Traffic Signal is a 2007 Indian Hindi-language social drama film co written, co produced and directed by Madhur Bhandarkar, starring Kunal Khemu, Neetu Chandra, Ranvir Shorey and Konkona Sen Sharma in the lead. Produced by Baldev and Kavita Pushkarna, and written by Sachin Yardi, it was released on 2 February 2007.Bhandarkar won the National Film Awards in 2007 as Best Director for this film, and Anil Moti Ram Palande won the first National Film Award for Best Make-up Artist.[1]

Traffic Signal
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMadhur Bhandarkar
Written bySachin Yardi
Madhur Bhandarkar
Produced byShailendra Singh
Madhur Bhandarkar
StarringKunal Khemu
Neetu Chandra
Konkona Sen Sharma
Ranvir Shorey
CinematographyMahesh Limaye
Edited byDeven Murdeshwar
Music byShamir Tandon
Production
company
Distributed byPercept Picture Company
Release date
  • 2 February 2007 (2007-02-02)
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget40 million (US$480,000)
Box office85 million (US$1.0 million)

Plot

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This film is about the lives and travails of people living around a fictitious traffic signal in Mumbai. Anybody who drives in Mumbai has experienced the 2-odd minute wait at a traffic signal.

The traffic signal includes a microcosm of people who derive their daily livelihoods from it. There are beggars (kids and adults), prostitutes, tricksters, eunuchs, and others who sell clothes, flowers, and trinkets. They speak quickly, act fast, and operate somewhat honourably (with each other) to make a meager living out of the harsh Mumbai street life. They owe allegiance and hafta (weekly "protection" fee) to the signal manager, Silsila.

Silsila grew up at the signal. He ran various trades there before he became the manager. He is an ideal manager: sensitive and caring of his workers yet ruthless when it comes to delivery. Silsila reports into a mid-level don, Jaffar, who in turn reports to the big boss, Haji Bhaijaan.

Life is well at the signal. A gentle girl, Rani, arrives at the signal to sell ethnic clothes. The initial fireworks blossom into deeper companionship with Silsila. Everything proceeds normally.

Unbeknownst to Silsila, Haji Bhaijaan is part of a larger nexus of evil that comprises politicians and the larger Mafia. Haji must play a dangerous game where he is forced to invoke the unwitting pawn, Silsila, to start a series of events that could ultimately destroy the traffic signal. Silsila is unaware of the larger consequences as he carries out his orders without question. But reality dawns on him when he is apprehended in a case of murder, extortion, and bribery where he was hardly aware of things.

The signal faces destruction. Silsila's world, and all the people who grew up with it, face extinction. Silsila is forced to choose between his life and his world. As his life moves from Green to Red, he may only hope that the signal moves from Red to Green.

Cast

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Soundtrack

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  1. "Aai Ga" – Vaishali Samant, Bhavika
  2. "Aai Ga (Remix)" – Vaishali Samant, Bhavika
  3. "Albela Saajan" – Kailash Kher
  4. "Dilruba" – Kailash Kher
  5. "Din Kuch Aise Guzarta Hai" – Jagjit Singh
  6. "Haath Chhute Bhi To Rishtey Nahi Chhuta Karte" – Jagjit Singh
  7. "Na Jis Din Teri Meri Baat Hoti Hai" – Bhupinder Singh
  8. "Na Jis Din Teri Meri Baat Hoti Hai (Duet)" – Kunal Ganjawala, Yogita Pathak
  9. "Piya Basanti" – Ustad Sultan Khan, K. S. Chithra
  10. "Signal Pe" – Baba Sehgal, Vinod Rathod, Neerja Pandit, Raj Pandit, Navin Prabhakar
  11. "Tere Bin Nahin Lagda" – Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
  12. "The Spirit of Signal" – Raju Singh
  13. "Yeh Zindagi Hai To Kya Zindagi Hai" – Hariharan, Sangeet Haldipur

Awards

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Reception

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This film is the last part of Madhur Bhandarkar's trilogy after Page 3 (2005) and Corporate (2006).[2] Konkona Sen Sharma's acting is critically acclaimed and she got very good reviews for her role. Reviews state that Konkona Sen Sharma is able to bring a shred of credibility to her part.[3]

References

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