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Pheray is a 1949 Pakistani Punjabi-language film directed by Nazir Ahmed Khan. [1] [2] The story of the film was a remake of Nazir's own 1945 Indian film Gaon Ki Gori, that was released before partition. Ghulam Ahmed Chishti composed the music and the lyrics were written by G. A. Chishti and Baba Alam Siyahposh. [3] [2]
The film was released on February 11, 1979. This film was a landmark movie and introduced 'Gandasa culture' violence into the Pakistani Punjabi movies. This trend lasted for over a decade in Pakistan. Wehshi Gujjar: Yunus Malik: Sultan Rahi, Aasia, Adeeb, Iqbal Hassan, Afzaal Ahmad, Najma, Sawan: Thriller, Drama: This was a Golden Jubilee film ...
Sudhir was introduced in his first Pakistani film and played a role of a singer in this film. He had a very long film caeer. 13 May 1949 Sachai: Social film Urdu: Nazir: Swaran Lata, Nazir, Majeed, Maya, Devi: Average 28 July 1949 2 Kinaray: Social film Urdu: Ashiq Bhatti: Akhtari, Suresh, Kalavati, Zarif: Flop 28 July 1949 Pheray: Romantic ...
Mere Rashk-e-Qamar" by Junaid Asghar became second video to garner over 500 million views. This is the list of most-viewed Pakistani music videos on YouTube. As of 20 February 2023 (), 35+ videos have exceeded 100 million views (including 2 videos having 1 billion views).
Debut film for Sabiha Khanum and Santosh Kumar as actors in Pakistan. 17 February 1950: Laray: Drama: Punjabi: Nazir: Sawarn Lata]], Nazir, Nazar, Allauddin, Baba Alam Siaposh, Zeenat, Farrukh: Another big romantic and musical film from the Pheray-team.
Pages in category "Pakistani action films" The following 71 pages are in this category, out of 71 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
Pakistani film video covers (25 F) 0–9. Pakistani 3D films (4 P) B. Pakistani black-and-white films (100 P) M. Pakistani multilingual films (22 P) P. Pakistani ...
1981 marked a significant period in Pakistani cinema, as it faced a rapid decline due to islamization in the country, consequently resulting in destabilization of the film industry. [1] With growing censorship policies, Punjabi and Pashto action films dominated the field. [2]