Directorial debut and Success (1993-2000) Dharmesh made his directorial and screenwriting debut with the action romance
Lootere (1993), starring
Sunny Deol and
Juhi Chawla in lead roles. Produced by his brother,
Suneel Darshan, the film emerged as a commercial success at the box office. Dharmesh achieved his breakthrough with his next directorial venture, the romantic drama,
Raja Hindustani (1996), starring
Aamir Khan and
Karisma Kapoor in lead roles. The film told the story of a
cab driver (Khan) from a small town who falls in love with a rich young woman (Kapoor). It received positive reviews from critics upon release, with praise for its direction, story, screenplay, soundtrack, and performances of the cast. The film emerged as a major blockbuster at the box office, grossing ₹76.34 crore worldwide, ranking as the
highest-grossing Hindi film of the year, and the fourth highest-grossing film in India of the 1990s.
Raja Hindustani won several awards including the
Filmfare Award for Best Film, and earned Dharmesh his first nomination for the
Filmfare Award for Best Director. Dharmesh began the new millennium with directing and screenwriting the
masala film Mela and the musical romantic drama
Dhadkan.
Mela, which starred Khan,
Twinkle Khanna and his real-life younger brother
Faisal Khan in lead roles, was the first
Bollywood release of the new millennium. The film opened to highly negative reviews from critics upon release, and emerged as a major commercial disaster at the box-office.
Mela is considered to be one of the worst films of Hindi cinema. Dharmesh's next directorial that year was
Dhadkan, starring
Akshay Kumar,
Shilpa Shetty,
Suniel Shetty, and
Mahima Chaudhry in lead roles. Inspired by
Emily Brontë's
novel Wuthering Heights, the film received positive reviews from critics upon release, with praise for its direction, soundtrack, and performances of the cast. It emerged as a major commercial success at the box office, grossing ₹26 crore worldwide, ranking as the
fourth highest-grossing Hindi film of the year.
Dhadkan earned Dharmesh his second nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Director.
Career decline (2001 onwards) After doing three back-to-back successes—
Lootere,
Raja Hindustani and
Dhadkan—and one forgettable film
Mela, his next venture was the romance
Haan Maine Bhi Pyaar Kiya (2002), starring
Akshay Kumar,
Karishma Kapoor and
Abhishek Bachchan in lead roles. Inspired by
T. Rama Rao's Hindi-language drama film
Ek Hi Bhool (1981), the film received mixed-to-negative reviews from critics, and emerged as a commercial failure at the box office. He next directed and screenwrote the romantic drama
Bewafaa (2005) starring
Akshay Kumar,
Kareena Kapoor,
Anil Kapoor and
Sushmita Sen in lead roles. Inspired by
B. R. Chopra's
Gumrah (1963), the film received mixed reviews from critics upon release, and emerged as an average grosser at the domestic box office; however, it emerged as a commercial success in overseas markets. His last directorial to date is the romantic comedy
Aap Ki Khatir (2006) starring
Akshaye Khanna and
Priyanka Chopra in lead roles. Inspired by the 2005 American film,
The Wedding Date (2005), the film received negative reviews from critics upon release, and emerged as a commercial disaster at the box office. ==Filmography==