Kahani Ek Chor Ki (transl. Story of a Thief) is a 1981 Indian Hindi-language action drama film, produced by Balubhai Shah under the Deepak International banner, directed by S. Ramanathan. It stars Jeetendra, Moushumi Chatterjee, Vinod Mehra and music composed by Ravindra Jain. This was veteran actress, Lakshmi’s last Hindi film as a heroine, since she wanted to concentrate her acting career mostly down, towards the southern film industry. She would make her comeback to Bollywood industry after a gap of 25 years later with the film, Hulchul by playing Kareena Kapoor Khan’s grandmother and hasn’t acted in any Hindi films further, since then.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
Kahani Ek Chor Ki | |
---|---|
Directed by | S.Ramanathan |
Written by | K.B. Pathak Ravindra Jain Hasrat Jaipuri (lyrics) |
Produced by | Balubhai Shah |
Starring | Jeetendra Moushumi Chatterjee Vinod Mehra |
Cinematography | K. Ramanlal |
Edited by | A. Paul Duraisingam |
Music by | Ravindra Jain |
Production company | Deepak International[1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | 138 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Plot
editThe film begins with a thief, Shankar, who coerces his elder son, Ram, into the craft, eclipsing his future. Knowing it, his wife Gauri discards the children when Shankar withholds the younger one, Shyam. Years roll by, and with her hardship, Gauri molds Ram as a fine man. He marries a wise woman, Seeta. They live a merry, and Seeta gets pregnant. Shyam grows into an expert in pickpocketing, but Shankar, as reformed, makes him desert the profession. Once, Shyam rescues a millionaire, Seth Bihari Lal, from the burglars and falls for his daughter Geeta.
Meanwhile, in a dispute, Ram loses his job. As a result, his family starves, leading to Seeta's death, giving birth to a baby boy, Raju. Devastated, Ram turns to daredevil gangster Michael and hits the jackpot but falsifies his mother by hiding the fact. He melds with a kingpin, Vikram, and earns an enemy, Ranjeet. In an international deal, Ram is apprehended and penalized. Thus, Gauri learns Ram's actual shade and renounces him, too. However, Raju gets distressed by Ram. Further, he meets with an accident when Shyam saves him and pretends to be his father because of his condition. Now, Shyam accommodates them, and Gauri is surprised to see Shankar, and they reunite. Ram again changes his attire as Shantilal Shah, whereas Shyam is on the hunt for him. Then, a brawl erupts, which cools with Gauri's intervention. Ram is ecstatic to return to his family here but cannot bear their hatred. Eventually, Ranjeet abducts Raju. At last, Ram Shyam ceases him and protects Raju. Finally, the movie ends with Ram surrendering to the Police and acquiring his mother's forgiveness.
Cast
edit- Jeetendra as Ram / Micheal / Shantilal Shah
- Moushumi Chatterjee as Seeta
- Vinod Mehra as Shyam / Vilaiti
- Asrani as Kantilal
- Madan Puri as Shankar
- Ranjeet as Ranjeet
- A. K. Hangal as Seth Biharilal
- P. Jairaj as Vicky
- Mukri as Malyal Khan
- Chandrashekhar as CBI Inspector Chandra
- Ranjan
- Sunder
- Viju Khote
- Yunus Parvez as Denzongpa
- Nirupa Roy as Gauri
- Lakshmi as Geeta
- Aruna Irani as Item Dancer
- Master Tito as Raju
Soundtrack
editSong | Singer | Lyricist |
---|---|---|
"Karishma Yeh Kya Ho Gaya" | Kishore Kumar, Hemlata | Hasrat Jaipuri |
"Sabko Muraden Milti Hain" | Kishore Kumar, Asha Bhosle | Ravindra Jain |
"Yeh Raat Sard Sard Hai" | Asha Bhosle | Hasrat Jaipuri |
"Chor Chor Ko Pakadte" | Mahendra Kapoor, Hemlata, K. J. Yesudas | Ravindra Jain |
References
edit- ^ "Titles". IMDb.
- ^ "Heading". gomolo.
- ^ "Heading-2". apunkachoice.
- ^ "Heading-3". Bollywood Hungama. Archived from the original on 29 January 2013.
- ^ "Heading-4". Nth Wall. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
- ^ "Heading-5". IBOS.
- ^ "Heading-6". Bollywood Nagar.com.
- ^ "Heading-7". IMinDb.com.
- ^ "Heading-8". MuVyz.
- ^ "Songs". My Swar.