Ajay Devgn may not have won the National Award for Best Actor that year (he lost to his own co-star, ironically), but he built a monument. Watching the film today, you realize that Bhagat Singh wasn't a legend because he died. He was a legend because he lived—with his eyes wide open, knowing exactly where the road would lead.
Not just a biopic. A resurrection.
There is a moment in Rajkumar Santoshi’s The Legend of Bhagat Singh that silences the theater. It is not a bomb blast or a gunshot, but the sound of a young man humming a patriotic song while walking to the gallows. In that scene, Bhagat Singh (Ajay Devgn) isn't a revolutionary; he is a poet. He isn't a terrorist; he is a martyr. And he isn't angry; he is utterly, terrifyingly calm. The The Legend Of Bhagat Singh
When the hangman pulls the lever, Santoshi refuses to show the drop. Instead, we see the faces of the British officers: sick, shaken, ashamed. They have won the battle, but they look like they have lost their humanity. Ajay Devgn may not have won the National