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Ladki

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Director
  
M.V. Raman

Release date
  
1953 (India)

Music director
  
Dhaniram, R. Sudarsanam

Language
  
Hindi

6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy

Budget
  
7 million INR

Country
  
India

Release date
  
1953

Writer
  
Hargobind Duggal (dialogue associate), Rajendra Krishan (dialogue), R. Venkatachalam (story)

Screenplay
  
Rajendra Krishan, Hargobind Duggal

Cast
  
Kishore Kumar
(Kishore),
Vyjayanthimala
(Rani Mehra),
Bharat Bhushan
(Raja),
Anjali Devi
(Kamini),
Om Prakash
(Hazurdas)

Similar movies
  
Kahaani (2012), Ek Ladka Ek Ladki (1992), Ghar (1978), Apne (2007), Lekin (1990)

Adarsh ladki vs buri ladki lipstick under my burkha edition the quint


Ladki (English: Woman) is a 1953 Hindi-language romantic comedy film written by V.S.Venkatasalam and directed by M. V. Raman. The film starred Vyjayanthimala, Kishore Kumar, Bharat Bhushan and Anjali Devi in the lead while Chittor V. Nagaiah, Leela Mishra, Om Prakash, Raj Mehra and Master Chhotu as the ensemble cast. The film was produced by A. V. Chettiar of AVM Productions. The film's score was composed by R. Sudarsanam and Dhaniram, edited by K. Shankar and M. V. Raman and was filmed by Yusuf Mulji and T. Muthu Sami.

Contents

Plot

Rani (Vyjayanthimala), a feminist, is best friends with Kamini (Anjali Devi) much to the disapproval of her mother since Kamini's father (Chittor V Nagaiah) had married a woman of low caste. They meet Raja (Bharat Bhushan), a medical student, and Kishore (Kishore Kumar). After the initial tussle, Raja and Kamini fall in love while Kishore likes Rani. Rani goes to Columbo for the University Sports Tournament and while winning every single event she enters there, injures her leg and is in hospital. Meanwhile Kamini and Raja marry secretly since he knows his woman-hating, upper caste father will never agree to this marriage. Captain Sundar, Kamini's childhood friend, comes from Rangoon and wants to marry Kamini but is shattered as he finds out she is married to Raja. Raja's parents are told of the wedding and they call him home asking him to forget the marriage and marry a girl of their choice. Raja refuses and goes back to Kamini and misunderstands the situation when he sees Kamini with Sundar. He returns to his parents and tells them he's willing to marry the girl of their liking who turns out to be Rani, having returned from Columbo. Kamini, devastated by Raja's betrayal, decides to commit suicide. Finally with Kishore and Sundar's help, everything is sorted out and Raja is re-united with Kamini while Kishore marries Rani.

Cast

  • Vyjayanthimala as Rani Mehra
  • Kishore Kumar as Kishore
  • Bharat Bhushan as Raja
  • Anjali Devi as Kamini
  • Chittor V. Nagaiah as Kamini's father
  • Om Prakash as Hazurdas
  • Leela Mishra as Mrs. Hazurdas
  • Raj Mehra as Colonel Mehra, Rani Mehra's father
  • Master Chhotu
  • Production

    Ladki was produced by A. V. Meiyappan, founder of AVM Productions. It was simultaneously shot in Tamil as Penn and Telugu as Sangham, with Vyjayanthimala starring as the female lead in all three versions.

    Soundtrack

    The film's soundtrack was composed by R. Sudarsanam and Dhaniram while the lyrics was provide by Rajendra Krishan. The song Baat Chalat Nai Chunari Rang Dari and Shaadi Shaadi sung by Geeta Dutt and Kishore Kumar respectively becomes the successful song of the film.

  • "Baat Chalat Nai Chunari Rang Dari" - Singer: Geeta Dutt
  • "Shaadi Shaadi" - Singer: Kishore Kumar
  • Reception

    Upperstall's reviewer Karan Bali wrote, "As with Bahar and many of her early films, it is Vyjayanthimala's dances that are the film's saving graces although it is unintentionally funny now to see how deliberate and obviously tacky the sequences are which lead into her dances [...] Ladki too makes no real demands on 'feminist' tomboy Vyjayanthimala histrionically [...] Kishore Kumar are strictly supportive appendages at best [...] Kishore Kumar does what he can, bringing the film to life with his lively antics whenever he is on screen. One sees his potential for zany comedy that would go on to flower fully in films like Aasha (1957), Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi (1958) and Half Ticket (1962)".

    Box office

    At the end of its theatrical run, the film grossed around 1,50,00,000, and became the second highest grossing film of 1953 with verdict hit.

    References

    Ladki Wikipedia
    Ladki IMDb