Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (English Subtitled). It bowled me over and I was hooked on Shah Rukh Khan's films from that day onward! Oct 20, 1995 The love for Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge still going strong as it crosses an astounding 1200 week run! 24 October 2018| Bollyspice; Anupam Kher on The Accidental Prime Minister: “I’ve never worked so hard for any particular film” 11 October 2018| Bollyspice.
The city in the world. For22 years, l've here Every l take a walk down this street Every morning, the asks me my name. Chaudhary Singh? Where are you from?
Why are you here? Do l have a reply?
This land alien to me; and l to it No one here me. None except these doves. They're like me Neither do they to a country. Just drop down you find food Have your fill, then fly on When l fly?
L don't know. Of necessity, my are clipped l'm to my bread. To my Punjab 'When the sing in spring, it's time for memories' 'lt's time for swinging underthe boughs' 'Come home o'wanderer, your beckons' 'The mute soil doesn't read your letters' 'Come, kiss your soil, back the to life' 'Yes, you have your dreams; but we are too, your kin' 'You are so forgetful, but we miss you so.' ' 'Come home o'wanderer, your land beckons' Glory to The Goddess Yes Lajjo, l'm here safe and sound. Good Why is my one away?. Day for20 years. Dad has been down the very same street.
To his very same destination. Yet day, you call him up. Just to ask him, 'Have you reached?'
You won't understand Just it's a habit. Left unchanged. Tends to necessity.like. Philosophy, again? You're twelve Talk like a 12.year old! Why all this big talk? There's no childhood, no adulthood.
One is as grown.up as one feels All right! Now go to school, chew yourteacher's brains, okay? Why d'you forget the everyday? Just it's habit Will you get out? 'This is the time it's in 18 years' 'Some l have seen, comes to my mind' That's my diary!.
Only l can read it. That was so funny Let me read some more. This is a diary. Why hide from me? When a girl is up. Her her friend.
Show that to me You won't tell anyone, will you?. Never All right. Very well 'This is the time it's in 18 years' 'Some l have seen, comes to my mind.' ' 'shadow.like my eyes' 'Someone raps on my heart' 'Deep eyes want me to give up' 'When l look at my hands, there l see a face etched' 'A my cheeks' 'My hair smells of the on his hands' 'Yes, it's for the time in 18 years' 'l've seen this stranger who to my mind' Simi, you've begun writing well. And the boy lively. Ma, l've yet to set my eyes on him So there's no one? L was wondering.
One doesn't find such boys nowadays And you of someone you haven't even seen! This is no dream l may not have met him, seen him.
But he's there. Out there, somewhere 'The one who in my dreams.'
' 'the one who me.' ' 'just ask him to face me, once' 'What's he like?
Who is the one.' ' 'my lips will say yes to?' ' 'ls he l know? Ls he a stranger?' ' 'ls he for real, or just a legend?' ' 'He at me, from far, far away' 'Tell him not to rob me of my sleep' 'The one who in my dreams.' ' 'the one who me.'
' 'just ask him to face me, once' 'Some kind of is me' Rate this script: (3.00 / 2 votes). Aditya Chopra (born 21 May 1971) is an Indian filmmaker. His work as a director includes Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995), Mohabbatein (2000), Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi (2008) and Befikre (2016).He is also the current Chairman of India's multi-national film, media and entertainment conglomerate Yash Raj Films (YRF).
Chopra has written and produced a number of critically acclaimed and commercially successful films under the banner such as Veer-Zaara (2004), Fanaa (2006), Band Baaja Baaraat (2010), Jab Tak Hai Jaan (2012), the Dhoom series (2004, 2006 & 2013), Sultan (2016) and the Tiger series (2012 & 2017). He has broken away from typecast through production of off-beat films such as Kabul Express (2006), Chak De! India (2007), Rocket Singh (2009), Dum Laga Ke Haisha (2015) and Hichki!
(2018), that do not necessarily fit into the realm of 'Masala films'. Chopra is also the first to move towards a true film studio model through independent projects helmed by producers, writers and directors under his banner.
Major production and post-production work of the company is now carried out of YRF Studios (co-founded by his ex-wife Payal Khanna), where Chopra serves as Chief Executive. As of March 2018, he has produced eight films that have accumulated worldwide gross earnings of more than ₹200 crore, which is the most for an Indian film producer. In December 2009, Chopra rejected an extremely aggressive acquisition bid by Walt Disney, valued upwards of ₹2500 crore, to remain and continue purely as an independent entity exclusively funded by domestic enterprises.
Apart from emerging as an equitable brand, his company has earned the status of a movie movie mogul, through distribution networks spread across the globe. With a majority of his work being part of the highest grossing films of all time, the company is estimated to be net worth ₹6350 crore (FY17/18) by multiple NSE and BSE analysts, thereby making it the biggest and most successful film production company in the history of Cinema. The Government of India honoured him with the National Film Award for his contribution to the arts, on three separate years (1995, 2005 and 2007) through the Directorate of Film Festivals.
In June 2018, he was awarded membership into The Academy by the Producers Guild of America. Widely regarded as one of the most influential and powerful executives in Indian entertainment, Chopra has however rejected the publicity and fame that came with being Yash Chopra's son and the Chief Executive of Yash Raj Films. He has remained extremely media-shy and a passive individual, battling constant reports of an alleged dysthymic disorder throughout his three-decade career, resulting in very few public photos of him being in existence.