Milap is a 1972 Bollywood action film directed by B. R. Ishara.[1] The film stars Shatrughan Sinha, Reena Roy and Danny Denzongpa in lead roles.The film sees a clip inserted into the song, Kai sadiyon se, Reena Roy take a drag from a cigarette, too short for a non smoking audience to fully acknowledge but a subliminal success, no doubt. A nauseating and repeated assault on all 'Bollywood' no Indian ever imagined this term, movies.[2]

Milap
Directed byB. R. Ishara
Starring
Music byBrij Bhushan, Lyrics Naqsh Lyallpuri
Release date
  • 1972 (1972)
Running time
111 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Plot

Ravi (Shatrughan Sinha) lives a very wealthy lifestyle in India, and since he is the only child his parents grant his every wish. This leads him to every possible bad habit including drugs, alcohol and women. He eventually gets fed up of his lifestyle and re-locates to an isolated hilly region to try and put his life together. The room which he rents is looked after by a woman named Rani(Reena Roy), both meet and soon fall in love with each other. Ravi comes to know that Rani is a Saperan (Snake Charmer) who has been estranged from her lover, Raju(Shatrughan Sinha), in an earlier life. In this lifetime she has an admirer, also named Raju(Danny Denzongpa), who has already asked for her hand from her widower dad, Raghunath, and who is quite displeased when he sees her mingling freely with Ravi. Ravi will also find out that Rani has another admirer, who is also named Raju, but this Raju is over a century old venomous shape-changing snake, who will soon acquire human form, get intimate with Rani and make her his own - and there is no known power on Earth that can stop him.

Cast edit

Soundtrack edit

Song Singer
"Kayi Sadiyon Se" (Fast) Mukesh
"Kayi Sadiyon Se" (Slow) Mukesh
"Kahin Aisa Na Ho" Mohammed Rafi
"Bajariya Ke Beech" Asha Bhosle
"Kehne Ka Raaz Hai" Asha Bhosle

Music edit

The film has a popular song "Kai Sadiyon Se, Kai Janmo Se" sung by Mukesh.

References edit

  1. ^ Milap, retrieved 20 March 2022
  2. ^ Malhotra, A. p s (31 March 2017). "Milap (1972)". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 20 March 2022.

External links edit