Dharti Mata is a 1938 Hindi social film directed by Nitin Bose. The film was also made and in Bengali as Desher Mati in the same year by New Theatres.[1] It starred K.L. Saigal, Uma Shashi (aka Umasashi), Jagdish Sethi, Kamlesh Kumari, and K. C. Dey.[2] The music was by Pankaj Mullick and lyricist and dialogue writer was Pandit Sudarshan.[3] The story, screenplay and cinematography was by Nitin Bose. The story is about two friends Ashok and Ajay, one interested in agriculture and the other in technology. Ashok goes to the village to help the farmers while Ajay goes to UK for higher studies in engineering. The film highlights the need of technology and new concepts for effective farming.

Dharti Mata
Directed byNitin Bose
Written byNitin Bose
Produced byNew Theatres
StarringK. L. Saigal
Uma Shashi
(Umasashi)
Jagdish Sethi
Kamlesh Kumari
CinematographyNitin Bose
Music byPankaj Mullick
Production
company
Release date
1938
Running time
165 min
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Plot edit

Ashok (K. L. Saigal) and Ajay (Jagdish Sethi) have different notions about the progress of the country. Ashok supports agriculture and going back to the villages while Ajay is in favour of industrialisation and technology. Ajay is from a rich family and has to go to UK for further studies in engineering. He asks Ashok to come with him. Ashok refuses and decides to go the village and help the farmers. Ajay’s sister Pratibha (Kamlesh Kumari) is in love with Ashok who is unaware of her feelings. When Ashok faces hardships in the village she secretly assists him by sending money to buy new machinery for the farm. Ashok and his colleague are frustrated in their attempts several times by Chowdhary, the village headman. Ashok meets and falls in love with a village girl Gauri (Uma Shashi) who stays with her blind father (K. C. Dey). Ajay returns from abroad and is told of a rich coal mine. This is located under Ashok’s field. Ajay forgoes mining the land and decides to buy the land that Ashok has been farming to safeguard it for him. Ashok tells Ajay his plans of marrying Gauri. Ajay is stunned and upset for his sister. For the farmers there is distress when the monsoons fail. They face a drought situation. This is when Ajay decides to mine the field for coal. However the disagreements are sorted out and Ajay helps out with new ideas and approves Ashok’s method of co-operative farming.

Cast edit

Production edit

New Theatres ushered in a renaissance period with films based on social issues. These were most commonly addressed in Nitin Bose’s films. In Dushman (1939) he dealt with tuberculosis and in Dharti Mata he used the idea of collective farming and need of machinery and tube wells in agriculture.[4] This was one of the first films to deal with innovative methods of farming and the need for modernisation.[5]

Soundtrack edit

Pankaj Mulick used western elements in his music without losing the melodious Indian appeal in "Duniya Rang Rangili Baba".[6] The songs were sung by K. L. Saigal, Uma Shashi and K. C. Dey. The lyrics were by Pandit Sudarshan.[7]

Songs edit

# Title Singer(s)
1 "Mann Kee Bat Bataun" K. L. Saigal, Uma Shashi
2 "Kisne Yah Sab Khel Rachaya" K. L. Saigal
3 "Duniya Rang Rangilee Baba" K. C. Dey, Uma Shashi, K. L. Saigal
4 "Ab Main Kah Karu" K. L. Saigal
5 "Jaag Sajaniya Jaag Navyug Aaya" Uma Shashi

References edit

  1. ^ Chandra, Balakrishnan, Pali, Vijay Kumar. "100 Years of Bollywood-Dharti Mata 1938". indiavideo.org. indiavideo. Retrieved 19 July 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ CITWF. "Dharti Mata 1938". citwf.com. Alan Goble. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  3. ^ "Dharti Mata 1938". upperstall.com. The Rest. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  4. ^ "The Epic Melodrama". Journal of Arts & Ideas (25–26). December 1993. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  5. ^ Nevile, Pran (2011). K. L. Saigal A Definitive Biography. India: Penguin Books. p. 20. ISBN 9780141406343.
  6. ^ Sebastian, Mary. "Pankaj Mulick". thebigindianpicture.com. tbip. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  7. ^ "Dharti Mata 1938". hindigeetmala. hindigeetmala. Retrieved 19 July 2014.

External links edit