Jump to content

Chashme Buddoor (1981 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chashme Buddoor
Poster
Directed bySai Paranjpye
Written bySai Paranjpye
Produced byGul Anand
Jayshree Anand-Makhija
StarringFarooq Sheikh
Deepti Naval
Rakesh Bedi
Ravi Baswani
Leela Mishra
CinematographyVirendra Sahni
Edited byOm Prakash Makkar
Music byRaj Kamal
Distributed byPLA Entertainment
Release date
  • 8 May 1981 (1981-05-08)
Running time
145 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Chashme Buddoor (transl. Far be the evil eye) is a 1981 Indian romantic comedy-buddy film directed by Sai Paranjape and produced by Gul Anand and his sister Jayshree Anand–Makhija. The film stars Farooq Sheikh, Deepti Naval, Rakesh Bedi, Ravi Baswani and Leela Mishra in lead roles. The story revolves around three close friends who fall in love with a girl named Neha. Two of the friends fail to woo her and decide to seek revenge after discovering that their third roommate is dating the girl. The plot is inspired by K. Bhagyaraj's 1981 movie Indru Poi Naalai Vaa.[1] A remake version directed by David Dhawan and the original digitally restored film were both released on 5 April 2013. The lyrics written by Indu Jain were composed by Raj Kamal and sung by Yesudas and Hemanti Shukla.

Plot

[edit]

Siddharth Parashar (Farooq Sheikh), Omi Sharma (Rakesh Bedi) and Jomo Lakhanpal (Ravi Baswani) are close friends and roommates who are studying at Delhi University. Siddharth has completed M.A. in Economics and is preparing for Ph.D. While Siddharth is a studious boy who loves to spend most of his time with books, his friends Omi and Jomo are mostly busy chasing girls. The only thing common among the three of them is smoking. They Used to buy cigarettes from local paan shop owned by Lallan Miyan (Saeed Jaffrey). One day, Omi and Jomo spot a girl named Neha Rajan (Deepti Naval) from their balcony and try to impress her one by one by their antics. However, both of them give up after experiencing shameful events.

After some days, Neha visits their flat as the salesgirl of Chamko washing powder. Omi and Jomo quickly hide as soon as they spot her from the peep hole. Siddharth meets Neha for the first time and soon a love story begins. Meanwhile, Siddharth gets a job in company where Neha's father is manager. He too gets impressed by Siddharth and sees a prospective son-in-law in him. However, when Omi and Jomo discover their relationship, they decide to plot something to end their relationship and also to seek revenge to the embarrassment inflicted upon them by the girl. Initially, they succeed in creating a false image of Neha's character and separating Siddharth and Neha, but later on repent when they realise that Siddharth's love for Neha is genuine and he has started losing his interest in work and study and is most likely to end his life as well. Neha is clueless about abrupt change in Siddharth's behaviour. Finally, Omi and Jomo decide to reunite both the lovers. As a spate of kidnapping (especially of young girls) has started in Delhi, Omi and Jomo plan a fake kidnapping of Neha along with her grandmother (Leela Mishra) where Siddharth will rescue her. Unfortunately, she is kidnapped by the real gang and the duo is left in the lurch. Siddharth fights with real kidnappers and police arrive at the scene with Lallanmiyan to arrest the gang. The later part of the story revolves on how they clear the confusion that she has been going through and how she was kidnapped by real thugs and finally rescued.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Chashme Buddoor was produced by Gul Anand and Jayshree Anand-Makhija.[citation needed]

Soundtrack

[edit]

All the songs[2] were composed by Raj Kamal and were penned by Indu Jain. The film has a popular song "Kahan Se Aaye Badra", which has been set in Raag Megh (known as Madhyamavathi in Carnatic Music) sung by K. J. Yesudas and Haimanti Sukla.

# Title Singer(s) Duration
1 "Kahan Se Aaye Badra" Yesudas, Haimanti Sukla 07:38
2 "Is Nadi Ko Mera" Shailendra Singh, Haimanti Shukla 05:50
3 "Kali Ghori Dwar Khari" Yesudas, Haimanti Sukla 05:36
4 "Karna Tha Inkar" (Parody Song)[3] Parody Song 03:37
5 "Aansoon Ki Aarti" Haimanti Sukla 03:26
6 "Kaise Ho Pagal" Raj Kamal, Haimanti Sukla 05:00
7 "Pyaar Lagawat Pranay Mohabbat" Anand Kumar C., Shailendra Singh, Hariharan 04:38

Remakes

[edit]

Awards

[edit]
29th Filmfare Awards:

Nominated

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Mishra, Nivedita (25 March 2018). "Farooque Shaikh birth anniversary: An unheroic actor who could make us laugh, feel deep remorse". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 23 January 2024. Retrieved 23 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Chashme Baddoor : Lyrics and video of songs from the movie Chashme Buddoor (1981)". HindiGeetMala.
  3. ^ Rajshri (1 September 2014). "Chashme Buddoor – Parody Song – Cult Classic Songs Comedy Compilation – Deepti Naval, Ravi Baswani" – via YouTube.[dead link]
[edit]