Prithvi Vallabh
Prithvi Vallabh | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sohrab Modi |
Written by | K. M. Munshi |
Produced by | Minerva Movietone |
Starring | Sohrab Modi Durga Khote Sankatha Prasad Meena Shorey K. N. Singh |
Cinematography | Y. D. Sarpotdar |
Music by | Rafiq Ghaznavi Saraswati Devi |
Release date | 1943 |
Running time | 121 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Prithvi Vallabh is a historical drama Bollywood film directed by Sohrab Modi. Made under the Minerva Movietone banner it was released in 1943.[1][2] The story is an adaptation of K. M. Munshi's book "Prithvi Vallabh" written in 1920.[3] It had music by Rafiq Ghaznavi and Saraswati Devi with lyrics by Pandit Sudershan who also wrote the screenplay and dialogues.[4] The film starred Sohrab Modi, Durga Khote, Sankatha Prasad, Kajjan, Meena Shorey, Sadiq Ali, K. N. Singh and Al Nasir.[5]
The story revolves around two kings, Munj/Prithvi Vallabh of Avantipur who is kind and just, and Tailap a neighboring king who is cruel. With the help of his sister Mrinalvati (Durga Khote) and another neighbouring king Bhillam (K. N. Singh), Tailap manages to capture Prithvi Vallabh. The rest of the film follows incidents following his captivity.
Cast
- Sohrab Modi as Munj
- Durga Khote as Mrinalvati
- Sankatha Prasad as Tailap
- K. N. Singh as Bhillam
- Kajjan
- Meena Shorey as Vilas
- Amirbai Karnataki as Charini, the devotee
- Sadiq Ali as Kavi
- Al Nasir as Bhoj, Munj's son
- Navin Yagnik
Crew
- Director: Sohrab Modi
- Producer: Minerva Movietone
- Writer: K. M. Munshi
- Screenplay, Dialogues: Pandit Sudarshan
- Cinematographer: Y. D. Sarpotdar
- Audiographer: Keki Edulji
- Art Direction and settings: Rusi K. Banker
- Studio: Minerva Movietone
- Music: Rafiq Ghaznavi and Saraswati Devi
- Music Effects: Mir Sahib
- Lyricist: Pandit Sudarshan
- Choreographer: Chaubey, K. M. Parwar
- Costumes: G. J. More
- Make-up: M. N. Borkar
References
- ^ "-". Gomolo.com. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
- ^ Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (1999). Encyclopaedia of Indian cinema. British Film Institute. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
- ^ Gangar, Amrit (2008). Sohrab Modi The Great Mughal of Historicals. New Delhi, India: Wisdom Tree. p. 60. ISBN 9788183281089.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - ^ "Prithvi Vallabh". Hindi Geetmala. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
- ^ "Prithvi Vallabh". Alan Goble. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
External links