Bandini (1963 film)
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Bandini | |
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Directed by | Bimal Roy |
Produced by | Bimal Roy |
Written by | Nabendu Ghosh (screenplay) Jarasandha (story) Paul Mahendra (dialogue) |
Starring | Nutan Ashok Kumar Dharmendra |
Music by | Sachin Dev Burman |
Cinematography | Kamal Bose |
Editing by | Madhu Prabhavalkar |
Distributed by | Yash Raj Films |
Release date(s) | 1963 |
Running time | 157 min. |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi, Urdu |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Bandini (Hindi: बन्दिनी, Urdu: بندِنی, translation: imprisoned) is a film directed and produced by Bimal Roy, the man who directed such classic as Do Bigha Zameen and Devdas, Bandini explores the human conflicts of love and hate intertwined in the mind of Kalyani (Nutan). The movie tells the story of Kalyani, the all suffering, selfless, sacrificing, and strong yet weak Indian woman. She must make a choice between two very different men.
[edit] Plot details
A female centric movie, Bandini revolves around Kalyani or Bandini (meaning imprisoned). She is in a prison in India. We learn the circumstances of her crime in flashback. Kalyani had fallen in love with a freedom fighter/anarchist, Bikash (Ashok Kumar) during the British Raj, who later leaves her in the village promising to come back but never does. The society treats them harshly. Broken by her father's misery and that of her own, Kalyani moves to the city, to the singing of the "O Jaanewale Ho Sake To Laut Ke Aana". In the city she works as a caretaker of an almost insane woman, who is also the wife of Bikash. When Kalyani is told her father came to the city looking for her and died in an accident she decides to poison her lover's wife, identifying her as the cause of her miseries. Director Bimalda captures her emotions with light and darkness falling on her face due to a welder's torch and the thumping of Iron in the background.
Back from the flashback in the jail Deven (Dharmendra) the jail doctor falls in love with her. Kalyani is not ready for it and starts to stay away from him. They are always shown with a partition in between after Deven proposes her. Another symbolism used in the movie is the occasional shouting of "All is well" by the prison guard when nothing in the movie is.
The lines "Main Bandini Piya ki, Main Sangini Hoon Saajan ki" in the end score of the movie tells us that Kalyani is imprisoned by her love. "Mere saajan hain us paar" is sung by the musician S D Burman himself. The climactic song, it beautifully expresses Kalyani's dilemma of having to choose between Bikash & Deven. Though the movie features excellent songs they all depict the situation like nothing else could. The character of Kalyani gets lifted from that of a woman who is a prisoner of destiny to one who defines her own freedom.
Nutan is strongly supported by Ashok Kumar and Dharmendra, just beginning to make an impact in the film industry. Bimal Roy is the director, He won eleven Filmfare awards in his career, eight for Best Director, the last one for Bandini and the first one for "Do Bigha Zameen" (incidentally at the first Filmfare awards). S D Burman composed the songs for the film. The movie has songs such as "Mora Gora Ang Lai Le" by Lata and the haunting and brilliant "O Jaanewale Ho Sake To Laut Ke Aana" by Mukesh . Bandini is brilliantly photographed by Kamal Bose with its rich tonal quality and evocative framing.
[edit] Awards
- Filmfare Best Actress Award for Nutan
- Filmfare Best Director Award for Bimal Roy
- Filmfare Best Cinematographer Award for Kamal Bose
- Filmfare Best Movie Award
- Filmfare Best Sound Award for D Billimoria
- Filmfare Best Story Award for Jarasandha
Awards | ||
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Preceded by Saahib Bibi Aur Ghulam |
Filmfare Award for Best Film 1963 |
Succeeded by Dosti |