Celebrating Raveena Tandon: 10 Must-Stream Movies For A Perfect Birthday Binge

Raveena Tondon
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Some stars arrive with a catchy song. Raveena Tandon arrived with presence—quick eyes, a sure-footed comic beat, and a spine that made even the loudest frames feel focused. To mark her birthday, we’ve built a Raveena Tandon birthday special that shows the spread: high-style action, clean comedies, city dramas, and romances that still hum on a late evening. Ten films, one mood: rewatchable.

If you’re queuing these up, start with our Movies hub, filter the shelf under Hindi movies, and shape the night with Raveena Tondon’s movie lineup, where you can find Action movies, Romance movies, Drama movies, and Crime movies or Thriller movies—add what fits, then press play.

Khiladiyon Ka Khiladi (Action/Thriller)

Action from the ’90s with showroom shine. Khiladiyon Ka Khiladi pits Raveena Tandon against Akshay Kumar and Rekha in a cat-and-mouse tale set around underground fight circuits and power battles. She stays calm when the place heats up. Controlled voice, clean reactions, zero fuss. Huge set pieces, slick frames, and a heroine who refuses to just decorate the chase: it’s the perfect start when you want style and stakes in the same breath.

Anari No. 1 (Comedy)

A reminder that timing is half the joke. Govinda’s double role is the circus; Raveena Tandon is the metronome that makes the gags click. One raised brow, a delayed line, and suddenly the punchline lands a notch harder. With Kader Khan and Johnny Lever fanning the chaos, songs arrive like breathers, and Anari No. 1 becomes that rare thing—broad comedy that doesn’t age into noise. Keep snacks within reach; you’ll finish this one smiling.

Laadla (Drama)

Factory floors, boardrooms, union notices—Ladla is a drama built from decisions. Anil Kapoor and Sridevi occupy the central clash; Raveena Tondon threads through with controlled warmth, the kind that steadies a scene without demanding attention. What makes it rewatchable is the grown-up texture: people negotiate, fail, regroup. She underplays beautifully, and the film trusts viewers to notice.

Bulandi (Drama/Action)

Rural codes seen through a star lens. Anil Kapoor doubles up; Rajinikanth drops by; Raveena balances empathy and will in a story about honour, verdicts, and the price of power. The confrontations are staged for impact but never drown out character. Watch the quiet beats of Bulandi—glances that shift a room’s temperature, pauses that push the story forward. It’s old-school, yes, but it still carries weight.

Sandwich (Comedy)

Door-slamming comedy with clean footwork in the Sandwich movie. Govinda races from mess to mess. Raveena Tandon and Mahima Chaudhry maintain the rhythm tight, gliding from straight-faced banter to full slapstick without losing charm. It’s bright, snackable film—perfect as a taste cleanser between heavier choices. The jokes don’t rest on cruelty. They rest on speed, and the movie never runs out of it.

Jaago (Crime/Thriller)

A procedural that refuses melodrama. Manoj Bajpayee and Sanjay Kapoor shoulder the casework, while Raveena anchors the human cost with pared-down grief and steady grit. Corridors, reports, courtrooms—Jaago keeps moving, and those restrained choices make the third act sting. If your marathon needs urgency without spectacle, this sits right in the middle like a tuning fork.

Shab (Drama/Romance)

Delhi at night: neon, rain, long shadows. Raveena Tandon plays a wealthy patron whose poise hides soft edges in Shab; the performance trusts stillness, and the camera rewards it. Around her, strivers chase love, work, and meaning. It’s adult in the best way—no grandstanding, just people finding language for complicated feelings. A lovely pivot when you want something modern and low-lit after the ’90s voltage.

Saajan Ki Bahon Mein (Romance/Drama)

Melody leads, story follows in Saajan Ki Bahon Mein. With Rishi Kapoor opposite and Tabu in the orbit, Raveena brings sincerity without syrup—pauses and glances do the heavy lifting. Separation and reunion arrive like old Hindi cinema should: gently, with room for breath. File it under “late-evening calm,” the kind of romance that settles the room rather than crowding it.

Divya Shakti (Action/Crime)

Early-’90s grit with a moral spine. Ajay Devgn’s crusading journalist takes on a crime web; Amrish Puri coils menace tight; Raveena threads tenderness through the heat so the vengeance has weight. The punches land, sure, but it’s the straight-arrow anger—and her steady presence—that keeps you watching past the set pieces. Divya Shakti is a solid bridge between glossy and grounded.

Tune Mera Dil Le Liya – Pinjara (Suspense/Romance)

Tune Mera Dil Le Liya is a romance movie that hides a curve. Raveena plays the arc patiently, letting small tells add up; Naseeruddin Shah lends the reveal its gravity. It’s intimate, attentive, and smart about how much to say out loud. End your slate here and let the credits sit for a minute—the final note is soft, but it lingers.

How To Line Up Your Marathon

Open easy, peak, cool, repeat. Start with Anari No. 1 and the Sandwich to loosen the shoulders. Turn the style dial up with Khiladiyon Ka Khiladi; keep the heat on with Divya Shakti. Park Laadla and Bulandi are at the core of the drama that argues like adults. As the night deepens, switch to city hush with Shab, then glide into Saajan Ki Bahon Mein, and close on Pinjara for the quiet after. One shelf, many idioms—exactly why a Raveena Tandon birthday special works.

Why These Picks Still Play In 2025

Range is the through-line. You get action that hasn’t dulled, comedies with real rhythm, and dramas that privilege choices over noise. Across them, Raveena Tandon toggles between spark and steel without losing centre—sometimes the punchline, sometimes the conscience, sometimes both. That’s why the rewatch holds: familiar beats, lived-in edges, and a performer who knows when to step forward and when to stand still.

Final Word

Build the queue, set audio or subtitles the way you like, and settle in. From single-screen swagger to urban ache, these ten films keep the promise of a birthday binge: comfort, charge, and a few scenes you’ll want to replay right away. Happy birthday, Raveena Tandon—the screen still listens when you enter.

Bio of Author: Gayatri Tiwari is an experienced digital strategist and entertainment writer, bringing 20+ years of content expertise to one of India’s largest OTT platforms. She blends industry insight with a passion for cinema to deliver engaging, trustworthy perspectives on movies, TV shows and web series.