Dus


Director
Anubhav Sinha
Producer
Nitin Manmohan
Sohail Maklai
Music
Vishal Dadlani
Shekhar Ravjiani
Ranjit Barot
Cinematography
Vijay Arora
Editing
Amarjeet Singh
Story
Vinay
Yash
Dialogues
Anubhav Sinha
Action
Allan Amin
Gary Bexly
Art Director
Acropolis
Costumes
Naveen Shetty
S Rocky
Shaheed Aamir
Falguni Thakore
Banner
Karma Entertainment
Release Date
July 8, 2005
Run Time
152 Min
Language
Hindi

Star Cast
Sanjay Dutt, Sunil Shetty, Abhishek Bachchan, Zayed Khan, Esha Deol, Raima Sen, Gulshan Grover, Dia Mirza, Shilpa Shetty, Pankaj Kapoor, Rajendra Sethi, Ninad Kamat
DUS VIDEOS
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Dus Movie Photos
DUS MOVIE REVIEWS
Rediff.com Dus is full on timepass
This is full on time pass, sure. A racy actioner free of common sense, full of frilly thrills. And, as Mumbai parlance has it, 'total paisa vasool'. Read More
IndiaFM.com 2/5
Director Anubhav Sinha tries to camouflage the defect (lackluster screenplay) with stylish execution, great music, hair raising stunts, eye filling visuals, but let's not forget that the moviegoer wants to listen to a captivating story at the end of the day. Everything else is secondary! Read More
ApunKaChoice.com Fast but not moving
All said, Dus is a movie that will appeal to those who dig action thrillers, no matter what the story is. Brawns, bullets, bombs, high speed chases, pyrotechnics all is on the platter in Dus. The romance, in between, is a sore thumb. Read More
NowRunning.com 3/5
This film is so cool, you probably need sun glasses to watch it. Unlike its thriller predecessors like Sanjay Gupta's 'Kaante' Vikram Bhatt's 'Elaan' and Rajiv Rai's 'Asambhav' Dus isn't phoney cool. Read More
BBC.co.uk 2/5
The latest filmmaker to tackle the subject is Bollywood's Anubhav Sinha, whose action packed Dus focuses on the Anti Terrorist Cell's (ATC) mission to foil a deadly plot aimed at wreaking havoc during the Indian Prime Minister's goodwill visit to Canada. Read More
PlanetBollywood.com 5.5/10
"Dus" is the greatest proof that without a solid script, all the stars and stunts in the world can't save a film from mediocrity. Read More