Lamhe

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Lamhe

DVD cover
Directed by Yash Chopra
Produced by Yash Chopra
Written by Honey Irani,
Rahi Masoom Raza
Starring Sridevi,
Anil Kapoor,
Waheeda Rehman,
Anupam Kher
Music by Shiv-Hari
Distributed by Yash Raj Films
Release dates 22 November 1991
Running time 187 minutes
Language Hindi, English

Lamhe (Hindi: लम्हे, translation: Moments) is a 1991 Hindi film directed by Yash Chopra and starring Sridevi and Anil Kapoor. The story was written by Honey Irani. It was inspired from the 1986 film Anokha Rishta starring Rajesh Khanna.

Lamhe was shot in two schedules in Rajasthan and London. Over the years it has been hailed as a classic and is regarded as a modern masterpiece and possibly Yash Chopra's finest film. Sridevi received acclaim for her double role, winning the Filmfare Award for Best Actress. Although a commercial failure in India, it became a success in the U.K. Despite its commercial failure, Lamhe went on to win several awards and features in Outlook magazine's list of Bollywood's Best Films. It has been cited as Yash Chopra's personal favourite of the movies he has done. This was one of the last films that the famous Dr. Rahi Masoom Reza scripted as a writer. He died a couple of months after its release.

On the occasion of the Centenary of Indian Cinema in 2013, Lamhe featured among the Top Ten Romantic Movies of 100 years.[1]

Plot

Virendra "Viren" Pratap Singh (Anil Kapoor) travels to Rajasthan with his governess, affectionately called Dai Jaa (Waheeda Rehman). He meets the beautiful Pallavi (Sridevi) and falls in love with her. However, she happens to be older than he is, though this does not bother Viren. During a property dispute and a court case, Pallavi's father dies of a heart attack. She is shattered and goes into isolation. At the wake, Viren goes to console her, when she runs past Viren—towards Sidhharth, the man she loves. Viren is heartbroken but, to fulfill Pallavi's father's dying wish, he arranges the wedding between Sidhharth and Pallavi. Allowing Pallavi to live her life happily, Viren leaves for London.

One year into the marriage, Sidhharth and Pallavi are killed in an accident. It is revealed that she was pregnant at the time and gave birth to a daughter. The girl is named Pooja and is kept in the care of Dai Jaa. Viren has a childhood friend, Prem (Anupam Kher), who knows that Viren's heart still pines for Pallavi. Over the course of time, and with much persuasion, slowly Viren hops back to reality engaging himself in work in London. There a girl, Anita, who works along with him falls for him. She knows about Viren's love for Pallavi and constantly tries to gain his attention.

Viren visits Rajasthan from time to time, for Pallavi's death anniversary, and buys gifts for the young Pooja. He never spends any time with her though, which makes her sad. A few years later Viren returns from London and meets the grown up Pooja for the first time. When he meets her he is shocked to see that she looks exactly like her mother.

Pooja and Dai Jaa come to London for vacation, and there Anita discovers that Pooja is the image of Pallavi. This upsets her as she is afraid that Viren will eventually fall for Pooja. Pooja develops feelings for Viren whom she lovingly calls "Kuwarji". Prem also likes Pooja and understands that Pooja loves Viren. Though he likes the alliance, he is skeptical since Viren is still living in the past.

Later in the movie, Anita realizes that Viren is over Pallavi and has fallen for Pooja. There are scenes when Pooja and her come face to face over the topic of Viren. She finally confronts Pooja with the utmost respectful way of saying "He's mine." There, eventually she insults Pooja as a kid infatuated by Viren and asks what relation Pooja is to Viren that she acts authoritatively over him. Pooja retorts back saying that if she is not related to Viren, Anita is not related to him either. This frustrates Anita leading her to lambaste Viren about having feelings for a younger woman.

Pooja finds a sketch (which Viren has made of her mother) and misunderstands that it is a sketch of her. She confronts him and he reveals to her that he had loved her mother and not her. Pooja is heartbroken and returns to India with Dai Jaa. Viren decides to marry Anita since he feels she is right and has been waiting for him for a long time. Pooja can't bear this and decides to get married only on the condition that Viren marries Anita first. Pooja never marries for her love for Viren was too great. Viren does not marry as well.

The resolution she took shows a heartbroken Pooja narrating a folk tale to audience in a village show. After the show, Viren approaches a confused and wary Pooja. Viren reveals that he realized, after she left London, that he loves her and not her mother anymore, who in fact had never had feelings for him. She runs into his arms and they are together at last.

Cast

Reception

Lamhe was hugely popular with metropolitan elite and the overseas market, but it had a poor box-office response with the Indian mass market because of its supposed incest theme.[2]

Music

The music of Lamhe was composed by Shiv Kumar Sharma and Hariprasad Chaurasia, known together as Shiv-Hari and lyrics were provided by Anand Bakshi. The song "Kabhi Main Kahoon" was made from melody used as background music in Yash Chopra's previous movie Chandni, also scored by Shiv-Hari. In the famous Parody Sequence, Waheeda Rehman danced to "Aaj Phir Jeene ki Tamanna Hai" — the superhit number from her own classic Guide.

The songs included on the official soundtrack are listed here:

Song Singer(s)
"Yeh Lamhe Yeh Pal" Hariharan
"Yeh Lamhe Yeh Pal (Sad Version)" Hariharan
"Mhaare Rajasthan Ma" Moinuddin
"Mohe Chhedo Naa" Lata Mangeshkar
"Chudiyan Khanak Gayee (contains excerpt of 'Mhaare Rajasthan Ma' in the introduction)" Lata Mangeshkar and Ila Arun
"Chudiyan Khanak Gayee (Sad Version)" Lata Mangeshkar
"Kabhi Main Kahoon" Lata Mangeshkar and Hariharan
"Megha Re Megha" Lata Mangeshkar and Ila Arun
"Yaad Nahin Bhool Gaya" Lata Mangeshkar and Suresh Wadkar
"Gudiya Rani" Lata Mangeshkar
"Meri Bindiya" Lata Mangeshkar
"Freak Out (Parody Song)" Pamela Chopra and Sudesh Bhosle
"Moments of Rage (Instrumental)"
"Moments of Passion (Instrumental)"

Critical acclaim and achievements

The film was critically acclaimed, had exceptional music, and did brilliant business in UK. Unfortunately, it was not a box-office success in India. Lamhe is one of the few films that picked up the Filmfare Award for Best Movie despite its lacklustre business. Lamhe is also one of the biggest Bollywood hits in the overseas market and video circuit. Sridevi won much acclaim for her double-role as mother and daughter, winning the Filmfare Best Actress Award among others. The film finds a place in the Times Movie Guide's Top 100 Indian films.[citation needed] It is in the Outlook magazine's list of All-Time Great Indian films.[3] It has been cited as Yash Chopra's personal favourite his films.[4] Times of India included it in its list of 'Top 10 Films of Yash Chopra' describing it as a tale of "love transcending the boundaries of time and space"[5] while Rediff called it "Quite easily one of his most definitive films, Chopra surpassed his own findings of romance with the insightful, lovely Lamhe".[6]

Sridevi played both mother and daughter cast in what iDiva described as "another double role but it was unlike any played before".[7] Hailed by Rediff as "one of the most remarkable films of her career...often considered a film way ahead of its time",[8] Her performance brought her much acclaim with BizAsia stating that "Her rendition of both Pallavi and Pooja serves well in highlighting how versatile she is as an actress, playing contrasting characters in the same movie".[9] Speaking to Karan Johar about the 'Making of Lamhe', Yash Chopra revealed "When 90% of the London schedule was over, tragedy happened. Sridevi's father died...She came back after 16 days and had to shoot a comedy scene...At that moment she forgot everything and gave a wonderful scene. I understood that is the secret of her success...Why she is what she is".[10] Sridevi's folk dance number 'Morni Baga ma' also became a rage and was placed among the 'Top 5 Songs' of Yash Chopra by Hindustan Times.

Sridevi received universal critical acclaim. Many called it one of the best performances by a female in Indian cinema. Over the years Lamhe has become a cult classic.[11][12] Talking about the film, critic Rachel Dwyer wrote in her biography of the film-maker "Yash Chopra's own favourite film, Lamhe ('Moments', 1991), divided the audience on a class basis: it was hugely popular with metropolitan elites and the overseas market, which allowed it to break even, but it had a poor box-office response (largely lower class, especially the repeat audience) because of its supposed incest theme".[13] The Hindu reported that "With shades of incest, Lamhe caused more than a flutter and remained the talk of the town"[14] while Sridevi herself admitted in an interview with Rajeev Masand that she found the subject "too bold".[15] Rediff described its failure as "one of those bizarre, unexplained moments of cinema",[6]

Awards

1992 Filmfare Awards
  • Best Film – Yash Chopra
  • Best Actress – Sridevi
  • Best Comedian – Anupam Kher
  • Best Story – Honey Irani
  • Best Story –
  • Best Dialogue – Dr. Rahi Masoom Reza
  • Nominated Best Director – Yash Chopra
  • Nominated Best Actor – Anil Kapoor
  • Nominated Best Actress in a Supporting Role – Waheeda Rehman
1992 National Film Awards

References

External links

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