A flashback soon reveals that Aditya's pregnant wife Sunaina died when the buildings in their colony collapsed and killed hundreds of other people too. Aditya collected proof of the faulty buildings against builder Digvijay, who bribed everyone and tried to bribe Aditya too by offering Rs. 10 million to spare the matter, but Aditya spurned the offer by fighting everyone in the room and nearly killing Digvijay. Aditya spared him when the latter asked for forgiveness, but Digvijay brutally retaliated by hitting him with an axe and left him for dead. However, a bus full of medical students found the unconscious Aditya on a highway and saved his life. He then decided to use the power of idealistic, young, honest youths and trained students at National College to join his cause. Meanwhile, Sadhuram finds that all the honest officers attended National College for graduation. Shruti discovers that Aditya is the real Gabbar and is shocked but when he tells her the truth, she supports his cause.
Gabbar is back under the direction of Krish. It sounds like some superhero combo. It indeed is. Krish has given Gabbar the power to reduce the corrupt forces in the society to pulp. Gabbar is a teacher, an aam aadmi called Aditya, who teaches gravity and then defies it by bouncing the bribe seekers and their mentors against the ground when he is pushed into a corner by the corrupt system.
We performed a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials to investigate the effectiveness of surgical fusion for the treatment of chronic low back pain compared to non-surgical intervention. Several electronic databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL and Science Citation Index) were searched from 1966 to 2005. The meta-analysis comparison was based on the mean difference in Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) change from baseline to the specified follow-up of patients undergoing surgical versus non-surgical treatment. Of the 58 articles identified, three studies were eligible for primary analysis and one study for sensitivity analysis, with a total of 634 patients. The pooled mean difference in ODI between the surgical and non-surgical groups was in favour of surgery (mean difference of ODI: 4.13, 95%CI: -0.82 to 9.08, p = 0.10, I(2) = 44.4%). Surgical treatment was associated with a 16% pooled rate of early complication (95%CI: 12-20, I(2) = 0%). Surgical fusion for chronic low back pain favoured a marginal improvement in the ODI compared to non-surgical intervention. This difference in ODI was not statistically significant and is of minimal clinical importance. Surgery was found to be associated with a significant risk of complications. Therefore, the cumulative evidence at the present time does not support routine surgical fusion for the treatment of chronic low back pain.
"Pachaas pachaas kos door jab koi rishvat leta hai toh log kehte hai mat le varna Gabbar ajeaga..."
It is difficult to imagine the iconic villain from Sholay mouthing this dialogue, while mincing tobacco in one hand and beating his belt on the stones with the other. However, Bollywood's new Gabbar is anything but a villain. The long haired, beefy man with salt-and-pepper beard stands tall against every wrong. He is 'kaam se hero', but only 'naam se villain'.Akshay Kumar says corruption is a big issue and Gabbar is back is based on real incidents
Akshay Kumar's Gabbar Is Back might make you shudder as the popular soundtrack from the 1975 film Sholay plays in the background, but the actor clarifies that the film is not a sequel to the original. And in fact, the two Gabbars are as different from each other as chalk and cheese.
"Corruption is a big issue in India, and I liked Murugadoss' idea of dealing with it in the film. Gabbar Is Back is based on real incidents, but we haven't used the real names. The film is a different take on how to deal with corruption. Hats off to AR Murugadoss for writing this script 10 years back," says Akshay.Akshay Kumar in a still from Gabbar Is Back