Mela (1948 film)

Mela
Directed by S.U Sunny
Produced by Wadia Movietone
Written by Azm Bazidpuri
Starring Dilip Kumar
Nargis
Rehman
Music by Naushad
Cinematography Fali Mistry
Edited by Moosa Mansur
Release dates
1948
Country India
Language Urdu/Hindi

Mela (The Fair) is a 1948 romantic tragedy Urdu/Hindi film. It was produced by and directed by S.U. Sunny for Wadia Movietone. It starred Dilip Kumar, Nargis, Jeevan, Rehman and Nur Jehan.[1] The film's music was composed by Naushad. Mukesh gave playback for Dilip in this film and one of the "Mukesh hits" was "Gaye Ja Geet Milan Ke". Mohammed Rafi's voice was used just once, for the popular song "Ye Zindagi Ke Mele", set in a fair-ground and picturised on a wandering mendicant at the start of the film.[2] Lyrics of the songs were written by Shakeel Badayuni with story and dialogue by Azam Bazidpuri.[3]

The musical film, set in a village milieu, was a tragic love story involving Manju and Mohan. Manju is married off to a seventy-year-old gentleman, who declares that he didn't realise he was being married to someone so young. After the husband's death, the lovers meet and Manju dies accidentally. Mohan is convicted for her murder, and after spending twenty years in jail, he too falls off the cliff and dies when he follows Manju's spirit.

Plot

Manju lives in the village with her father a school teacher and step mother. Mohan (Dilip Kumar) and Manju (Nargis) live in the same village and are friends since childhood. The friendship develops into love and they are both excited about their wedding. Mohan decides to go into town to buy jewelry for the marriage. On the way he is robbed and becomes unconscious with his injuries landing him in a hospital.

Mehkoo (Jeevan), is a no-good retired from the army man, who lusts after one of the young village girls. He is influential with Manju's stepmother and, with her by his side he calls the village panchayat. Here he denounces Mohan as a cad who has run way with a girl, telling them that he won't return for the marriage. Since th wedding day has been fixed, the panchayat agrees with Mehkoo that Manju should get married on the day decided. A supposedly suitable groom is found for Manju, who turns out to be a seventy-year-old sickly man. When he enters the wedding chambers, he finds that Manju is too young to be his bride. Remorseful, he asks forgiveness but pleads with her to care for his children. Manju takes on the role of the old man's wife. The man dies with Manju now left a young widow in charge of the children.

One night in stormy weather, she goes out to meet Mohan, and is killed when she falls off a cliff. Mehkoo and other villagers arrive to convict Mohan of murdering Manju. Mohan says nothing in his defense and is sentenced to twenty years imprisonment. On release from jail, Mohan goes to the same place where Manju had died. He sees her spirit, who beckons him to follow her. As he does, he falls off the cliff edge and dies.

Cast

Production

Review

The film came in for harsh criticism from the editor of Filmindia, Baburao Patel. In the December 1948 issue of the cine-magazine, he compared the "formula" used for the story as similar to that of the film Rattan (1944), terming it as a "rehash of Rattan". His review focused on the Parsi (Wadia) and Muslim (Bazidpuri) angle, who he reported as wanting to run down the Hindus by making a regressive film like Mela. Calling the film a slander on Hindus, he labelled it as an anti-social film, which encouraged suicide, a criminal offense. The army was slandered because the film showed the villain as an ex-army man, "The most objectionable character in the picture is that of Mehkoo". He found "unbelievable" features in the story, especially the quick arrangement for Manju's wedding without looking for Mohan, and that a seventy-year-old widower remarrying, wouldn't know the age of the woman he's going to marry.

The film was commended for its "pleasant photography", Nargis was praised, but was found to be unacceptable and seemingly "synthetic" in her role of a mother. Dilip Kumar as the hero "does his job well". For Jeevan, who played the role of Mehkoo, he had this to say, "Jeevan plays Mehkoo and succeeds in creating disgust and revulsion, the two main aspects of his role".[3]

Release and reception

The film was released on 8 October 1948 at Excelsior cinema, Bombay. The music of the film was a main part in the commercial success at the box-office, with it being reportedly referred to as Naushad's "Golden jubilee (fifty weeks) Mela".[2] According to Meghnad Desai, a weak story was camouflaged by the "stunning melodies" in Mela and other films.[6]

The reported box-office gross for the film according to IBOS was ₹. 50 lakhs in 1948. The adjusted gross as of 2015 is roughly estimated at ₹. 340.44 crores.[7]

Music

Composer Naushad had Shamshad Begum singing some memorable songs, in the process getting the "best out of Shamshad" for this film. "Dharti Ko Aakash Pukaare" and "Taqdeer Bani Banke Bigdi" by Shamshad are both notable songs, reportedly showing her growth as a "serious singer".[8] The song "Dharti Ko Aakash Pukaare" was originally put in as a title song, but it became extremely popular forcing the producers to have the full song added in the film.[9]

Another popular song was the Bidai (Farewell) number, "Gaaye Jaa Geet Milan Ke" (Sing Songs Of Meeting) sung by Mukesh, at the time of Manju's departure from home after marriage. It was used in the film to show Manju's feelings, which highlight her "secret sorrows" that "cannot be voiced but are palpable" through the medium of the song.[10] The song is sung by Mohan (Dilip Kumar) as he's racing home in his bullock cart to meet Manju (Nargis), whereas Manju is leaving for her husband's home.

Mohammed Rafi's popularity as a singer rose with the single song sung by him in Mela, "Ye Zindgi Ke Mele".[9]

Remake

Chiranjeevulu (1956), a Telugu language film, was a remake of Mela. In the Telugu version, the hero is turned blind, and the old man who marries Manju is changed to a young bachelor, Dr. Krishna. The film was made under the Vinoda Productions banner, produced by D. L. Narayana (Dronamvajhala Lakshmi Narayana) and directed by Vedantam Raghavaiah. The dialogue writer and lyricist was Malladi Ramakrishna Sastry. The film starred N.T.Ramarao, Jamuna, Gummadi Venkateswara Rao, Peketi Sivaram, C.S.R. Anjaneyulu. For actress Jamuna, it was cited as her "career-best performance"; Peketi Sivaram played the negative role of Mehkoo, originally played by Jeevan. The film "was a box office grosser".[11]

Soundtrack

Mela had music directed by Naushad with lyrics by Shakeel Badayuni. The singers were Mukesh, Shamshad Begum, Zohrabai Ambalewali and Mohammed Rafi.[12]

Songlist

# Title Singer
1 "Ye Zindagi Ke Mele, Duniyaa Men Kam Na Honge" Mohammed Rafi
2 "Gaye Ja Geet Milan Ke Tu Apni Lagan Ke" Mukesh
3 "Phir Aah Dil Se Nikli, Shaayad Woh Ja Rahe Hain" Zohrabai Ambalewali
4 "Dharti Ko Aakash Pukaare" Mukesh, Shamshad Begum
5 "Mera Dil Todne Wale Mere Dil Ki Dua Lena" Mukesh, Shamshad Begum
6 "Aayi Sawan Ritu Aayi Sajan Mora Dole Hai Man" Mukesh, Shamshad Begum
7 "Main Bhanwra Tu Hai Phool" Mukesh, Shamshad Begum
8 "Mohan Ki Muraliya Baaje" Shamshad Begum
9 "Dharti Ko Aakash Pukare" Shamshad Begum
10 "Taqdeer Bani Ban Kar Bigadi" Shamshad Begum
11 "Pardes Balam Tum Jaaoge" Shamshad Begum
12 "Garibo Par Jo Hoti Hai" Shamshad Begum

References

  1. 1 2 Sanjit Narwekar. "Filmography". DILIP KUMAR THE LAST EMPEROR. Rupa Publications. pp. 171–. ISBN 978-81-291-3365-6. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  2. 1 2 Raju Bharatan (1 September 2010). A Journey Down Melody Lane. Hay House, Inc. pp. 169–. ISBN 978-93-81398-05-0. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  3. 1 2 Patel, Baburao (December 1948). "Review Mela". Filmindia. 14 (12): 55. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  4. Ashok Raj (1 November 2009). Hero Vol.1. Hay House, Inc. pp. 171–. ISBN 978-93-81398-02-9. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  5. Dilip Kumar (28 July 2014). "12-Reel Life Versus Real Life". Dilip Kumar: The Substance and the Shadow. Hay House, Inc. pp. 129–. ISBN 978-93-81398-96-8. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  6. Meghnad Desai (13 December 2013). PAKEEZAH. HarperCollins Publishers India. pp. 57–. ISBN 978-93-5116-023-6. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  7. "Mela (1948)". ibosnetwork.com. IBOS. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  8. Ganesh Anantharaman (January 2008). "Shamshad Begum: First Superstar of Playback". Bollywood Melodies: A History of the Hindi Film Song. Penguin Books India. pp. 170–. ISBN 978-0-14-306340-7. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  9. 1 2 Chandra, Balakrishnan, Pali, Vijay Kumar. "Mela (1948)". indiavideo.org/. Invis Multimedia Pvt. Ltd. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  10. Rosemary Marangoly George (21 November 2013). "Footnotes pages 138-144, Note 88". Indian English and the Fiction of National Literature. Cambridge University Press. pp. 251–. ISBN 978-1-107-72955-1. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  11. Narasimham, M. L. (31 October 2014). "Chiranjeevulu (1956)". The Hindu. The Hindu. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  12. "Mela (1948)". hindigeetmala.net. Hindi Geetmala. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
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