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Dharti Ke Lal (Hindi pronunciation: ['d̪ʱəɾ.t̪iː 'keː 'lɑːl]; transl. Children of the Earth) is a 1946 Hindustani film, the first directorial venture of the noted film director Khwaja Ahmad Abbas (K. A. Abbas).
"Maine Hawa Ke Paron Pe Likha Hai" Vidyasagar Sameer "Jaana Hai Tujhko Piya Ke" Mission Istaanbul "Jo Gumshuda" Anu Malik Mahalakshmi Iyer, Ege Money Hai Toh Honey Hai "Dance Master" Nitz'n'Sony Shivamani Mr. Black Mr. White "Ek Dil Ki" Jatin–Lalit Udit Narayan, Alka Yagnik My Name Is Anthony Gonsalves "Ya Baba" Pritam Sunidhi Chauhan
Kabhi Neki Bhi Uske Ji Men Gar Aa Jaye Hai Mujhse "Ghazi Salahuddin" 1939 Khemchand Prakash: Kalyaani: Hindi: Bhairavi: Hato Kaheko Juthi Banao Batiyaan Manzil: S. D. Burman: Manna Dey: Hindi: Bhairavi: Nache Man Mora Magan Dhig Dha Dhigi Dhigi Meri Surat Teri Ankhen: S. D. Burman: Mohammed Rafi: Hindi: Bhairavi: Dil Aaj Shair Hai Gambler: S. D ...
Saat Hindustani (transl. Seven Indians) is a 1969 Indian Hindi-language action film written, directed, and produced by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas.The film portrays the heroic story of seven Indians who attempt to liberate Goa from the Portuguese colonial rule.
The first Indian film released in the Soviet Union was Dharti Ke Lal (1946), directed by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas and based on the Bengal famine of 1943, in 1949. [55] Three hundred Indian films were released in the Soviet Union after that; [226] most were Bollywood films with higher average audience figures than domestic Soviet productions.
Balraj Sahni with his wife Damayanti, 1936. Sahni was born on 1 May 1913 in Rawalpindi, Punjab, British India. [3] His father belonged to the Arya Samaj organization, a Hindu reformist movement, and stressed the importance of social reforms as well the independence movement also admiring individuals such as Gandhi and Tagore, which would instill an early idealism in the mind of Sahni. [4]
Dharti Ke Lal (1946), about the Bengal famine of 1943, which was one of Indian cinema's first social-realist films, [3] and opened up the overseas market for Indian films in the Soviet Union. [4] Pardesi (1957) was nominated for the Palme d'Or.
Kavi Pradeep was born Ramchandra Narayanji Dwivedi in 1915 into a middle-class Audichya Brahmin family in the small central Indian town of Badnagar near Ujjain.Since his early student days and later while pursuing graduation from University of Lucknow, [5] he had a passion for writing and rendering Hindi poetry.