Lagan (1941 film)

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Directed byNitin Bose
Written byBinoy Chatterjee
Produced byNew Theatres Ltd. Calcutta
Starring
Lagan
Directed byNitin Bose
Written byBinoy Chatterjee
Produced byNew Theatres Ltd. Calcutta
Starring
CinematographyNitin Bose
Edited bySubodh Mitra
Music byR. C. Boral
Release date
  • 1941 (1941)
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Lagan is a 1941 Indian Hindi language film. It was the fifth highest grossing Indian film of 1941.[1] The film was directed by Nitin Bose for New Theatres Ltd. Calcutta.[2] The film was a bilingual with K. L. Saigal and Kanan Devi acting as the lead in its Bengali language version, Porichoy. The music for both versions was by R. C. Boral.[3] This was the last film Saigal did for New Theatres, Calcutta, before his move to Bombay to make films for different studios there.[4]

The film was a romantic triangle involving a poet, his beloved, and her wealthy husband. A theme, which was later followed by Guru Dutt, for his film, Pyaasa (1956).[4]

At the annual college event the main singer goes missing. To help matters, Kusum Kumari (Kanan Devi) plays a record. The lyrics of the song are by a young poet (K. L. Saigal) living in a village. The Principal of the college, impressed by the poet's work brings him to the city. The poet takes to training Kusum to sing for the next event and falls in love with her. One of the patrons (Nawab) is a wealthy businessman. He is enthralled by Kusum and after negotiations with her father, marries her in spite of the poet trying to intercede. The poet disappears, but after some time, the husband listens to Kusum and helps in furthering the poet's career. The gesture is misunderstood by the poet who thinks that the help was given to him because of Kusum's love for him. Finally Kusum has to let him know that for her the poet was a Guru she respected.

Cast

  • K. L. Saigal as Harish the Poet
  • Kanan Devi as Kusum Kumari
  • Nawab as Deendayal
  • Nemo as Madholal
  • Rehmat Khatoon as Poet's aunt
  • Jagdish Sethi
  • G. Vaid

Reception

The film was a big hit at the box office. Kanan Devi won the Best Actress award from the Bengal Film Journalists Association's in 1942 for the Bengali version Parichaya.[5]

Music

References

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