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Pyar Jhukta Nahin

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Pyar Jhukta Nahin
Poster
Directed byVijay Sadanah
Written byS.H. Bihari
Partho Mukerjee
Amir Shamji
Produced byK.C. Bokadia
StarringMithun Chakraborty
Padmini Kolhapure
Danny Denzongpa
Asrani
Bindu
CinematographyS.L. Sharma
Edited byGovind Dalwadi
Music byLaxmikant–Pyarelal
S.H. Bihari (lyrics)
Production
company
BMB Productions
Distributed byGemini Pictures
Release date
  • 11 January 1985 (1985-01-11)
Running time
135 min
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Pyar Jhukta Nahin (transl. Love Does not Bow Down) is a 1985 Indian Hindi-language film directed by Vijay Sadanah, starring Mithun Chakraborty, Padmini Kolhapure, Danny Denzongpa, Asrani, and Bindu. Laxmikant–Pyarelal were nominated for Best Music Director. It was a blockbuster at the box office, earning 4.5 crore with a production budget of less than 50 lakh.[1]

The film is inspired by the 1973 film Aa Gale Lag Jaa.[2] It was remade in Kannada as Nee Bareda Kadambari with Vishnuvardhan and Bhavya in the lead. It was also remade in Tamil with Rajnikant as Naan Adimai Illai co-starring Sridevi. Both remakes were directed by Dwarakish. The film was also remade in Telugu as Pachani Kapuram again starring Krishna and Sridevi. Bimal Roy Jr. adapted the film in Bengali in 1989 as Aamar Tumi starring Prosenjit Chatterjee and Farah Naaz.Basant Naik adapted the film in Odia in 1995 as To Kola Mo Jhulna starring Siddhant Mohapatra and Rachana Banerjee.

Synopsis

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Preeti (Padmini Kolhapure) is a rich girl who falls in love with a middle class photographer Ajay (Mithun Chakraborty). Her parents initially disagree for the marriage but the daughter manages to make them ready for the marriage. They propose Ajay to become their ghar jamai to which he refuses. Preeti's father Bhanu (Danny Dengzongpa) makes Ajay a top class photographer and his salary gets an increment. Later Ajay discovers that Bhanu has made his promotion and this has hurt his self-respect. Preeti and Ajay separate.

Although Preeti and Ajay both still love each other, Bhanu makes them have a divorce due to misunderstandings caused by him – Bhanu makes Ajay believe Preeti wants a divorce and vice versa. Preeti is then found to be pregnant with Ajay's child. Bhanu does not tell this to Ajay, and instead takes Preeti to the mountains (Shimla) for the delivery so that nobody finds that she gave birth to a baby. There in the hospital, Bhanu meets Ajay and tells him about the baby. Bhanu agrees to give the baby to Ajay on the basis that Ajay never approach Preeti again, as she wants a new life with a new man. Ajay agrees, but Bhanu later changes his mind and gives the baby to an orphanage. However, Ajay follows him there and takes his own baby from the orphanage.

The story moves forward for some years and Preeti does not believe that her baby is dead, slowly losing her mental stability as a result. She carries a doll child in her arms, believing it to be her own son. Her parents get increasingly worried as a result. However, Preeti shows some improvement when she sees a photograph which she clicked in Shimla when she was with Ajay. The parents take her back to Shimla as a result. Ajay lives in Shimla and has brought up his child on his own. In a chance occurrence, the child meets Preeti and there is a connection between the two – with the help of Ajay, he later identifies her as his mother. He returns to her and brings her to Ajay and they solve their misunderstandings. The two expose the misunderstandings in their minds caused by Bhanu. They are able to reconcile and express their love for one another and live happily thereafter with their child.

Cast

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Awards and nominations

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33rd Filmfare Awards:[3][4]

Nominated

Soundtrack

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# Title Singer(s)
1 "Chahe Lakh Toofan Ayen" Lata Mangeshkar, Shabbir Kumar, Laxmikant
2 "Tumse Milkar Na Jane" (I) Lata Mangeshkar, Shabbir Kumar
3 "Ho Dilbar Janiya" Lata Mangeshkar
2 "Tumhein Apna Sathi Banane Se Pehle" Lata Mangeshkar, Shabbir Kumar, Anuradha Paudwal
5 "Tumse Milkar Na Jane" (II) Shabbir Kumar
6 "Tumse Milkar Na Jane" (III) Kavita Krishnamurthy

References

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  1. ^ "Hindi films: As action movies flop in a row, Bollywood tries its luck with romantic flicks".
  2. ^ Peter Cowie (1985). International Film Guide. Tantivy Press. p. 238. ISBN 9780900730245. Until recently it was Pakistani filmmakers who were plagiarising Indian hits but as videos of Pakistani films began creeping into India, producers from Bombay and Madras too jumped on the bandwagon and made copies of Mola Jat as Jinney Na Doon Ga and Aina as Pyar Jhukta Nahi, ironically the latter was a hotch potch of three Indian films.
  3. ^ 33rd Filmfare Awards
  4. ^ Dhirad, Sandeep (2006). "Filmfare Nominees and Winner" (PDF). deep750.googlepages.com. p. 71.
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