A voiceover reveals Vikram now lives in a remote monastery. The town is free. A statue of a masked warrior is built in the square. And legend says, if injustice ever returns to Kasauli, the man called "Jung" will come back from the dead one more time.
Captain Vikram Rathore (Sanjay Dutt) was the pride of the Indian special forces—a man with fists of iron and a heart of gold. On his last leave before a critical mission, he returns to the hill town of Kasauli to visit his aging mother and younger sister, Pooja. But the town has changed. A ruthless arms dealer and drug baron, Zafar Khan (played with menacing glee by Danny Denzongpa), has choked the life out of the place. Those who resist vanish. Those who pay survive. Jung Sanjay Dutt Movie
Sanjay Dutt, in civilian clothes, feeds pigeons at a temple. He looks at the camera, gives that trademark slight smirk, and crushes an empty cigarette pack. Fade to black. Why this fits Sanjay Dutt: The story plays to his dual strengths—the vulnerable, emotional son/brother (a la Sadak or Vaastav ) and the explosive, larger-than-life action hero (a la Khalnayak or Agneepath ). The mask allows for brooding intensity, and the raw, hand-to-hand combat style suits his physicality. The title Jung (War) is punchy, one-word, and unmistakably 90s Bollywood. A voiceover reveals Vikram now lives in a remote monastery
The first sign is Zafar’s opium godown going up in flames, all guards found tied up with broken limbs. The second is his illegal weapons convoy ambushed in a mountain pass—the trucks overturned, the cash gone, a single black mask left on the windshield. And legend says, if injustice ever returns to