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*[[Yunus Parvez]] <small>as</small> Mansoor Miyan, Chedilal's Worker
*[[Yunus Parvez]] <small>as</small> Mansoor Miyan, Chedilal's Worker
*[[C. S. Dubey]] <small>as</small> Chedilal, Jeweller
*[[C. S. Dubey]] <small>as</small> Chedilal, Jeweller
*[[T.P. Jain]] <small>as</small> Ganeshilal, Diamond Merchant
*T.P. Jain <small>as</small> Ganeshilal, Diamond Merchant
*[[Padma Chavan]] <small>as</small> Alka, Ashok's Friend
*[[Padma Chavan]] <small>as</small> Alka, Ashok's Friend
*Ram Mohan <small>as</small> Taxi Driver
*Ram Mohan <small>as</small> Taxi Driver

Revision as of 04:25, 3 September 2020

Angoor
Poster
Directed byGulzar
Written byGulzar
Produced byJai Singh
StarringSanjeev Kumar
Deven Verma
Moushumi Chatterjee
Deepti Naval
Aruna Irani
Padma Chavan
C.S.Dubey
Yunus Parvez
T.P.Jain
Music byRahul Dev Burman
Release date
5 March 1982 (India)
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Angoor (Template:Lang-hi) is a 1982 Indian Hindi-language comedy film starring Sanjeev Kumar and Deven Verma in dual roles, and directed by Gulzar.[1] [2] It is a remake of the Indian Film Do Dooni Char which was a remake of 1963 Bengali language comedy film Bhrantibilas, that is based on Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar's Bengali novel by the same name, which itself is based on Shakespeare's play The Comedy of Errors.[3] All characters are innocent and destiny plays the main role in bringing all characters to one place. Most of the other films are generally based on false characters and deliberately make false statements to fool others.[4]

Plot

The film is about two pairs of identical twins separated at birth and how their lives go haywire when they meet in adulthood.

Raj Tilak (Utpal Dutt) and his wife (Shammi) are on a trip with their twin sons, both of whom they call Ashok. Since they look the same, they should be called the same, is Mr Tilak's reasoning. As fate would have it, they adopt another set of twins, both of whom they call Bahadur. An unfortunate accident then divides the family, leaving both parents with one child out of each pair of twins.

A few years later, Ashok (Sanjeev Kumar) is married to Sudha (Moushumi Chatterjee) and Bahadur (Deven Verma) is married to Prema (Aruna Irani). They all stay together with Sudha's younger sister Tanu (Deepti Naval). Into their lives enter the other Ashok, a detective novel aficionado, and Bahadur, a bhang (an edible form of cannabis which has been used in India since before the Vedic period) lover. Now there are two Ashoks and two Bahadurs in the same city. This is more than their families, the Jeweller, the Taxi Driver and the Inspector can handle.

Cast

Soundtrack

# Title Singer(s)
1 "Hoton Pe Beeti Baat" Asha Bhosle
2 "Roz Roz Dali Dali" Asha Bhosle
3 "Pritam Aan Milo" Sapan Chakraborty

Awards and nominations

Home Media

The DVD version of the film was released by IndiaWeekly under its own label.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Gulzar's 'Angoor' (Book Excerpt)". Scroll.in. 13 February 2019.
  2. ^ "Tha making of Angoor". The Telegraph, Calcutta. 11 February 2019.
  3. ^ "Angoor (1982)". The Hindu. 21 May 2016.
  4. ^ "Just breathe and reboot". Indian Express. 24 March 2011.
  5. ^ List of Filmfare Award Winners and Nominations, 1953-2005
  6. ^ "Angoor DVD". IndiaWeekly. Retrieved 20 February 2013.