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Chaahat 1996 -hindi- Shah Rukh Khan-pooja Bhatt... ((link)) Official

A fun, upbeat track showcasing the joyful, comedic chemistry between Shah Rukh Khan and Anupam Kher.

: Represented by Reshma's dark obsession, where love is treated as a commodity to be bought or forced.

Shah Rukh Khan’s character, Roop Singh, is not the sanitized, diaspora-friendly hero prevalent in contemporaneous films like Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995). Roop is a street singer, economically marginalized, and characterized by a raw, almost feral energy. Chaahat 1996 -Hindi- Shah Rukh Khan-Pooja Bhatt...

At its core, Chaahat is a story about the purity of love clashing with the destructive power of unbridled obsession.

He plays a menacing, overprotective brother who will go to any lengths for his sister’s happiness. A fun, upbeat track showcasing the joyful, comedic

Shah Rukh plays Roop, a simple, good-hearted musician from a small town who moves to the city for his mother’s medical treatment. There, he meets Pooja (Pooja Bhatt), a no-nonsense nurse who saves his mother’s life. Roop falls for her instantly, but Pooja’s heart belongs to someone else—her deceased lover’s memory. Enter Ajay (Naseeruddin Shah), a powerful, sinister businessman with a god complex and a dangerous obsession with Pooja. Soon, Roop’s pure love turns into a toxic obsession, leading to a violent clash between two men—both deeply flawed—for the same woman.

When Roop rejects Reshma’s advances, the Narang siblings unleash a wave of terror. Ajay uses his immense wealth and systemic power to isolate Roop, ruin his career, and physically endanger his loved ones, leading to a violent, high-stakes climax where Roop must fight to protect his love and his dignity. Performance Highlights: Khan, Krishnan, and Shah Roop is a street singer, economically marginalized, and

The film is known for its emotional love triangle, SRK playing a singer from a small town, and Naseeruddin Shah’s intense negative role. The music was composed by , with famous songs like “Neele Neele Ambar Par” (by Udit Narayan and Kavita Krishnamurthy) and “Janam Deewangi Deewana Tera.”

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