Diwana (1967 film)

Diwana

DVD cover
Directed by Mahesh Kaul
Produced by Mukhram Sharma
N.C. Sippy
Written by C.L. Kavish
Starring Raj Kapoor
Saira Banu
Music by Shankar Jaikishan
Hasrat Jaipuri (lyrics)
Shailendra (lyrics)
Cinematography S.S. Samel
Edited by R.V. Shrikhande
Production
company
Anupam Chitra
Release dates
1967
Running time
171 min
Country India
Language Hindi

Diwana is a 1967 Indian Bollywood film directed by Mahesh Kaul. The film stars Raj Kapoor, Saira Banu, Lalita Pawar in pivotal roles.[1][2] The film made under the Anupam Chitra production banner had music by Shankar-Jaikishan with lyrics by Hasrat Jaipuri and Shailendra.[3]

Plot

Pyarelal (Raj Kapoor), a simple-minded and extremely naive young man, who was orphaned at birth, and now lives with Fatima (Lalita Pawar), a Muslim landlady who treats him like her son. Once, he sets on a journey and meets a young woman with whom he falls in love, Kamini Gupta (Saira Banu). Sarmoyadhar (Kamal Kapoor), the person who brought her up happens to be Pyarelal's real father. All of a sudden, Pyarelal is arrested on the charge of murder. No one believes that a harmless man like him could commit a crime, let alone kill. However, Pyarelal openly admits in court that he is indeed guilty, and demands capital punishment for it. The reason he does that unveild several secrets later on.

Cast

Soundtrack

# Title SingerLyricist
1 "Diwana Mujhko Log Kahen" Mukesh Hasrat Jaipuri
2 "Ham To Jate Apne Gaon" Mukesh Shailendra
3 "Ae Sanam Jisne Tujhe" Mukesh Hasrat Jaipuri
4 "Tumhari Bhi Jai Jai" Mukesh Shailendra
5 "Pate Ki Baat Kahega" Mukesh Shailendra
6 "Taron Se Pyare" Mukesh Hasrat Jaipuri
7 "Tumko Sanam Pukar Ke" Sharda Shailendra
8 "Tumhari Bhi Jai Jai (Female)" Sharda Shailendra

Awards

References

  1. Ritu Nanda (2002). Raj Kapoor: Speaks. Penguin Books India. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-0-670-04952-3. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  2. Ritu Nanda; Rāja Kapūra (1991). Raj Kapoor, His Life and His Films. R.K. Films & Studios. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  3. "Cast and crew Diwana (1967)". Gomolo.com. Retrieved 16 January 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.