At a session remembering actor Om Puri and director Kundan Shah at the ongoing Jio MAMI 19th Mumbai Film Festival, the people associated with the cult 1983 film revisited memorable behind-the-scene stories.
Puri died in January this year while Shah passed away earlier this month.
Satish Kaushik, who wrote the dialogues and also featured in the film, revealed Kher played a villain, "Disco Killer", but the part was not included in the final edit of the movie.
Filmmaker Vidhu Vinod Chopra, who was the production controller on the film, said he was the one to break the news to Kher.
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"I told Anupam, 'Your role is cut'. He said, 'Please, don't cut it too much'. I said, 'No, it has been cut'. He asked, 'How much of it has been cut?' I told him 'The entire role has gone from the film'," Chopra said.
Apart from Kher, there were "several other things" which did not make it to the film, such as a "sentimental song" called "Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro", out of which the title was born.
The film chronicled the story of two photographers (played by Naseeruddin Shah and Ravi Baswani), employed by a newspaper editor to expose the scandalous activities of a rich builder. They accidentally end up photographing a murder.
"On the premiere night, we thought we will be big stars. We went to Maratha Mandir
the first NFDC film was having a premiere we thought we will be welcomed with a red carpet," he said.
"Instead, Kundan was standing outside with tickets in his hands. When we came and said, 'Let's go, he was like first pay for the tickets I bought!'," Kaushik said.
Director Sudhir Mishra, who wrote the story and the screenplay of the film, revealed that Om Puri accepted his role without even reading the script.
Ranjit Kapoor, also a dialogue writer on "Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro", said there was a follow-up scene after the iconic sequence where Puri has a conversation with the dead body.
"There was another scene after Puri gives the dead body a lift where he plays chess with the dead body! The funny thing is, the dead body wins! It was our favourite scene," he recalled. Despite being a part of the script, the scene was never shot.
Chopra revealed that he was never meant to be in the film and it was purely accidental.
"There was an actor I selected for the role and had agreed to pay him Rs 500 for the four-day shoot. He thought it was Rs 500 per day. Just before shooting, he wanted Rs 2,000. I tried to bargain, that take 1,500 or 1,000, but he didn't agree," Chopra said.
"Then the costume came and I was like, 'Give it to me'."
"I told him, just shoot. I am saving you Rs 2,000," Chopra added.
It has been over three decades and the film has found a new audience but Chopra said no one knew that they were making a cult classic.
"We all talk (about the film) highly now, but to be honest, nobody knew what was being made. It was 7-8 hours long when it came to the edit table. We all thought he was a mad man. But I genuinely miss Kundan," Chopra said.