Anand Ashram

Anand Ashram
Directed by Shakti Samanta
Produced by Shakti Samanta
Written by Shakti Samanta
Kamleshwar (dialogue-Hindi)
Prabhat Roy (dialogue-Bengali)
Story by Sailajananda Mukhopadhyay
Starring Ashok Kumar
Uttam Kumar
Sharmila Tagore
Music by Shyamal Mitra
Cinematography Aloke Dasgupta
Edited by Bijoy Chowdhary
Production
company
Natraj Studios
Release dates
  • 14 October 1977 (1977-10-14)
Running time
141 minutes
Country India
Language Hindi/Bengali

Anand Ashram is a 1977 double version Indian drama film in Hindi and Bengali written and directed by Shakti Samanta, based on a story by Bengali film director and novelist, Sailajananda Mukhopadhyay. It starred Ashok Kumar, Uttam Kumar and Sharmila Tagore in lead roles. Samanta has previously made another double version, Amanush (1975) with the same lead actors, however this film didn't do well at the box office.[1]

Plot

Dr. Deepak lives with his wealthy father, a Thakur, in a small town in India. While the Thakur would like to get Deepak to marry a woman from an equally wealthy family, he has fallen in love with a poor woman named Asha, and would like to marry her. The Thakur is displeased, and asks Deepak to leave his house, never to return. A few months later, Thakur's employee, Girdhari, informs him that he has found an abandoned child by the river bank, and would like to adopt him. Initially the Thakur does not want anything to do with the child, but when he sees it for the first time, he decides to let Girdhari have his way. Years later, young Pratap has grown up under Girdhari and Thakur's care, and travels abroad to study in order to be a doctor. When he returns he decides to work with a chemical company. His travels take him to meet a beautiful woman named Kiran, her father, and an elderly man named Doctor. Pratap is perturbed by this doctor, who seems to know him very well, and wants him to leave his job at the chemical company, and start practicing medicine in the small town where they live. What Pratap does not know that this doctor is none other than his biological father, Deepak. What both don't know is what steps the Thakur will take when he finds out that Pratap is none other than his grandson.

Cast

Music

The film had music by Shyamal Mitra, with lyrics by Indeevar

Song Singer (s) Duration
Tum Itni Sundar Ho Yesudas, Preeti Sagar 3:55
Sara Pyar Tumhara Asha Bhonsle, Kishore Kumar 3:58
Tere Liye Maine Sabko Chhoda Kishore Kumar 4:01
Raahi Naye Naye Rasta Naya Naya Kishore Kumar 3:40
Safal Wohi Jeevan Hai Shyamal Mitra 3:38
Jab Chaho Chali Aaoongi Lata Mangeshkar 3:49

References

  1. Nalin Mehta (2008). Television in India: Satellites, Politics and Cultural Change. Routledge. p. 155. ISBN 1134062133.

External links


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