Ab Tumhare Hawale Watan Saathiyo 19 years old
An unusual journey of love
Major General Amarjeet Singh (Amitabh Bachchan) is a dedicated officer for the Indian army. His son Lieutenant Commander Vikramjeet Singh (Bobby Deol) follows in his footsteps and joins the army. Amarjeet is extremely proud of Vikramjeet but tragedy strikes when Vikramjeet is killed in action. Many years pass, Vikramjeet's son Captain Kunal Singh (Bobby Deol) joins the army but has no intentions of remaining there. He instead plans to leave, settle abroad and earn lots of money. Amarjeet is disappointed with Kunal as he hopes his grandson would do something to honour his deceased father. Kunal comes across a desert party and sees Shweta Bhansali (Divya Khosla). It is love at first sight for him but she totally ignores him and does everything to avoid him. However she is doing this for a reason- she was once married. Shweta fell in love and married Major Rajeev Singh (Akshay Kumar), unfortunately he was deployed for action on his wedding day and he had to leave his newly wed bride.
Credits
Ab Tumhare Hawale Watan Saathiyo Cast
Name | Character |
---|---|
Danny Denzongpa He was 56, now 76 years old | as Colonel Ashfaque Khan / Captain K.K. Madan |
Akshay Kumar He was 37, now 57 years old | as Major Rajeev Singh |
Govind Namdeo | as Maqsood Bhat |
Ashutosh Rana He was 40, now 60 years old | as Sikandar Khan |
Bobby Deol He was 37, now 57 years old | as Captain Kunaljit Singh / Lieutenant Commander Vikramjeet Singh |
Aarti Chabria She was 22, now 42 years old | as Trilok's wife |
Vishwajeet Pradhan He was 39, now 59 years old | as Subedar Abdul |
Nagma She was 29, now 49 years old | as Aarti V. Singh |
Sandali Sinha She was 33, now 53 years old | as Dr. Sakshi |
Big B He was 62, now 82 years old | as Major General Amarjeet Singh |
Ab Tumhare Hawale Watan Saathiyo Crew
Name | Department |
---|---|
Anil Sharma as Director. He was 49 (now 69) years old | Directing |
Shaktimaan Talwar as Screenplay. | Writing |
Shaktimaan Talwar as Story. | Writing |
Shaktimaan Talwar as Dialogue. | Writing |