11 O'Clock

11 O'Clock is a 1948 action film directed by Homi Wadia.[1] It starred Fearless Nadia, John Cawas, Atish Sayani and Aftab. The Austin car, which was a regular in most Fearless Nadia films, was given a billing with the main cast as "Austin Ki Bacchi" (daughter of Austin). The music was composed by Chitragupta.[2] Homi Wadia had left Wadia Movietone, having parted ways with his brother JBH Wadia and started his own film company called Basant Pictures.[3] He was to continue with the action genre, but produced more mythological films under this banner. His co-sponsor was M. B. Billimoria, who also distributed the film.[4]

11 O'Clock
Directed byHomi Wadia
Produced byBasant Pictures
Screenplay byHomi Wadia
StarringFearless Nadia
John Cawas
Music byChitragupta
CinematographyR. P. Master
Production
company
Basant Pictures
Distributed byM. B. Billimoria & Son
Release date
1948
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Plot

Suresh (John Cawas) has been left 1,000,000 (US$14,000) by his uncle in his will. The stipulation is that he has to be married and reach the lawyer's office by 11 O'Clock the next morning. The money will otherwise go to his cousin Harish. He entreats Harish to help him find a bride, but under the pretense of helping him, Harish tries to foil his plans. With help from Lakshmi (Fearless Nadia) and a friend called Tattu, who has the Austin, they manage to make it on time.

Production

Screenshot of Fearless Nadia in 11 O'Clock

Homi Wadia made 152 films under his Basant Pictures banner. Most were mythological and several were action adventure films starring Fearless Nadia. He made use of the same sets several times to save money.[3][4] Like all his other action films, this too had Nadia doing her stunts, fist raised in the air, western clothes, running over trains, fist-fighting bad guys and hefting them on her shoulders, to make the formula-driven genre be understood and accepted by the audiences by just seeing the poster.[4]

Discography

The film's music was composed by Chitragupta, with lyrics written by Rajjan.[5]

#TitleComposerLyricist
1 "Phoolon Ke Haar Laayi" Chitragupta Rajjan
2 "Tu Kaun Se Kaune Mein" Chitragupta Rajjan
3 "O Aasteen Kumari" Chitragupta Rajjan
4 "Nazar Haseenon Se Hum" Chitragupta Rajjan
gollark: Extremely intelligent 12490 IQ people know it's pronounced "gife", like "life".
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/293418077742170112/743243319533895730/117626862_2679838815563747_2178965322258026269_n.png?width=488&height=421
gollark: Repost from a while ago but relevant.
gollark: AAAAAAAAAA
gollark: Allowing some HTML subset could probably work, except I think the mobile apps run on some kind of half-native JS thing and not something which renders actual HTML.

References

  1. Rajadhyaksha, Willemen, Ashish, Paul. Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema (1999 ed.). British Film Institute. pp. 572, 594, 599. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
  2. citwf. "Eleven O'Clock". citwf.com. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
  3. Kaur, Sinha, Raminder, Ajay. Bollyworld: Popular Indian Cinema Through a Transnational Lens. SAGE Publications. pp. 47–48. ISBN 978-81-321-0344-8.
  4. Museum, Powerhouse. "11 O'Clock". Retrieved 27 June 2014.
  5. MySwar. "11 O'Clock". myswar.com. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.