Aulad (1968 film)
Aulad | |
---|---|
Directed by | Kundan Kumar |
Written by | Rafi Ajmeri Vishwanath Pande (dialogues) Majrooh Sultanpuri (lyrics) |
Screenplay by | Ranjan Bose |
Story by | Ranjan Bose |
Produced by | Kundan Kumar |
Starring | Jeetendra Babita |
Cinematography | V. Durga Prasad |
Edited by | Kamalakar |
Music by | Chitragupta Shrivastav |
Production company | Kundan Films[1] |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Aulad (transl. Child) is a 1968 Hindi-language drama film, produced and directed by Kundan Kumar under the Kundan Films banner. It stars Jeetendra, Babita with music composed by Chitragupta Shrivastav.[2][3][4][5][6][7]
Plot[]
A wealthy Zamindar (Landlord) Kanta Prasad Gupta (Manmohan Krishna) from a remote village visits Pashupatinath Temple in Nepal every year with his wife (Achala Sachdev) and son. In one of his visits, he loses his son in the milieu. He comes back disheartened and his wife is on the verge of insanity. Information from Nepalese police tells him that his son is dead. To save his wife, his Munshi (Accountant) Ram Lal Jeevan approaches for an adoption from a poor family of Dinu (Nazir Hussain) and his wife Mamta (Sulochana Chatterji), who have two sons Mohan and Sohan. Sohan is adopted. Reluctantly, the child is given away.
Mohan goes on Diwali to meet his brother in the Mansion and is labelled as a thief of firecrackers that he and his brother were playing with. His father beats him up and Mohan runs away from his house. The family is left with none of their children. Sohan matures to become an able estate manager of the Zamindar's estate. He falls in love with a retired Major's daughter, Bharati, they have come from the city (indicating Calcutta now Kolkata) to spend their vacations. They have a family doctor named Dr. Mohan who visits them in their sojourn and incites jealousy in the heart of Sohan. The loving couple spar with each other and Dr. Mohan leads them to a decrepit house down the valley where his parents used to live. He discloses that his younger brother was given to the Zamindars, whereupon the younger brother, who is now known by the name of Arun gets suspicious and asks questions from his foster father, who gives him a mouthful of lies.
Slowly the past reveals itself 17 years later. Mamta is seriously ill and asks Dinu to bring Sohan back. Dinu goes to the Zamindar's house where he meets a young man who identifies himself as the real son of the Zamindar, Suraj, (who has established himself as the real son of the Zamindar with assistance from a so-called priest of Pashupatinath Temple) and informs him that Sohan has been sent packing. A devastated Dinu loses his memory and roams listlessly on the streets of Calcutta, unable to remember anything. There, he is rescued by Sohan and ultimately the family meets, but not before Mamta is dead. What happens next?
Cast[]
- Jeetendra as Arun / Sohan
- Babita as Bharti
- Sujit Kumar as Dr. Mohan
- Manmohan Krishna as Zamindar Kanta Prasad Gupta
- Nazir Hussain as Dinu
- Hari Shivdasani as Major Gupta
- Mehmood as Chamanlal "Charlie" Singaporie
- Manmohan as Suraj
- Jeevan as Munim Ramlal
- Sulochana Chatterjee as Mamta
- Achala Sachdev as Sharda
- Aruna Irani as Shobha
- Helen as Courtesan
Soundtrack[]
The music was composed by Chitragupta Shrivastav and lyrics by Majrooh Sultanpuri.[8][9]
# | Song | Singer |
---|---|---|
1 | "Abke Bahaar Aayi Hai Tumhare Naam Se" | Mohammed Rafi |
2 | "Naazuk Naazuk Badan Mora" | Mohammed Rafi, Lata Mangeshkar |
3 | "Arman Tha Hamen" | Mohammed Rafi, Lata Mangeshkar |
4 | "Kab Tak Huzoor Roothe Rahoge" | Lata Mangeshkar |
5 | "Dagabazi Piya Tere" | Suman Kalyanpur |
6 | "Jodi Hamari Jamega Kaise Jaani" | Asha Bhosle, Manna Dey |
References[]
- ^ "Titles". IMDb.
- ^ "Heading". gomolo.
- ^ "Heading-2". IBOS.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Jeetendra". Times of India. 5 May 2020.
- ^ "Heading-4". Bollywood hungama.
- ^ "Heading-5". MuVyz.
- ^ "Heading-6". apunkachoice. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015.
- ^ "Songs". Songs.PK.
- ^ "Aulad Songs: Aulad MP3 Songs by Chitragupta Online Free on Gaana.com" – via gaana.com.
External links[]
- 1968 films
- Hindi-language films
- 1960s Hindi-language films
- 1968 drama films
- Indian films
- Films featuring an item number
- Indian drama films
- Hindi-language drama films