Veer (2010 film)

Brave) is a 2010 Indian Hindi-language epic action film directed by Anil Sharma and produced by Vijay Gulan.

Along the way, Veer encounters Princess Yashodhara (Zareen Khan), the daughter of Gyanendra Singh, and is mesmerised by her beauty.

As the Pindaris are illiterate with little knowledge of the world outside their country, Veer and his younger brother, Punya Singh (Sohail Khan), are sent to complete their education at a college in London.

He also manages to get close to Yashodhara, who is also a student at the college with her older brother, Crown Prince Gajendra (Puru Raaj Kumar).

A few months before the completion of their education, Yashodhara’s brother, who has been planning to quell the Pindari revolution, discovers Veer and Punya’s true identity.

Location shooting at Amber Fort in Jaipur was also interrupted when several onlookers were injured and the Rajasthan High Court ordered a halt to filming.

A case was filed against Anil Sharma accusing the film crew of damaging the fort, violating several conservation laws and causing the structure's 500-year-old roof to collapse.

[11] Rochester Castle appears as a backdrop for a musical sequence named 'Everytime I look into your eyes I see my paradise' featuring a horse and carriage.

The Chatham Dockyard provided the setting for many of the montage shots used in the UK dance sequences as well as the location where Veer first meets Yuvraji Yashodhara.

2 million suit against Khan, Anil Sharma and producer Vijay Galani, alleging that the film borrowed elements from his novel, Trilogy of Wisdom.

[18] Noyon Jyoti Parasara of AOL.in also praised Salman Khan but added "Overall, 'Veer' has its pluses but it is sadly restricted to a very average film.

"[19] Among U.S. critics, Frank Lovece of Film Journal International enjoyed it as "hokum of the highest order, punctuated with the most rousing musical sequences of the last several Indian imports," and after dissecting the film's numerous historical and chronological fallacies said, "Stateside Bollywood fans more accustomed to modern-day musical romances or stylish crime thrillers will be pleasantly surprised to find a period piece that's more Xena: Warrior Princess than A Passage to India.