but hrishida insisted on sharmila,saying " she has my anupama's eyes"...
anythread post on ANURADHA?...leela naidu was so angelic as the protagonist
Bigg Boss 19: Daily Discussion Thread - 3rd Oct 2025
Bigg Boss 19 - Daily Discussion Topic - 4th Oct 2025 - WKV
Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai Oct 4, 2025 Episode Discussion Thread
SAB KUCH HOGAYA 4.10
Ranbir and Deepika in the airport shuttle.
Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai Oct 5, 2025 Episode Discussion Thread
Slap!! Once again?!
Veteran Actress Sandhya Shantaram Passes Away
Janhvi -Tiger in Lag Jaa Gale
![]() |
Hrishida evocatively captures the passage of years while Ashok composes philosophical poems in prison. His redemption is however not complete -- a grown-up Nina expresses her distaste for criminals. Aashirwad's tear-soaked climax however reaffirms the pristine nature of the father-daughter bond.
![]() |
The film's many lighter moments balance out the emotional sequences which are aplenty -- while blessing his sister Khanna says, 'Tujhe kya ashirwad doon, bahen? Yeh bhi toh nahin keh sakta meri umar tujhe lag jaaye.' (How do I bless you? I can't even pledge that my lifespan should be added to yours.)
![]() |
Hrishida always peopled his films with interesting supporting actors who are supportive to the main leads and gave them memorable cameos -- Lalita Pawar was unforgettable as the benevolent Mrs D'Sa in Anadi, Shashikala and David were Sharmila's fiercely protective wellwishers in Anupama. Seema was Rajesh Khanna's compassionate sister in Anand. Asrani was Amitabh's peace-making secretary in Abhiman. And in Guddi, Utpal Dutt played Jaya's caring but scheming uncle, which kick-started his memorable career in Hindi films.
![]() |
Embellishing his film with a great score by S D Burman, Abhimaan suggests Mukherji's belief in the primacy of relationships over all else.
![]() |
Rekha's exuberant Khubsoorat persona found an echo in Hrishida's Jhoothi subsequently but the filmmaker's latter movies were not a patch on his classics. After receiving the Padma Vibhushan and the Dadasaheb Phalke Award, Hrishida was content to rest, having left behind a virtual El Dorado for Hindi film lovers.
Remembering Hrishida |
| |
|
Hrishikesh Mukherjee's best films
August 28, 2006
Khubsoorat (1980)
In the late 1970s, Hrishida enthralled audiences with quite a few comedies -- Chupke Chupke, Golmaal and Khubsoorat.
Khubsoorat is a sparkling comedy, both genial and literate. But amidst the froth and frolic, Hrishida also slips in a subtly introduced message on the often conflicting roles of discipline and freedom in life. The redoubtable Dina Pathak plays the matriarch of a household who, like Queen Victoria, is not often amused. The battle lines are drawn when her daughter-in-law's sister (played with verve by Rekha) incites her family to rebellion. But finally, neither proves to be the victor.
In the film, Hrishida seems to advocate the keeping of a fine balance between merriment and regulation. This sense of balance is what served him best in his films -- they were not too arty to alienate the masses and they were insightful enough to please the critics.
Rekha's exuberant Khubsoorat persona found an echo in Hrishida's Jhoothi subsequently but the filmmaker's latter movies were not a patch on his classics. After receiving the Padma Vibhushan and the Dadasaheb Phalke Award, Hrishida was content to rest, having left behind a virtual El Dorado for Hindi film lovers.
Sunday morning, I changed the caller tune on my phone. Moved from an English oldie to Har seedhe raste ki ek, the fabulous title song from Golmaal. About eight hours later, a colleague messaged me the news, minutes before it took over the television channels. A lump hit my throat and I instantly flashbacked to last year, when I had called up Hrishida. Working on a feature on India's best films, I couldn't look past Hrishikesh Mukherjee, the name tempting me from the film directory. Could I get an opinion from the man who made Anand? I called, and he picked up, huskily assuring me that it was he. I stammered out a nervous introduction and, making sure not to cut me off mid-sentence, the filmmaker finally stopped me. "I cannot help you, I'm sorry," he wheezed into the phone. "I am very ill." I hastily muttered an apologetic, awkward goodbye as the line went dead. I was shattered and, I soon realised, heartbroken. Yes, filmmakers get old and their films live on. Yes, life goes on. But that this would happen to Hrishikesh Mukherjee somehow just hit harder. I felt helpless and greatly dismayed, and was resultantly puzzled. Not just had I never met the man, I also hadn't ever really read up or researched his background and technique. Yet, I felt inexplicably attached to him. All I had done, of course, was fall in love with the films he made. And that's all it takes. There are filmmakers with a great cinematographic eye, those with powerful use of light and shadow, those who throw their actors over the edge to achieve mammoth performances and those who overwhelm you with sound and fury. In terms of emotion, Hindi cinema is packed with directors conversant with maudlin melancholy and rolling-in-the-aisles humour.
And it was not as if he drew his actors from the haughty sidelights of parallel cinema. These were superstars, not art-house critical favourites looking scornfully at the mainstream. He gave Amitabh Bachchan visibility in Anand, and subsequently balanced out his angry-young-man credentials with roles of acting significance. In 1973, Hrishida's Abhimaan rose alongside Prakash Mehra's Zanjeer; 1975 was the mammoth year of Ramesh Sippy's Sholay and Yash Chopra's Deewar, but Hrishida did his luminous bit with Mili and Chupke Chupke. His films might not have been Amitabh's blockbusters, but they do give us the megastar's most substantial performances. The stories are literature by themselves. From immense marital discord to the inevitability of death, from delicate Wodehousean farce to war of the classes, he tackled it all but laced his movies magically with an earnest realism that touched us to the core. Special cinema of course, but crucially special sans fanfare. A Hrishikesh Mukherjee film didn't come with any massive pretentions of grandeur, any conceit of inaccessibility. This was dal-bhaat filmmaking, supremely fresh everyday slices of life, served up unfailingly warm and tender. The films he made discriminated not between frontbenchers and critics, cineastes and collegekids, critics and our mothers. And how they endure. From Rajesh Khanna's babumoshaai to Utpal Dutt's eeesh, not to mention lyrical dialogues impossible to forget, the words penetrated the nation's collective lexicon. Even today, cable operators are well aware that their best chance of getting people to watch a poor-quality channel on a Saturday afternoon is to show one of Hrishida's Amol Palekar comedies. And the dramas are infinitely compelling, peopled by characters he turned into our extended family. The stories are ever poignant and never overdone, and we're repeatedly forced back into choking back a sob. Or stifling louder-than-acceptable guffaws with our hands. The magic lies, of course, in the fact that we are often torn by both emotions simultaneously. Hrishikesh Mukherjee was truly the heart of Hindi cinema. His films have transcended libraries and genre, and simply become a part of who we are. I grew a moustache recently and, despite the Mangal Pandey jibes, my predominant encouragement is drawn from Utpal Dutt's inimitable Golmaal lines on the importance of a man's mouch. I am not a man for funerals, but there are some cases where one just has to pay last respects. The caller tune on my phone, needless to say, now stays, a tribute to the great humanist filmmaker. It is the kind of song that inevitably makes you break into a grin, but like Hrishida's cinema, the lump in the throat stays alongside the smile. | | |||