Producer - director Vidhu Vinod Chopra made his directorial debut with Murder At Monkey Hill in 1976 that won him the National Award , which is the top honor given by the Government of India. Two years later, in 1978, this young FTII (Film & Television Institute of India) graduate made a documentary film called An Encounter with Faces, which was nominated for the Academy Award s in 1979. The poignant documentary highlighting the plight of India's destitute children, also won the Grand Prix at the Tampere International Short Film Festival. While critical praise and recognition came to him with these early works, the maverick director then went on to make his first mainstream Hindi film called Sazaaye Maut (Death Row) in 1981. Critical and popular acclaim is hard to come by simultaneously, Chopra is one producer - director who has perfected the art and his body of work is testimony to this. Movies like Khamosh, Parinda, 1942: A Love Story, Kareeb and Mission Kashmir, which were directed by Chopra, were hailed by critics and audiences alike - thus bridging the gap between critical and popular cinema. The year 2003 was a year of firsts for Chopra. Moving away from direction, he wrote his first script, handed over the directorial reigns to a debut ant and also made his first solo production under his banner with Munna Bhai M.B.B.S. The movie, directed by Rajkumar Hirani, went on to become one of the most popular films Indian cinema has ever seen. So impressed was the West by this movie that leading Hollywood studio Twentieth Century Fox acquired the rights of the film's screenplay from Chopra and will be adapting it into an English film. The second movie in the Munna Bhai series, Lage Raho Munna Bhai (2006) propagated Mahatma Gandhi's principles and portrayed them in a new light. The 'Gandhisim' wave that spread across India, post the release of the movie was unprecedented. Also in the pipeline is the third installment in the series called Munna Bhai Chale Amerika. Munna Bhai is the first ever successful Indian movie franchise. A firm believer in encouraging talent, Chopra also wrote and produced another debut ant director's film - Parineeta. Directed by ad-man Pradeep Sarkar, the movie went on to receive critical and popular acclaim and award s galore. After a hiatus of seven years, Chopra took up the director's baton yet again with the dramatic action-thriller Eklavya - The Royal Guard. The movie won critical acclaim from the Indian and world press alike. 'A lost film by David Lean' is what L.A. Times touted it as. Vinod Chopra Films also has a co-production deal with Anil Ambani's Reliance BIG Pictures that was announced at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival. Two films to be made under this deal are a mainstream English language film Broken Horses, which is being directed by Chopra and a romantic fantasy adventure Taalismaan, which is based on an epic novel, to be directed by Ram Madhvani. Vinod Chopra Films has won national and international recognition for several of its films. The latest release, 3 idiots, has become India's biggest worldwide box office performer in history, whose Box office collections rank higher than those of the second and third ranked films combined. Apart from the traditional market for Indian films, 3 idiots has done historic business even in non-traditional secondary markets, such as Taiwan and Korea, where the universality of the film's message has become a rage with the local audiences. Forthcoming Films from Vinod Chopra Films include the next installment in the Munna Bhai series to be directed by Rajkumar Hirani, debut ant director Rajesh Mapuskar's heartwarming father-son story, Ferrari Ki Sawaari (A ride in a Ferrari), and Chithiyaan (Letters), a classic young love story to be directed by Tanuja Chandra. Vidhu Vinod Chopra has commenced planning and pre-production work on the banner's first mainstream English language feature, Broken Horses, in March 2011. The film is expected to commence lensing in September 2011. Vinod Chopra Films is one of the leading film production houses in India. Some of the best talent in the Indian film industry has either been launched or has worked with Vinod Chopra Films.
Farhan Qureshi and Raju Rastogi want to re-unite with their fellow collegian, Rancho, after faking a stroke aboard an Air India plane, and excusing himself from his wife - trouser less - respectively. Enroute, they encounter another student, Chatur Ramalingam, now a successful businessman, who reminds them of a bet they had undertaken 10 years ago. The trio, while recollecting hilarious antics, including their run-ins with the Dean of Delhi's Imperial College of Engineering, Viru Sahastrabudhe, race to locate Rancho, at his last known address - little knowing the secret that was kept from them all this time.