Here's a report on the film:
If you want the rawest, grittiest Jung , skip the gloss and go straight to Mahesh Manjrekar’s Vaastav . Sanjay Dutt plays Raghu, a common man dragged into the underworld. The Jung here isn't about cool one-liners; it’s about screaming "Maa" while stabbing enemies. This film won him his first Filmfare Best Actor award. It is the apex of his "conflict cinema." sanjay dutt jung film
By 1996, Sanjay Dutt had perfected the art of carrying heavy weaponry on screen. Unlike the balletic action of Akshay Kumar or the thumping fights of Sunny Deol, Dutt’s action in Jung was . He didn’t fight with grace; he fought with desperation. Here's a report on the film: If you
Jung is perhaps most famous for the massive rift between director Sanjay Gupta and producer Satish Tandon. Creative differences led Gupta to disassociate himself from the film before it was finished. This film won him his first Filmfare Best Actor award
The film revolves around the character of Aarti (played by Shilpa Shetty), a young and innocent woman who gets trapped in a web of crime and corruption. Sanjay Dutt plays the role of Vijay, a small-time crook who gets involved with Aarti. As the story unfolds, Vijay tries to protect Aarti from the clutches of a powerful and ruthless politician, played by Rajinikanth.
In the mid-1990s, Bollywood was enamored with two things: the raw, muscular action hero and the quintessential “angry young man” fighting a corrupt system. Standing tall at the intersection of these trends was Sanjay Dutt, who delivered a memorable, albeit commercially mixed, outing with the 1996 action thriller (translated: The Battle ).