Saanch Ko Aanch Nahin

Saanch Ko Aanch Nahin (alternative: Truth Needs No Support[1]) is a 1979 Bollywood drama film directed by Satyen Bose. This film was inspired by the story Panch Parmeshwar, written by the famous writer Premchand. The film was produced by Tarachand Barjatya.[2] The film stars Arun Govil, Om Shivpuri and Urmila Bhatt,[3] and also marked the debut of actress Madhu Kapoor.[4]

Saanch Ko Aanch Nahin
Directed bySatyen Bose
Produced byTarachand Barjatya
Written bySharad Joshi (story)
Govind Moonis (screenplay & dialogues)
Music byRaam Laxman
CinematographyAnil Mitra
Edited byMukhtar Ahmed
Release date
  • 1979 (1979)
Running time
138 min
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Plot

Manoharlal Agarwal (played by Om Shivpuri) and Satyaprakash Agarwal (played by Arvind Deshpande) are wealthy businessmen and close friends. Manoharlal enters into a dispute with Hariram and to solve this he asks his friend Satyaprakash to be the sole arbitrator. To bond their friendship more, Manoharlal proposes to wed his daughter Nirmala (played by Madhu Kapoor[5]) with Satyaprakash's son Ajay (played by Arun Govil). He also proposes this in order to get favour from Satyaprakash in his case.

Given the acceptances from both the families, Nirmala and Ajay keep meeting each other and soon fall in love. They are also engaged. But as the events in the case turn out, Satyaprakash gives his decision in favour of Hariram. This agitates Manoharlal and in vengeance he decides to break off the wedding. With his power of money he also gets himself appointed as a sole arbitrator in one of the cases involving Satyaprakash. He then decides to rule against Satyaprakash and ruin him financially. Nirmala is also made to marry another man, Murli. But just before the wedding, she decides to elope with Ajay. Seeing that her daughter has departed, Nirmala's mother goes in shock and falls critically ill. Hence Ajay brings back Nirmala so that her mother can feel better.

In the case, Manoharlal sees how Satyaprakash is really innocent. Hence, with all the truth in front of him, he is unable to give a false verdict just for the sake of his vengeance. He thus realises in what situation Satyaprakash had been when he ruled and realises how the truth needs no support and always wins. They both patch up their animosity and the two lovers, Nirmala and Ajay, also get married.

Cast

Music

The songs of the film are composed by the musical duo Raam Laxman on lyrics penned by Kulwant Jani and Ravindra Rawal.

No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Hari Hari Mehndi Ki Pattiyan" Shailender Singh, Usha Mangeshkar03:38
2."I Love You (I)"Kulwant JaniShailender Singh, Usha Mangeshkar03:37
3."I Love You (II)"Kulwant JaniShailender Singh, Usha Mangeshkar04:32
4."Aankhon Ankhon Mein Dil Gaya Apna" Shailender Singh03:32
5."Mere Bas Mein" Shailender Singh04:10
6."Aaj Meri Didi Ki Sagai"Ravindra RawalUsha Mangeshkar05:11

Reception

The film was a modest success. Film World wrote "Saanch Ko Aanch Nahin is no patch on the earlier hit pictures of Rajshri, like Dulhan Wahi...".[4] Madhu has said of her appearance in the film and several others in the 1980s: "I made mistakes and signed some wrong movies" and cited it as to why her career never took off.[6]

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gollark: I run a ton of different random programs and some use unreasonably large amounts of RAM.
gollark: It has some ancient Xeon, an equally ancient 1TB disk, and 4GB of RAM.
gollark: It monitors my server's performance stats, my Discord bot, the IRC network some friends made, and other things.
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References

  1. Riggs, Thomas (14 September 2007). Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television. Gale / Cengage Learning. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-7876-9050-2. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  2. Encyclopædia Britannica (India) Pvt. Ltd; Gulzar; Govind Nihalani; Saibal Chatterjee (2003). Encyclopaedia of Hindi cinema. Popular Prakashan. p. 552. ISBN 978-81-7991-066-5. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  3. Collections. Update Video Publication. 1991. p. 128. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
  4. Film World. T.M. Ramachandran. 1979. p. 161 and 181. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  5. Eve's Weekly. J.C. Jain. 1980. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
  6. India Today. Living Media India Pvt. Ltd. 1994. Retrieved 16 March 2012.
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