Mohabbat Ki Kasam

Mohabbat Ki Kasam (Hindi: मोहब्बत की कसम) is a 1986 Bollywood action melodrama film directed by K. Pappu.[1] It stars Amjad Khan, Kulbhushan Kharbanda and Tanuja, with special appearances from two of Bollywood's biggest stars, Dharmendra and Rajesh Khanna.[2][3] Produced by P. B. Pictures, it features music by Kamalkant.[3] The lyricist was Kulwant Jani.[4] The director of photography was Sushil Chopra, the film also features Vinod Mehra and Moon Moon Sen in lead roles, with Anita Raj, Shoma Anand, Paintal and Imtiaz Khan, forming an ensemble cast.[5]

Mohabbat Ki Kasam
Film poster
Directed byK. Pappu
Produced bySohan Singh Billa
Written byMohan Singh Baggad (story), Madan Joshi (dialogue) and K. Pappu (screenplay)
Music byKamalkant
CinematographySushil Chopra
Edited byDeepak Pal
Production
company
P. B. Pictures
Release date
1986
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Plot

Two brothers, Thakur Vikram Singh (Kulbhushan Kharbanda), and Baseera Singh (Amjad Khan) live in the same village. Baseera is resentful that Vikram has got all he ever wanted, the estate, the wealth, the title, and lovely wife (Kaushalya Tanuja). Baseera, unable to control his anger, kills one of Vikram's men, and is sentenced to be hanged until death. Baseera leaves the legacy of revenge and hatred with his son, Jageera. Vikram undertakes to look after his nephew as his own, and he already has a son. Additionally, Vikram also adopts a boy as his son.

Jageera, now grown up, backlashes against the family; Vikram's son is killed, and the adopted son is accused of having sexual relationship with Vikram's daughter-in-law. And the person to pronounce the sentence is non other than fair-minded and generous Thakur Vikram Singh.[6]

Cast

  • Amjad Khan as Baseera Singh[7]
  • Kulbhushan Kharbanda as Thakur Vikram Singh[7]
  • Tanuja as Kaushalya Singh[7]
  • Rajesh Khanna as Krishna[7]
  • Moon Moon Sen as Radha[7]
  • Dharmendra as a shop-owner[7]
  • Anita Raaj as the shop-owner's wife[7]
  • Vinod Mehra as a Dancer/Singer[7]
  • Shoma Anand as a Dancer/Singer[7]
  • Master Bhagwan as a Dancer[7]
  • Guddi Maruti as a Student[7]
  • Paintal as Professor Lallu[7]
  • Rajesh Puri as a Dancer[7]

Soundtrack

The lyrics were written by Kulwant Jani who was active from 1970s-90s and had written lyrics for films like Ramanand Sagar's Lalkaar (1972), Anand Sagar's Hamrahi (1972), O. P. Ralhan's Paapi (1977), and Tarachand Barjatya's Ek Baar Kaho (1980).[8] Music director was Kamalkant, with playback singing provided by Mahendra Kapoor, Shabbir Kumar, Alka Yagnik and Shailendra Singh.[9]

Songlist

SongSinger
"Tere Mere Pyar Ka Dushman Zamana Ho Gaya" Shabbir Kumar
"Jahan Pasina Gire Yaar Ka" Shabbir Kumar, Shailendra Singh
"Rabba Rabba, Dil Gaya" Shabbir Kumar, Alka Yagnik
"Dil Ka Tarana Tarana Gayenge Hum Tum" Shabbir Kumar, Alka Yagnik
"Nazar Se Pilaane Ka Vaada" Mahendra Kapoor, Alka Yagnik

References

  1. Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (10 July 2014). Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema. Routledge. p. 280. ISBN 978-1-135-94318-9.
  2. Lentz III, Harris M. (24 April 2013). Obituaries in the Performing Arts, 2012. McFarland. pp. 153–. ISBN 978-0-7864-7063-1.
  3. Collections. Update Video Publication. 1991. p. 101.
  4. "Mohabbat Ki Kasam". hindigeetmala.net. Hindi Geetmala. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  5. "Mohabbat Ki Kasam". citwf.com. Alan Goble. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  6. "Mohabbat Ki Kasam". apunkachoice.com. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
  7. "Mohabbat Ki Kasam Cast & Crew". gomolo.com. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
  8. "Kulwant Jani". myswar.com. MySwar. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  9. "Songs-Mohabbat Ki Kasam". muvyz.com. Muvyz Ltd. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
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