Prem Pinda

Prem Pinda (Nepali: प्रेम पिण्ड) is a breakthrough,[1] first historic 1995 Nepali film directed by Yadav Kharel [2] and produced by actor Neer Shah. Prem Pinda, is an adaptation of popular play by Balkrishna Sama.[3] Sama was considered as ‘Shakespeare’ of Nepal with his evergreen plays like “Mutuko Byatha,” “Mukunda Indira,” “Bhater,” “Birami Ra Kuruwa,” “Boksi,” and “Andhabeg”. The movie was depiction of eternal love. The evergreen music by Sanbhujeet Baskota with some songs rendered by Asha Bhosle (Gairi Khet Ko) & Abhijeet (Ke Bhanu) propelled it to classic of Nepali Cinema.

Prem Pinda
Directed byYadav Kharel
Produced byNeer Shah, Manju Rana
Written byBalkrishna Sama
Music bySambhujeet Baskota
Release date
  • 1995 (1995)
CountryNepal
LanguageNepali

Storyline

The movie starts with the narrated video of the General's palace, giving a short review of the practice during the regime. In the next scene, a brother comes to the general’s palace with his sister to leave her there as a maid and receives Rs. sixty for that. The sister, played by Sunny Rauniyar, is a typical village girl who is anxious and big mouthed. She is then looked after by Kesari, who teaches her the basics of new palace life style. She is later named Sabita by General. She learns fast and is impressed with the lifestyles of the palace; does her best in getting reward from General every time. As General’s favorite, she is given special training for dance. On the other hand, she develops feelings for a servant boy working there named Nakul, and this love at first sight is a two way thing. However, their love is unknown to the world and they keep meeting in private. As General sets his lustrous eyes on Sabita's tempting youth, sensing the romance blooming between Nakul and Sabita, he tries everything to separate them forever. General, being the cruel guy has a history of killing one of his previous man servant for developing an affair with one of his personal care taker and also he would get Nakul beaten to death in front of everyone if known about the secret affair. In the middle of thorns and adverse hatred, blooms their love. After finding out about the alliance, General sends Nakul away and keeps Sabita inside the Palace under house arrest. Despite his attempts, General is not able to win Sabita’a heart and sends her away. Meanwhile, Nakul is in his death bed and remembers no one but Sabita. At the end of the story, Sabita meets Nakul minutes before his death where they share their last few words of love. Upon Nakul’s death, Sabita cries a lot. The movie ends with Sabita committing suicide by jumping off a cliff with Nakul’s corpse.[4][5]

Cast

Soundtrack

Song TitleRuntime
Gairi Khet Ko4:39
K bhanu ma kasori4:13
Ridi kali2:55
Chait mass3:53
Sapana Hoyo4:11
Timrai bainile3:39
Mirmiri Jhyalaima 2:13

Prem Pinda is also known for having some ever green sound tracks. "Gairi Khet ko" by (Asha Bhosle) is the most famous Nepali Song. After more than a decade of its release, the song is still preferred and performed on various platforms. Lately, the song has been remade into a rock version by musician Samrit Lwagun entitled Gairi Rocks. [6]

Controversy

Prem Pinda, based in the novel by Bal Krishna Sama, subsequently differs from the original book. It has been quoted to be based in the real life events of General Adwin during (Rana regime) in Nepal. Among many historic Nepali movies, Prem Pinda has been criticized for not justifying history. [7][8]

Accolade

Marking Nepalese film industry, the movie has been recommended as a must watch and is listed in the top 10 nepali movie of all time.[9] [10] Often mentioned in media, the movie has been noted by media persons as a good literary movie holding the essence of Nepali culture.[11]

gollark: Yep.
gollark: Or the ones without fire hydrants, but who knows really.
gollark: I constantly get told to do the captchas again despite, I'm pretty sure, correctly identifying fire hydrants.
gollark: I say this because they are compiled to static classes.
gollark: They're basically just static classes in F#.

See also

References

  1. "First Nepali Movies". Wave Magazine. http://www.wavemag.com.np/. November 2004. Archived from the original on 21 April 2013. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  2. HIMALAYAN NEWS SERVICE (5 August 2011). "Director with lyrical thoughts". The Himalayan Times. http://www.thehimalayantimes.com/. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  3. Yuba Nath Lamsal (2008). "Balkrishna Sama: Master Playwright In Nepali". The Rising Nepal. www.gorkhapatra.org.np. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  4. Anisha. "Nepali Movie Prem Pinda". Boss Nepal. www.bossnepal.com/. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  5. "Synopsis: Prem Pinda". http://artnepal.wordpress.com/. 23 February 2013. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
  6. Saroj (22 February 2012). "गैरी खेतको सिरै हान्यो – ओरिजिनल भर्सेस रक". www.sangeetsansar.com. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  7. Avash Karmacharya (25 November 2009). "NEPAL: Turning the pages aesthetically". Republica. http://thehimalayanbeacon.com/. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  8. Avash Karmacharya (25 November 2009). "Turning the pages aesthetically". Republica. http://archives.myrepublica.com/. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  9. Anisha. "Top Ten Nepali Movies Of All Time". Boss Nepal. www.bossnepal.com/. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  10. "5 Nepali Films You Should Not Miss". 7 January 2012.
  11. "80th birth anniversary of Shuskhin was marked". www.russiancultureinnepal.org/. www.russiancultureinnepal.org/: Russian Center of Science & Culture. 31 July 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
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