 | mili and Akhiyan milao. Indra Kumar’s third |
| 31 | hit in a row (after Dil, 1990, and Beta, 1992) |
| 32 | made Dixit, by way of Hum Aapke Hain |
| 33 | Koun...! (1994), for a brief period into the most |
| 34 | valuable star in the Hindi cinema. |
| 35 | |
| 36 | [[Film]] |