moviebox header nav
moviebox search icon
muted

Black Friday

2007

R

2 h 23 m

India

Tindakan

Kejahatan

Drama

Follows the investigations following the 1993 serial Bombay bomb blasts, told through the different stories of the people involved --police, conspirators, victims, middlemen.
More

8.4 /10

25393 people rated

Tonton online

Tonton di app

Episode

Pemeran Terbaik

Ulasan Pengguna

Episode
Pemeran Terbaik
Ulasan Pengguna

Episode

film
lklk
Netflix
Plex
Pemeran Utama(19)
starring avatar
Kay Kay Menon
DCP Rakesh Maria
starring avatar
Pawan Malhotra
Mushtaq 'Tiger' Memon
starring avatar
Aditya Srivastav
Badshah Khan
starring avatar
Aditya Srivastav
Nasir Khan
starring avatar
Dibyendu Bhattacharya
Yeda Yakub
starring avatar
Kishore Kadam
Inspector Bhaskar Dangle
starring avatar
Gajraj Rao
Dawood Phanse
starring avatar
Zakir Hussain
Inspector Nand Kumar Chougale
starring avatar
Ali Khan
Villain
starring avatar
Somesh Agarwal
Abdul Rashid
default avatar
Akhilesh Tripathi
Raju
starring avatar
Imtiaz Ali
Yakub Memon
starring avatar
Raj Arjun
Nasir Deklu
default avatar
Ragesh Asthana
Mohammad Dossa
default avatar
Sushovan Banerjee
Abhay Zarapkar
starring avatar
Asif Basra
Shanawaz Qureshi
starring avatar
Aditya Bhattacharya
Sheikh Aziz
starring avatar
Uday Chandra
Old Neighbour at Al Hussaini
starring avatar
Raj Singh Chaudhary
Mushtaq Tarani

Ulasan Pengguna

author avatar

Sipi Bwoy

11/04/2026 13:30
Subtitles are not there
author avatar

SocialIntrovert3020

23/01/2026 14:48
Black Friday-480P
author avatar

OfficialWaje

23/01/2026 12:53
Black Friday-480P
author avatar

Danish

17/09/2025 11:40
please upload this movie please I request you 🙏
author avatar

maymay

24/12/2024 04:12
I remember being there... I remember landing up at tuitions on 6th December 1992 and waiting for my friends to turn up, friends who lived very near the area most affected by the riots... I remember hearing that riots have broken out because the Babri Masjid has been demolished... I remember passing that week hidden behind blackened windows and Bombay looking like a dead city, my hysterical mother not even letting us children go down to the street to play. I remember the undercurrent of tension amongst communal solidarity between the hindus and muslims even where the riots did not reach. I remember 6th January 1993 even more clearly, A day when worried parents gathered out in the school football ground to pick up their children, Riots had broken out again. I remember my driver maneuvering the car expertly through bylanes and little side roads, protecting us kids from angry, approaching mobs, mobs who would not differentiate between hindu and Muslim, child or adult... all they wanted was blood. Even at fifteen, I knew that the January riots were political, not communal. The politicians of the day had seized the opportunity to make their power plays, giving it a communal twist, and the uneducated, scared or frustrated (sometimes all-three) common man fell for it and became part of it. I remember joining a charitable organization and handing out food to what seemed to be millions of people who had lost their homes and families. sitting at VT station. And I remember the 12th of March 1993 clearer than anything. I was in school, and the sound of what was probably the century Bazaar blast tore through the air in the afternoon, in the middle of the exam hall. It was the last day of the 10th Standard Board exams, And we didn't know what the sound was, Someone made a joke for me to stop farting... It was only when we got out of school that we heard about the blasts. All sorts of news started filtering in, but we didn't know exactly what the magnitude of the attack was, until we got home that is. When I got home, all the windows of our living room were broken, just from the shock waves of the Air India Building blast. The following few months were spent in dread, looking over our shoulders. Even then I knew that this was in retaliation to the riots, And even then we were looking for answers. We waited, making heroes out of policemen, and martyrs of the common people who died that day, waiting for some kind of answer, some justification to the madness. Now, fourteen years hence, The film comes along and reminds me of how big in magnitude the attack actually was, and how it had impacted my mind forever. When I had heard of the film being banned, I was sad, I had heard so much about Anurag Kashyap, but the censor board seemed to hate him, not allowing any film of his to be released. From the day I heard that he was making this film, I had wanted to see it. And I am glad I did. The film gave me personally a sense of some kind of answers, some sense of what happened, and why it happened. It was directed with panache, precise and to the point, without resorting to jingoism and anti-communal will. All it did was present what is now believed to be fact in a format that comes together superbly. Brisk editing, masterful direction, and real, earthy performances. It is exactly how a film should be made. A special mention should go to the real hero of the film, Mumbai City, always a picture of resilience and strength, and the film shows that. Despite the blasts, the riots and all the Chaos, Mumbai moves on, and thats what the city does to its people as well. Gives them a strength that can only be understood if you spend some time living in the city. If only the powers that be wake up, take notice, and put their money behind Anurag Kashyap, so that he can go on to make more Cinema that can put India on the map.
author avatar

سيف المحبوب👑

24/12/2024 04:12
Black Friday is definitely a well-directed film, more like a documentary with a few thrills.The film gives a clear picture of the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts, the entire modus operandi and how the cops follow through the case to nab the culprits. KK Menon has played his part well, like the others. Dialogues are good. There aren't any item songs, which are generally seen in underworld-type of movies, and fortunately too as that would've spoilt the essence of the film. The makers have tried to give an apt idea of the Indian police system. The entire music seems to be simple throughout the film, and it was Indian Ocean's "Bande" that made me wanna watch this film. A very realistic film, but I'm sure it cannot be watched more than once-it's too draggy for that and surely impossible.
author avatar

Soraya Momed

24/12/2024 04:12
Should include truth from Hindu side also. This movie does not show all truth. This false truth. First karsevack was killed by Muslim. Babri masgid was bullied on ram mandir . No one mentioned about that. First you should inform about Quran and JIHAD. Then we can talk about Hindu aggression.
author avatar

Messie Bombete

24/12/2024 04:12
An attempt to justify terrorists of 93 Bombay Blasts. Tiger Memon is shown to be leading the show but was actually just an employee of D-company serving Dawood Ibrahim. The Riots had phases. First involved Muslim instigation at Babri Masjid demolition. Director conveniently skips it and focuses only on second phase. Furthermore, nothing was shown about plight of bomb blast sufferers. It has been over 25 years since blasts happened, but only 1 terrorist found guilty was hanged. Then Chief Minister Sharad pawar rejected Dawood Ibrahim's (leading figure of bomb blast) surrender. Politicians do not have the will as they are afraid of getting exposed. This can only happen in India.
author avatar

🔱👑HELLR👑🔱

24/12/2024 04:12
Black Friday Is a movie to be watched by every Indian no matter if he don't like violence movie , its a real cinema & truth we should accept because many knows only one side of a blast story, after watching movie i saw both the side which i was not aware of , accused person who were involved in blast should be given severe imprisonment , but what about other who were indirectly involved it by landing RDX ,this was not possible without their help,actors in movie are real artist ,casting was excellent location are real , blast scene were terrific , hats off to director of the movie it needs guts to make such type of cinema , worth watching this movie,
author avatar

Abdo_santos_cat

24/12/2024 04:12
'Black Friday' is horrifyingly raw. It's overwhelmingly dark. It's frighteningly real. It's daringly gritty and graphic. Anurag Kashyap's film is one of the most skillfully executed movies of recent times. A great screenplay, strong light effects, the use of color, the direction, the performances, the background score work together very effectively. The cinematography, whether the shaky camera, the zooming or the closeup shots, works brilliantly. 'Black Friday' is slick (but not so much as to take away from the realness). Actors Kay Kay Menon, Aditya Shrivastava and Pavan Malhotra do an excellent job in the acting department. Based on Hussain Zaidi's book of the same title, 'Black Friday' revolves around the investigation of the infamous Bombay blasts (after which Bombay became Mumbai) in the early 90s. The movie opens with a 'boom' and from then on the intricate investigation proceeds. As the trial was still in process, Kashyap had to wait years before his movie could finally release in 2007. The director deserves credit for bravely making a film on such a serious and risky subject. However, it does have the documentary feel. Kashyap breaks the film into chapters and this gave the feeling that one was watching a documentary series. The pace isn't steady because the film does drag at certain points. 'Black Friday' is a brave well-made film and it is one that should be watched. Not everyone might like it but on some level they may appreciate it.
Disclaimer: All videos and pictures on MovieBox are from the Internet, and their copyrights belong to the original creators. We only provide webpage services and do not store, record, or upload any content.