Video Discription |
Song : duniya banana wale ,tune kahe ko duniya banai..
Film : Teesri Kasam,1966,
Singer : Mukesh,
Lyricist and Producer: Shailendra,
Music Director: Shankar jaikishan ,
Director: Basu Bhattacharya,
Cast: Raj Kapoor, Waheeda Rehman ,Asit Sen,Iftikhar, A K Hangal , Keshto Mukharjee.
Lyrics :-
Duniya Bananewale Kya Tere Man Mein Samaayi
Kaaheko Duniya Banayi
Toone Kaaheko Duniya Banayi
Kahe Banaye Toone Maati Ke Putle
Dharti Yeh Pyari Pyari
Mukhde Yeh Ujle
Kahe Banaya Toone Duniya Ka Khela
Usme Lagaya Jawaani Ka Mela
Gup-Chup Tamasha Dekhe, Wah Re Teri Khudaai
Kahe Ko Duniya...
Preet Banaake Toone Jeena Sikhaaya
Hansna Sikhaaya, Rona Sikhaaya
Jeevan Ke Path Par Meet Milaye
Meet Milake Toone Sapne Sajaaye
Sapne Sajaake Toone Kahe Ko De Di Judaai
Kahe Ko Duniya...
Teesri Kasam (तीसरी क़सम, تیسری قسم is a 1966 film based on a short story, 'Mare Gaye Gulfam' by Phanishwarnath Renu - a Hindi novelist.
Directed by Basu Bhattacharya, Teesri Kasam is an unconventional film that portrays the society of the rural Bihar.
The story is about Hiraman, a rustic villager from a remote village in Bihar, who drives a bullock cart to earn his livelihood. The story begins with Hiraman taking two consecutive vows based on the difficult situations he had to undergo, before he meets a nautanki dancer, Hirabai. The story soon transforms into the story of the friendship between a bullock cart driver and an urban nautanki dancer. The movie, finally, ends with Hiraman taking the third vow.
Cinematography is by Subrata Mitra, dialogues by Phanishwarnath Renu, screenplay by Nabendu Ghosh, lyrics by Shailendra and Hasrat Jaipuri, music by Shankar-Jaikishen.
Raj Kapoor worked on this film for one rupee only, as it was written by his dear friend Shailendra Teesri Kasam, in spite of its box-office failure, went on to win the President’s Gold Medal as the Best Feature Film of 1966. However the film had taken its toll on Shailendra and he passed away, a broken man, on December 14, 1966 on good friend Raj Kapoor’s birthday.
Awards:-
National Film Award for Best Feature Film
1967 Moscow International Film Festival: Grand Prix - Nominated
A naive villager falls in love with a Nautanki girl
Nearly caught by the police while carrying blackmarket goods in his bullock cart, Hiraman (Raj Kapoor) takes a vow never to carry contraband again. Transporting bamboo for a trader, he is beaten by two men when their horse swerves to avoid Hiraman’s cart and upsets their carriage. He now vows never to carry bamboo again. One night he is asked to carry a woman passenger to a fair forty miles away. She is Hirabai (Waheeda Rehman), a Nautanki performer going to perform at the fair. As they travel together, Hiraman’s innocence and simplicity charm Hirabai who is also moved by the songs he sings to pass the time. Hiraman tells her in song the legend of Mahua, a beautiful motherless girl who fell in love with a stranger but is later sold to a trader by her stepmother. Hirabai coaxes Hiraman to spend a few days at the fair and see her dance. At the Nautanki, Hiraman gets into a fight with a drunkard who makes an insulting comment about Hirabai. Hirabai angrily asks him what right does he have to fight on her behalf. Hurt, Hiraman stays away from the show. Hirabai calls him to her tent and apologises to him. Hiraman asks her to leave this profession where people talk ill of her. His concern touches Hirabai’s heart as she realizes he looks upon her just as is she were a respectable woman. Becoming unhappy with her situation, she refuses the local zamindar’s overtures. The zamindar tries to force himself on her but she fights him off. Hirabai decides to leave the Nautanki company for her presence will threaten the livelihood of others in the troupe as the zamindar will not leave them alone unless she gives in to him. But she cannot live a lie with Hiraman. She sends for him to say goodbye. At the train station she tells him she is going back to her old company. She tells a hurt Hiraman that like Mahua she already has been sold. As she departs and Hiraman returns to his cart he takes a third vow never to carry a woman from a Nautanki Company again.
It is one of Indian cinema’s tragic ironies that a sensitive and poetic film like Teesri Kasam sank without a trace, indirectly leading to its producer lyricist Shailendra’s death due to stress of financial problems. The irony is even more so as today the film is recognised as one of the all-time great films of Indian cinema.
Teesri Kasam
1966 ‧ Drama/Romance ‧ 2h 39m
Songs and Singers..
1
Aa Aa Bhi Jaa
5:03 · Lata Mangeshkar
2
Chalat Musafir
3:04 · Manna Dey
3
Duniya Bananewale
5:03 · Mukesh
4
Haye Ghazab Kahin Tara Toota
4:14 · Asha Bhosle
5
Maare Gaye Gulfaam
4:00 · Lata Mangeshkar
6
Paan Khayen Saiyan Hamaro
4:10 · Asha Bhosle, Shankar–Jaikishan
7
Sajanwa Bairi Ho Gaye Hamar
3:51 · Mukesh
8.
Sajan Re Jhoot Mat Bolo
3:43 · Mukesh
9
Lali Lali Doliya Mein Lali Re
3:11 · Asha Bhosle |