Ganga Ki Saugandh | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sultan Ahmed |
Written by | Nabendu Ghosh Asgar Mirza Wajahat Mirza Santosh Vyas |
Produced by | Sultan Ahmed |
Starring | Amitabh Bachchan Rekha Amjad Khan Bindu |
Cinematography | R.D. Mathur |
Edited by | M. S. Shinde |
Music by | Kalyanji Anandji |
Distributed by | Sultan Productions Polydor |
Release date | February 10, 1978 |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Box office | ₹5.5 crores (equivalent to ₹128 crores or US$16.5 million in 2021)[1] |
Ganga Ki Saugandh is a 1978 Hindi-language action drama film produced and directed by Sultan Ahmed. It was released on February 10, 1978.[2] The film stars Amitabh Bachchan, Rekha, Amjad Khan, Pran, I. S. Johar, Bindu, and Anju Mahendru. The title soundtrack was composed by Kalyanji-Anandji and the screenplay was written by Indian screenwriter and director Wajahat Mirza. It was a hit.[3] Irrfan Khan watched the shooting of Ganga Ki Saugandh, which took place in his hometown when he was a lad.
Synopsis
The film begins as Thakur Jaswant Singh (Amjad Khan) rules over the area of the film's setting. He rapes Champa (Farida Jalal), who is the daughter of Keshavram (only mentioned as "Munshi"), a secretary (Nana Palshikar). Singh cares only about money, women, and alcohol. After his father's death, he assumes control over the region and increases taxes.
One day, while walking across a hallway, he slips on a wet floor and falls. He angrily gets up and assaults an older woman, Ramvati (Achala Sachdev), who was washing the floor. His abuse is interrupted by the arrival of Ramvati's son, Jeeva (Amitabh Bachchan). Singh is ready to shoot him, but his mother, Rani Maa (Sulochana Latkar), stops him. Jeeva is now in trouble with the Singhs, and soon many people conspire against him.
Singh (Amjad Khan), his pandit Kashinath (Satyen Kappu), and Lala (Jeevan) conspire to frame Jeeva for poisoning a cow. The next day, Jeeva is summoned before the village council to explain his involvement in the cow's death. Because Jeeva has no satisfactory explanation, he is beaten brutally by Singh's men. Kalu Chamar (Pran), a shoemaker, tries to help him but fails. Jeeva and the villagers are then asked to leave the village with his mother. At the same time, Kalu, the leader of the villagers, attempts to start a new colony with the help of his friend (Anwar Hussain).
As Jeeva refuses to leave the village, he is severely beaten again and thrown out. Shortly after, his mother passes away, and Jeeva attempts to avenge her death. He becomes a dacoity (member of a band of armed robbers). Jeeva swears on the river Ganges to wipe out Singh and his men, not knowing his decision will bring him into conflict with the police and honest people from the community from which he was exiled.
Later, when Singh loots five lakhs from the villagers, and Jeeva is initially suspected, he clears his name and condemns Singh. In the end, Singh charters a small airplane and crashes it at Laxman Jhula, killing himself.
Soundtrack
Lyricist: Anjaan
# | Title | Singer(s) |
---|---|---|
1 | "Chal Musafir, Teri Manzil Door Hai To Kya Hua" | Mohammed Rafi |
2 | "Maano To Main Ganga Maa Hoon" | Lata Mangeshkar |
3 | "Aankh Ladi Humse" (female) | Asha Bhosle |
4 | "Roop Jab Aisa Mila" | Kishore Kumar |
5 | "Aankh Ladi Humse" (duet) | Kishore Kumar, Asha Bhosle |
6 | "Toone Har Raat" | Lata Mangeshkar |
7 | "Dekho Sapne" | Mohammed Rafi, Amit Kumar, Aarti Mukherji |
References
- ↑ "Amitabh Bachchan Hits, Flops and Blockbusters : Box Office Analysis".
- ↑ "Ganga Ki Saugand". IndiaTimes. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ↑ "Worth Their Weight in Gold! (70′s) | Box Office India : India's premier film trade magazine". Archived from the original on 18 November 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2015.