Ghar Ki Izzat (1948 film)

Ghar Ki Izzat (lit.'Honour of the House') is a 1948Hindi drama film directed by Ram Daryani for Murli Movietone.[1] The film starred Dilip Kumar and Mumtaz Shanti in lead roles with Manorama, Jeevan and Gope. The cinematography was by Kumar Jayawant. Music was composed by Pundit Gobindram. The story writer was K. S. Daryani and the dialogue and lyrics were by I. C. Kapoor.[2]

Ghar Ki Izzat
Poster
Directed byRam Daryani
Written byK.S. Daryani
Produced byRam Daryani
StarringDilip Kumar
Mumtaz Shanti
Gope
CinematographyKumar Jayawant
Edited byM.D. Malekar
Music byPundit Gobindram
Distributed byShree Sound Studios
Release date
21 January 1948
Running time
128 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

The milieu is an upper middle-class joint family, with the mother treating her son's wife shabbily. The son, an educated man working as a lawyer, is unable to handle the situation at home and turns to drink.[3]

Plot

Chandra (Dilip Kumar) a young lawyer, lives in a rich joint family with his parents, sister Radhika (Manorama) and sister's husband, Chaman (Gope). Chaman is made to do all the household chores as he lives on the sustenance provided by his wife's family. When Chaman is repeatedly insulted by his mother-in-law, Radhika steps in and walks out of the house with her husband. They start a small business outside the city and lead a happy life. One of their customers include Roopa (Mumtaz Shanti), who lives a poor lifestyle with her loving older brother Moti (Jeevan) and a younger brother Gulab, studying in school. To make a living, Roopa runs a school

While visiting his sister, Chandra meets Roopa and is captivated by her loving, sincere personality. Chandra and Roopa fall in love and are married despite their financial differences. However, when Chandra's parents learn about Roopa's social status, they insult and taunt her, slowly making her life miserable. Chandra's mother tries to give Roopa's clothes away to the servants, calls her a robber and insults her brothers when they come to visit her. She even locks up Roopa in a room while Chandra is on a trip to Pune!

Chandra tries hard to change his parents' mind, but they don't pay attention to his words and continue oppressing Roopa. Despite Chandra's efforts, Roopa insists that she will listen to whatever her in-laws tell her, as she wants to win their heart with love and respect. A distraught Chandra is sick of the disparity meted out to him and his wife, and leaves home. He takes to drinking and gambling and his life falls apart. Radhika requests her mother to let Roopa out, as she is what Chandra truly needs. In the end, Chaman and Radhika help Chandra and Roopa be reunited again.

Chandra's parents realise their mistake and apologise to their son and daughter-in-law and promise to be loving. His mother tells Roopa that, henceforth, she would treat her like her own daughter. The movie ends on a happy note with everyone enjoying a dance presented by Roopa and Radhika.

The movie also addresses topics such as dowry, social injustice, poverty and relationships in a realistic and convincing manner.

Cast

Soundtrack

The music was directed by Pandit Gobindram, with lyrics by I. C. Kapoor (Ishwar Chandra Kapoor). The playback singers were Mohammed Rafi, Shamshad Begum, Meena Kapoor, G. M. Durrani, Ram Kamlani and Zohrabai Ambalewali.[4]

Song List

#TitleSinger
1 "Sari Duniya Ke Sartaj" Shamshad Begum
2 "Fariyad Meri Sun Le" Shamshad Begum
3 "Meri Duniya Ke Garibo Jago" Shamshad Begum
4 "Dar Dar Ki Thokre Hai" Shamshad Begum
5 "Bahut Betaqalluf Huye Ja Rahe Hain,jo Mehaman Banke" Shamshad Begum, G. M. Durrani
6 "Taro Ki Toliyo Ye Kaisa Hai" Shamshad Begum, G. M. Durrani
7 "Bagh Mein Koyaliya Yehi Gaye" Shamshad Begum, Zohrabai Ambalewali
8 "Aankho Se Aankho Ko Do Chaar Kiye Jao" Shamshad Begum, Ram Kamlani
9 "Wah Re Zamane Kya Rang Dikhaye" Mohammed Rafi
10 "Boot Polish Karawa Le Baabu" Meena Kapoor
11 "Bane Hain Hum To Ghar Janwai" Ram Kamlani

References

  1. Ashok Raj (2009). Hero Vol.1. Hay House, Inc. p. 171. ISBN 978-93-81398-02-9.
  2. Patel, Baburao (April 1948). "Our Review-Ghar Ki Izzat". Filmindia. 15 (4): 53. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  3. Urmila Lanba (2002). The Thespian: Life and Films of Dilip Kumar. Vision Books. ISBN 978-81-7094-496-6.
  4. "Ghar Ki Izzat (1948)". hindigeetmala.ne. Hindi Geetmala. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.