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Pehchan (1975 film)

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Pehchan (1975 film)
پہچان
Directed byPervaiz Malik
Written by
Screenplay byPervaiz Malik
Produced byAnis Doosani
Starring
Music byNisar Bazmi
Release date
  • 1 August 1975 (1975-08-01)
CountryPakistan
LanguageUrdu

Pehchan is a 1975 Pakistani action-drama film directed by Pervaiz Malik. The film stars Nadeem and Shabnam, with Sabiha Khanam, Qavi Khan, and Munawar Saeed playing supporting roles. The film revolves around a family that lost its sole heir. The music was composed by Nisar Bazmi. It released on 1 August 1975 and was a success at the box office. At the 1975 Nigar Awards, the film received two awards.[1][2][3]

Plot

The story starts when the mother of a young boy named Janu dies at a railway station. Afterwards, a rich woman's secretary takes him to her mistress's house. The Mistress welcomes Janu and raises him with her son, Rashid. While playing, Rashid mistakenly shoots Janu and runs away, leaving the city out of fear of being arrested. However, nothing happens to Janu and the bullet just touches him. Unfortunately, Rashid gets trapped by a rich man who uses him for illegal activities.

Several years later, Janu is now closer with the Mistress and handles all of her properties. Sara, the daughter of the Mistress's husband, comes to live with them. She educates the villagers women about their health and family planning but Janu calls them vulgar things. He also teases Sara at different events, so she decides to leave the village. When Janu learns that she is leaving the village he stops her and confesses his love for her.

One day, Mistress is saddened remembering her lost son Rashid, so Janu decides to help her by placing a newspaper advertisement about Rashid's years-long absence from his family. Rashid sees the advertisement and decides to come back home. During his journey on the train, Rashid reveals the details of his situation to an unknown person, who turns out to be a criminal. The criminal decides to kill Rashid and disguise as him so that he can steal his property, so he injures Rashid by throwing him out of the train.

When the disguised Rashid goes home everyone notices his strange behaviour. He gets angry whenever Rashid's childhood is discussed. One day, the Mistress's secretary brings another person to the house. He seems to be irrational, but the person is actually Rashid. When the fake Rashid learns of his arrival he tries to kill him but fails, creating doubts in Janu's mind that the disguised Rashid is legitimate. An old Fakirni who has been living in the village for years comes across the unstable Rashid, feels his presence and tells Janu that he is the real Rashid. Janu is shocked and decides to expose the fake Rashid in front of everyone, but he fails and no-one believes him. The fake Rashid tells the Mistress to secure his marriage with Sara. Although Sara denies him at first, she later agrees after Janu approves it. When the Mistress learns of the engagement she arranges the weeding.

One day, the Mistress falls ill and asks the fake Rashid to sing the song that he sang in his childhood, but he cannot. At that moment, Janu comes with the real Rashid, who successfully sings the song. The identity of fake Rashid is revealed, Rashid reunites with his family after his years-long absence, and the Mistress arranges a marriage between Sara and Janu.

Cast

Soundtrack

All lyrics are written by Masroor Anwar; all music is composed by Nisar Bazmi[5]

Saheli
No.TitleSinger (s)Length
1."Allah hi Allah kiya karo"Naheed Akhtar 
2."Apne se lagte hain"Naheed Akhtar 
3."Mera pyar tere jeevan ke"Mehdi Hassan 
4."Mera pyar tere jeevan ke"Mehnaz Begum 
5."Hum ne kiya hai pyar"Ahmed Rushdi, Naheed Akhtar 

Impact

The film was remade in Bollywood as Namak. It starred Sanjay Dutt and was released in 1996.[6]

Awards and nominations

At 1975 Nigar Awards, the film received two awards;[7]

References

  1. ^ "Pehchan: A tribute to Pervaiz Malik". The News. 10 September 2017. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  2. ^ "OBITUARY: Farewell, Pervez Malik". Dawn. 29 November 2008. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  3. ^ "Pehchan". Pak Film Magazine. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  4. ^ Omair Alavi (19 July 2020). "The man, the legacy, the legend".
  5. ^ a b c d e "Pehchan (1975 film)". Complete Index To World Film (CITWF) website. Archived from the original on 20 January 2016. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  6. ^ "When Bollywood copied Lollywood: The Nadeem Phenomenon". Youline Magazine. 13 November 2020.
  7. ^ "List of Nigar awards from 1957 to 1971". The Hot Spot Online website. 17 June 2002. Archived from the original on 3 August 2008.