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Sholay's original version showing Thakur killing Gabbar Singh to release at Indian Film Festival of Sydney

The original ending of Sholay involved Thakur, played by Sanjeev Kumar, killing Gabbar Singh (Amjad Khan) and avenging the death of his family.

Sept 24, 2025 11:44 am IST
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When Sholay was first made, director Ramesh Sippy wanted the climax to be different. He wanted the villain, Gabbar Singh, to die at the hands of Thakur (played by Amjad Khan and Sanjeev Kumar, respectively). However, distributors convinced him to alter it to the final version where Thakur spares him and Gabbar is arrested instead. However, that original version was shot, and is now releasing, 50 years after the film first hit the screens.

Sholay's original ending to screen in 4K

Amjad Singh played the dreaded dacoit Gabbar Singh in Sholay.

The Indian Film Festival of Sydney (IFFS), presented by the team behind the team of Indian Film Festival of Melbourne (IFFM), announced that the newly restored version of Sholay will be its centrepiece film this October. The original ending of Sholay, where Thakur kills Gabbar, will be the one screening at the IFFS, which runs from 9 to 11 October.

One of the most iconic films in Indian cinema history, Sholay has been meticulously restored in 4K by the Film Heritage Foundation in collaboration with Sippy Films. The process, years in the making, involved locating a rare colour reversal print in London and recovering original camera negatives and long-lost deleted scenes from a warehouse in Mumbai. The result returns the film to its original 70mm glory.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Abhimanyu Mathur

Abhimanyu Mathur is Deputy Editor, Entertainment at Hindustan Times. With almost 15 years of experience in writing about everything from films and TV shows to cricket matches and elections, he inhales and exhales pop culture and news. Currently, he watches movies and TV shows and talks to celebrities for a living, while occasionally writing about them as well. A journalism graduate of Delhi College of Arts and Commerce, Delhi University, Abhimanyu began his career with Hindustan Times at the age of 20, swapping classrooms for newsrooms at an early age. He began his journey in the early days of digital journalism, later switching to the madness of print journalism. Work has led him to far off places like Japan and Jordan, as well as to the interiors of Haryana and the Indo-Pak border. He dabbled in city reporting in places like Meerut, Gurgaon, and Delhi, covered the Olympics and Cricket World Cups, before finding his calling in entertainment and lifestyle during the pandemic. A Rotten Tomatoes Certified Film Critic, he is equally at home covering stories on ground as he is interviewing celebrities and studios, and sometimes prefers to shepherd teams in delivering traffic through the day. Even as his role has evolved from reporter to supervisor over the years, his first love remains writing (and of late, talking on camera). With a good understanding of cinema and its trends, and a keen eye for detail, he continues to spark conversations around showbiz for readers around the world.

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