Woh Kaun Thi?

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Woh Kaun Thi?

Original poster
Directed by Raj Khosla
Written by Dhruva Chatterjee
Starring Sadhana
Manoj Kumar
K.N. Singh
Helen
Prem Chopra
Music by Madan Mohan
Release date(s) 1964
Running time 140 min.
Country Flag of India India
Language Hindi
IMDb profile

Woh Kaun Thi? (Who Was She?) is a 1964 black-and-white Indian movie directed by Raj Khosla, starring Sadhana, Manoj Kumar and Prem Chopra. The film became a hit at the box office.[1] Its success had Khosla directing Sadhana in two more suspense thrillers: Mera Saaya (1966) and Anita (1967 film).

Contents

[edit] Plot

On a dark stormy night, a compulsive smoker, Dr. Anand (Manoj Kumar) is on his way back home when he meets a white sari clad girl (Sadhana) in distress. He offers assistance to her, giving her a lift in his car. She accepts his assistance and introduces herself as Sandhya. As soon as she steps in the car, the wipers eerily stop working. He's even more spooked when the lady tells him she knows the way and guides him outside a cemetery. En-route he notices her hand is bleeding, when asked, she tells him Mujhe khoon achcha lagtaa hai (I like blood). Shortly thereafter Sandhya disappears. A while later a distraught father stops his car begging him to save his daughter's life. He follows the man and comes to an old manor-like house, but unfortunately the girl in question is already dead. He is surprised to see her, she being the same woman he just dropped off at the cemetery a while ago. When he goes back, he encounters some policemen who tell him that the place is deserted and no-one has been living there for a while now.

Shaken by this incident, Anand decides to investigate further and gets drawn into a web of lies, deceit, and an apparition who continues to appear and disappear at will. Later his mother arranges his marriage and to his shock his bride-to-be is none other than Sandhya. He becomes obsessed by Sandhya who appeares to him under different names with different guises, making him doubt his senses. She repeatedly allures him by the use of her beauty and the haunted song Nainaa barse rimjhim (Eyes weep drizzlingly). The enigmatic, sexually repressed Sandhya ranges from a ghostlike apparition to Anand's future wife with a seduction scene where she momentarily turns 'human' to the song Lag jaa gale (Come in my arms). He gets entangled very deeply in the mystery and plethora of questions surrounding her: Is she a ghost? Why is she after him?

[edit] Trivia

  • The film was remade into Tamil as Yar Nee by Sathyam (1966).
  • Jaggayya and Jaya Lalita (who later became Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu) starred in the Telugu remake, titled Ame Evaru which was made around the same period.

[edit] Awards & Nominations

[edit] References

  1. ^ BoxOffice India.com
  2. ^ 1st Filmfare Awards 1953


[edit] External links

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