Hanabari

Hanabari (The Haunted House) [ Bengali: হানাবাড়ী ] is a Bengali black and white thriller film released in 1952. Story, screenplay and direction were done by Bengali writer Premendra Mitra. The music director was Pabitra Chattapadhyaya. This movie was produced by Fakhrul Islam Khan in the banner of Mitrani Limited.[1]

Hanabari
Directed byPremendra Mitra
Produced byFakhrul Islam Khan
Screenplay byPremendra Mitra
StarringDhiraj Bhattacharya
Nabadwip Halder
Shyam Laha
Pranati Ghosh
CinematographyAnil Gupta
Edited byBaidyanath Banerjee
Production
company
Mitrani Limited
Release date
1952
Running time
112 minute
CountryIndia
LanguageBengali

Synopsis

A young man named Jayanta runs away from a haunted house and takes shelter in a nearby home. This is the house of Shrimanta, an artist. Jayanta tells the artist that he had been driving until his car broke down. He entered a house on Diamond Harbour Road, Kolkata where he faced a horrible creature that tried to kill him. Together, the two men go to the police station. The police inspector informs them that they are aware of the mystery. After that, a man bought the house and lives there with his nieces, Lalita and Namita. Jayanta knows the family personally and had a relationship with Lalita when they were in Burma.

He started an investigation and went to the House broker agency 'Bag and Nag' to know the history of the house. He decided to stay there for the security of the family and to solve the mystery. Surprisingly, a beggar moves around the house every day.

One night Jayanta, Shrimanta and the police find the ghostly creature and fire at it to no effect. The matter becomes more complicated when a piece of paper is discovered by Lalita's uncle that appears to be a clue to a hidden treasure. Jayanta suspects that Shrimanta is related to the matter. In the meantime, someone tries to kill Lalita's uncle and the police arrest Jayanta. Finally, it is revealed that all murder and ghostly atmosphere created by the real culprit for the treasure.[2][3]

Cast

The cast included:[1]

gollark: > Did I even mention EU yet?You did LAST time.
gollark: I think it was just because you were talking about some sort of crackpot "electric universe" "theory" with no basis in reality, not some sort of paradigm thing.
gollark: YET.
gollark: The eternal something of communism.
gollark: Plus, no slowmode!

References

  1. "Hanabari (1952)". imdb.com. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  2. "Hanabari (1952)". gomolo.com. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  3. "Hanabari (1952)". Indiancine.ma. Retrieved 25 March 2017.


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