The film's soundtrack, composed by Anand-Milind, was moderately successful. Notable tracks include:
For cinephiles, Salaakhen is essential viewing for Sunny Deol’s signature style. It arrived a year before his monumental hit Gadar, serving as a reminder of his box office draw in the action genre. Deol’s portrayal of controlled rage—accentuated by his famous hand-to-hand combat scenes—provided the "paisa vasool" (worth the money) moments that cinema halls roared for. salaakhen 1998 exclusive
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In the turbulent landscape of 1990s Bollywood, where romance often reigned supreme, Salaakhen arrived in April 1998 as a gritty, visceral throwback to the "Angry Young Man" era. Directed by Guddu Dhanoa, the film is often remembered for its thunderous background score and the incendiary chemistry between Sunny Deol and Raveena Tandon. Today, we take an exclusive look back at a film that defined the "mass action" genre of its time. The female lead, Ritika , was a fresh
If you are hunting for the "salaakhen 1998 exclusive" content, here is your guide: The female lead
While Mithun Chakraborty was the bankable face, Salaakhen boasted a supporting cast that, in hindsight, reads like a who's who of character actors:
The female lead, Ritika, was a fresh face whose role as the love interest doubled as the moral compass. However, film buffs argue that the real "heroine" of Salaakhen was its background score—a thumping, electronic synth beat reminiscent of the 80s, which was oddly retro even for 1998.