Aabroo (1968 film)

Aabroo (Honour) is a 1968 Hindi romantic crime drama film directed by C. L. Rawal.[1] The story, screenplay and dialogue were written by G. L. Rawal. It was produced by B. L. Rawal under the Rawal Films banner.[2] The music directors were Sonik-Omi and the lyricist was G. L. Rawal.[3][4] The director of photography was M. N. Malhotra.[5] The film starred Ashok Kumar, Nirupa Roy, Vimi, Rehman, Leela Naidu, Shashikala and Deepak Kumar.[6]

Aabroo
Directed byC. L. Rawal
Produced byB. L. Rawal
Written byG. L. Rawal
StarringAshok Kumar
Vimi
Nirupa Roy
Leela Naidu
Rehman
Deepak Kumar
Music bySonik Omi
CinematographyM. N. Malhotra
Edited byPran Mehra
Production
company
Rawal Films
Release date
  • 20 October 1968 (1968-10-20) (India)
Running time
170 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

The story revolves around two lovers, Manish and Neena, who are separated when Neena is forced to marry her sister's husband. The husband is killed and Manish is arrested for his murder.

Plot

Manish (Deepak Kumar) lives with his brother P. K. Anand (Ashok Kumar) an advocate and sister-in-law Tilottama (Nirupa Roy), in Kashmir. Manish has just returned from abroad having completed his medical degree. Neena (Vimi) has come to Kashmir for her holidays, meets Manish and they fall in love. Manish is waiting to get a job confirmation from one of the hospitals in Bombay. Neena's sister Sharda (Leela Naidu) lives with her husband Chandrashekhar Verma (Rehman) in Bombay. The two are very much in love with each other. Being childless, Sharda is harassed by her mother-in-law Mrs. Verma (Lalita Pawar). Sharda asks Shekhar to get married again, but he refuses. Mrs. Verma's harassment of Sharda turns to tragedy when two relatives Darwajalal (Jeevan) and Shanta (Shashikala) come to live with them. Neena is also staying in the house with her sister. Darwazalal poisons Sharda, who while dying makes Neena promise that she will marry Chandrashekhar. After Sharda dies, Neena and a distraught Chandrashekhar get married. Chandrashekhar has no interest in Neena as he is still grieving the loss of his beloved wife Sharda.

Manish finally gets a job in Bombay and Anand asks him to stay with his good friend Chandrashekhar till he settles in. On arriving at Chandrashekhar's house, Manish is shocked to find the girl he loves, Neena, now married to Chandrashekhar. Darwajalal and Shanta start rumours regarding Manish and Neena, however, Chandrashekhar overhears Darwajalal's plotting, but is hit on the head by him. His situation is critical and the attending doctor is Manish. When Chandrashekhar dies, Manish is arrested for murder. After a court scene where Anand fights for the prosecution and his wife Tillottama defends Manish, the nefarious planning of Darwajalal and Shanta is revealed.

Cast

Soundtrack

The music was composed by the duo Sonik-Omi while the lyricist was G. L. Rawal. The playback singers were Asha Bhosle, Mohammed Rafi, Mukesh and Manna Dey.[7]

Song list

#SongSinger
1 "Jinhe Hum Bhoolna Chaahe" Mukesh
2 "Har Chehra Yahan Chand" Mohammed Rafi
3 "Meri Aankhon Ke Ujale" Mohammed Rafi
4 "Yeh Dil Nahin Ki Jiske Sahare Jeete Hain" Mohammed Rafi
5 "Aap Se Pyaar Hua, Aap Khafa Ho Baithe" Mohammed Rafi
6 "Aap Se Pyaar Hua, Aap Khafa Ho Baithe" Mohammed Rafi, Asha Bhosle
7 "Aai Aai Re Holi" Asha Bhosle, Manna Dey
gollark: Honestly, I doubt it'll actually change.
gollark: You're more likely to be elected if you're better at manipulating people/are charismatic/whatever, and the amount of people who actually notice "hey, this law is impossible to implement and stupid" is much smaller than the amount of voters.
gollark: Well, the political system does select for people like that a bit...
gollark: You know, if you think about it, all these explanations are terrible for everyone else (well, in Australia, or actually most western countries). Yay!
gollark: That anti-encryption law.

References

  1. Ashish Rajadhyaksha; Paul Willemen; Professor of Critical Studies Paul Willemen (2014). Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema. Routledge. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-135-94318-9.
  2. "Aabroo 1968". Gomolo.com. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  3. Nabendu Ghosh (1995). Ashok Kumar: His Life and Times. Indus. ISBN 978-81-7223-218-4.
  4. "Aabroo 1968". Lyricsbogie.com. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  5. "Aabroo 1968". The Rest. Archived from the original on 28 October 2014. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  6. "Aabroo 1968". Alan Goble. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  7. "Aabroo 1968". Hindi Geetmala. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.