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This article lists Urdu-language films in order by year of production.Below films are mostly from Pakistan along with some Indian Urdu movies. For a full list of Pakistani films, including Punjabi language, Bengali language films and Urdu see List of Pakistani films.
Pages in category "Urdu-language Indian films" The following 125 pages are in this category, out of 125 total. ... Sangam (1964 Hindi film) Seeta Aur Geeta; Shaan ...
Ruposh (Urdu: روپوش) is a 2022 Pakistani romantic television film produced by Abdullah Kadwani and Asad Qureshi under their production house of 7th Sky Entertainment.It was written by Nooran Makhdoom and directed by Ali Faizan, starring Haroon Kadwani in lead role opposite Kinza Hashmi. [1]
العربية; تۆرکجه; বাংলা; Català; Cymraeg; Español; فارسی; Français; Frysk; Galego; 한국어; हिन्दी; Bahasa Indonesia ...
This is a list of films produced by the Indian Hindi-language film industry, popularly known Bollywood, based in Mumbai ordered by year and decade of release. Although "Bollywood" films are generally listed under the Hindi language, most are in Hindustani and in Hindi with partial Bhojpuri, Punjabi, Urdu and occasionally other languages ...
Year Title Director(s) Studio(s) Language(s) Distributor Notes 2015 3 Bahadur: Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy: Waadi Animations, SOC films. Urdu: ARY Films: First full-featured animated film and installment of 3 Bahadur franchise. [1] 2016 3 Bahadur: The Revenge of Baba Balaam: Urdu 2nd installment in franchise. [2] 2018 3 Bahadur: Rise of the Warriors ...
The film was made in Bengali-speaking East Pakistan, [1] and Raihan and much of the cast and crew were from there, but for commercial reasons it was produced in Urdu. [ 3 ] Raihan's decision to film in colour was influenced by the first colour laboratory in Pakistan being located in Dacca, at the fledgling government-run East Pakistan Film ...
In a 2004 review of the film's DVD release, John Beifuss of The Commercial Appeal called the film "arguably the find of the year, for cult movie fans", writing: "A mind-bending fusion of Hammer-style vampirism with the exotic song-and-dance numbers that are all but mandatory for movies made in Pakistan and India, [Zinda Laash] is both derivative and innovative, campy and scary."