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The film was announced in June 2023, along with the title of the film, it's based on the Naxalite–Maoist insurgency in the Bastar district of Chhattisgarh and the April 2010 Maoist attack in Dantewada. [7] Bastar was theatrically released on 15 March 2024. [8] The film received negative reviews from critics and was a major box office bomb. [9]
This film was based on a famous short story "Jhumkay" by a famous Urdu writer Saadat Hassan Manto, film was released on 2 September 1966. A super-hit 'Mujra' song sung by Surayya Multanikar, lyrics by Masroor Anwar , music by Deebo Bhattacharia .
Opening Title Genre Lanuage Director Cast Notes 9 January 1953: Ghulam: Social film: Urdu: Anwar Kamal Pasha: Sabiha Khanum, Santosh Kumar, Shammi: 27 February 1953: Sailaab: Social film
The film premiered on 10 October at Karachi [25] and on 14 October 2013 at Rawalpindi/Islamabad. [26] Waar was given adults-only rating by the Sindh's provincial censor board for use of obscene language and violence. [22] Waar was released in about forty five theaters across the country. [27] The film was world TV premiered on 14 August 2014 on ...
Bastar may refer to: Bastar State , a state founded in the 15th-century that later became a princely state of British India Bastar district , an administrative district of Chhattisgarh state in central India
Title Director Cast Notes Yeh Kaisay Hua: Iqbal Rizvi: Kaveeta, Nadeem, Badar Munir, Firdaus Jamal, Nemat Sarhadi: Box Office: Average Aisa Bhi Hota Hay: Masroor ...
This was the first-ever Urdu language 'Silver Jubilee' hit film in Pakistan. It was released on April 7, 1950. 2 June 1950: Judai: Drama: Urdu: Amin Malik: Shahina, Sadiq Ali, Nazar: 17 July 1950: Beqarar: Drama: Urdu: Nazir Ajmeri: Ragni, S. Gul, Shammi, Noor Mohammed Charlie, Majeed: The film was released on July 17, 1950 with hit music by ...
The film was shot in 2003 but wasn't released until 2005. Set against the backdrop of the Indian Emergency, the movie tells the story of three young people in the 1970s, when India was undergoing massive social and political changes. The title is taken from a poem by Urdu poet Mirza Ghalib.