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Farz

  • 1967
  • Not Rated
  • 2 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
138
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Farz (1967)
ActionCrimeThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuGopal, a secret agent, investigates the death of his colleague who possessed evidence against a known terrorist. Gopal and Kamla embark on a journey to find the traitor.Gopal, a secret agent, investigates the death of his colleague who possessed evidence against a known terrorist. Gopal and Kamla embark on a journey to find the traitor.Gopal, a secret agent, investigates the death of his colleague who possessed evidence against a known terrorist. Gopal and Kamla embark on a journey to find the traitor.

  • Regie
    • Ravikant Nagaich
  • Drehbuch
    • Vishwamitter Adil
    • Arudra
    • V.D. Puranik
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jeetendra
    • Babita Kapoor
    • Aruna Irani
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    138
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Ravikant Nagaich
    • Drehbuch
      • Vishwamitter Adil
      • Arudra
      • V.D. Puranik
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jeetendra
      • Babita Kapoor
      • Aruna Irani
    • 5Benutzerrezensionen
    • 1Kritische Rezension
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos8

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    Topbesetzung26

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    Jeetendra
    Jeetendra
    • Gopal (Agent 116)
    Babita Kapoor
    Babita Kapoor
    • Sunita
    • (as Babita)
    Aruna Irani
    Aruna Irani
    • Basanti
    Kanchana
    Kanchana
    • Kamla
    Sajjan
    Sajjan
    • Damodar
    Agha
    Agha
    • Shantaram
    Manohar Deepak
    Mukri
    Mukri
    • Raju
    Mohan Choti
    Mohan Choti
    • Nikku
    V.D. Puranik
      Prakash
      Prem Kumar
      Ramesh
      Jaggarao
      Samson
      David Abraham
      David Abraham
        Raghavulu
          Mari
          • Regie
            • Ravikant Nagaich
          • Drehbuch
            • Vishwamitter Adil
            • Arudra
            • V.D. Puranik
          • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
          • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

          Benutzerrezensionen5

          6,2138
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          Empfohlene Bewertungen

          6SAMTHEBESTEST

          This was the closest Bollywood film could go to the James Bond series.

          Farz (1967) : Brief Review -

          This was the closest Bollywood film could go to the James Bond series. Farz is an official remake of the Telugu film Gudachari 116 (1967), which had become quite a rage in Telugu cinema at the time. Spy thriller wasn't a big commercial genre for Bollywood but was made commercial with the great use of super hit music and romance. Ravikant Nagaich's Farz reminded me of Sean Connery's James Bond movies like "Dr. No" (1962), "From Russia With Love" (1963), "Goldfinger" (1964), and "Thunderball" (1965). These films had become popular outside the US and UK, leading to many people adopting the James Bond kind of spy in their particular cinema industries. As we know all those tricks: Bond is busy with some girl and he is called by the boss; he is sent on a mission; he is chased at the airport but escapes smartly; then he meets his local contact from the agency; he then finds a new girl, seduces her, and then they are attacked; and finally, there is a villain with all his traps, and our super agent finds a success breaking them all. Jeetendra is seen doing all those things here in Farz. As expected, Bollywood has been better than Hollywood with music, so Farz has some super hit songs like "Hum To Tere Aashiq Hain," "Baar Baar Din Ye Aaye," and "Mast Baharon Ka Mein Aashiq," and Jeetendra looks too gorgeous in all of them. For a new trick (or somewhat old, I'd say), he falls in love with the girl whose father is his/nation's enemy. The script is very smart (thanks to the original), but falters somewhere towards the end. A dead person suddenly wakes up with a bullet in his chest and does some shooting for a while; the girl who has denied believing the agent in the previous meeting suddenly has a seductive song with him. Totally illogical. The rest of the film is much better, though, especially all those fight sequences and espionage stuff, which was new for Bollywood. Samadhi established a quality spy thriller formula in 1950, so Farz, also being a remake, can't be called pathbreaking. The very next year, we got pathbreaking Ankhe!

          RATING - 6/10*

          By - #samthebestest.
          9mfhadm-07333

          One of the best spy thrillers

          Great movie to watch for. First espionage thriller. Had a VCR cassette..
          basheer447

          Golden Jubilee Hit

          It is the 1st successful movie based on Spy James bond type, The highlight of the movie is Jeetendra's charming looks his way of acting as well as his dancing ability, Well directed well scripted as well as meledious evergreen songs, From this movie Jeetu came in lime light he proved though this movie that he is very much talented, 100% credit goes to Jeetu's presence in this movie, Babita too looks gorgeous & Mukri comedy is fine after all you can say that it is the 1st color spy successful Golden Jubilee hit film of Bollywood till date no movie has been made or even reach to the expectation of Farz. With this movie Jeetu set the trend fashion of tight fitting trouser & white shoes & T shirt.
          antlerbaby

          The copycat adventures of a fast dancing young spy

          Farz has developed somewhat of a cult following these days, and misinformed statements regarding "Jeetendra's first", and India's initial spy flick is what got Farz into my DVD player. Over time, these myths have been busted but my own experience with Farz reflects the curse of its genesis. I probably would not have followed through with it if I had not been watching with a companion, although since then I have seen it in full several times. It has become one of those classics I will put up with, but this review is generally negative.

          Part of the appeal of this movie is the low budget and the campy "so bad it is good" aspects, as well as the "first" Hindi spy movie. Farz is certainly campy, but it is not an original Hindi film, and not the first Indian spy film, either. It stands to be known that Farz is a color remake of the black and white Telugu-language hit, Gudachari 116 which released earlier that same year. The movies share the same producers making Farz an intentional and methodical attempt to bring the South Indian moneymaker to Bombay. Aside from some minor shuffling of the events, and all the wrong omissions and additions, the way it is filmed is nearly identical and even includes some of the same sets and props! In its attempt to recreate the previous feature this has resulted in Farz having a low-budget look and demanded mediocre copycat performances from those involved.

          Fortunately for the myth-makers, Jeetendra's tight "mod Elvis" outfits and his now iconic pompadour hairstyle as he goes about as the Hindi speaking agent Gopal is no way inspired by the Telugu film, since the original character was dressed somewhat frumpily in garish patterned sweaters and jackets with a kinky mop not even a visibly large amount of brylcreem was able to contain. But, there are still parallels in dress notability. While Telugu 116 displayed an attention getting sort of frumpiness with blinding patterns, Hindi 116 forces us to eat a plate-full of eye burning sex appeal whenever he turns his backside to the camera. The off-white suit pants Gopal wears in most of the scenes are unnecessarily tight to the point that it could make you blush. Especially during the fights, as Jeetu kicks and leaps around in the harsh dramatic light they look powdered on by the makeup department or perhaps something from the ballet. In fact, I'll dare to say that Gopal's thus attired derrière gets so much screen time it's almost a separate character in its own right. This can be a good thing or a bad thing according to your interests.

          For the truly bad stuff, the comedy relief in the form of Gopal's two helpers is childish... and there is a pie fight. Musically, Laxmikant and Pyarelal write some catchy item numbers but there is also a disturbing inclusion of "The Twilight Zone" theme in the general score which seems to follow suit with how "The Addams Family" theme was featured in Guddchari 116. This cant possibly be a mistake or coincidence, for you'd have to assume in their quest to match up with the original L&P were advised to steal something spooky from American TV. The dances are not remarkable for a 60's piece, including the first wherein our youthful agent leaps around crowing like a rooster as he frolics with an unnamed vixen and opening his mouth very wide into the camera in ways that could make you uncomfortable. Even this famous dance is a copy of the one in Guddchari116, although Jeetendra infuses significantly more energy and weirdness into it. There is also some old school racism and sexism on the loose, the most blatant example of racism being the use of a scowling "chinese" villain in rubbery yellow face paint. For sexism, Babita's character Sonita is treated more poorly than the typical bollywood heroine. Used for her connections she is ultimately abandoned, even though this poor thing is only 17 years old! (and just what age is Gopal supposed to be? Is he a teenager too? So many questions, but I digress...). For racism AND sexism, there is an inclusion of an evil white goonette who brandishes a combination dagger-flashlight, resulting in a shocking moment when Gopal uses her body to shield himself from a bullet!

          If you are looking for Jeetendra's first performance as leading man, although this is certainly the style he would be known for up to the early 70's, Farz was not the film. It will be worth the time and money to acquire 1964's Geet Gaaya Pattharone Ne, an original artistic endeavor by the legendary V. Shantaram which displays the decidedly young Jeetendra in a way that does not involve gratuitous rock & roll posturing and butt shots. To experience both of these films in the correct order is to reveal Jeetu's early working versatility and willingness to do it with gusto. Otherwise, if you are not particularly interested in Jeetendra and are not one of those who has made it a goal to see each and every bond movie rip-off in existence (and in this case, a rip off of a rip off), you can continue living your life without seeing Farz and might even be the better for it.
          6nadkarnisumeet

          India's first James Bond

          Farz review :

          Much before Agent Vinod (1977) or Gunmaster G9 (1979), Bollywood got its own James Bond in jumping jack Jeetendra playing Agent 116 in Ravee kant Nagaich's Farz.

          Jeetendra plays a secret agent out to foil the evil plans of Sajjan who wants to destroy India. Eventually, we discover that Sajjan is a mere pawn in the game and main villain is a poker faced Chinese Supremo who speaks only in monosyllables. Yea, it was 60s and India was freshly out of the China war and hence quite a few espionage film of that era depicted Chinese as the antagonists. Dharmendra's Ankhen (1968) for instance..

          Jeetu was his usual self rollicking in "Mast Baharon ka aashiq" and later romancing the pretty Babita in "Hum toh tere aashiq hain sadiyon purane". He earned the nickname Jumping Jack with this film. His portrayal of desi style Bond was not bad at all. The "Q" team here was however a group of comic actors including Agha Saahab, Mukri and Mohan Choti. They were clear misfit in their roles.

          Laxmikant Pyarelal's music became a super hit and topped the Binaca Geetmala charts that year. The "Happy birthday to you Sunita" is still a party favorite.

          In one of his later interviews, Jeetendra admitted that Farz had actually started slow at the box office and he had "fed" the movie for a couple of weeks before it picked up to become a hit.

          And that's how India got it's own James Bond!!

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            The film was a turning point for Jeetendra who became famous and was called Jumping Jack after the film.
          • Verbindungen
            Followed by Keemat (1973)
          • Soundtracks
            Happy Birthday
            (uncredited)

            Written by Mildred J. Hill and Patty S. Hill

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          • Herkunftsland
            • Indien
          • Sprache
            • Hindi
          • Auch bekannt als
            • Duty
          • Drehorte
            • Delhi, Indien
          • Produktionsfirma
            • Vijayalakshmi Pictures
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          • Laufzeit
            2 Stunden 50 Minuten
          • Sound-Mix
            • Mono

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          Farz (1967)
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          By what name was Farz (1967) officially released in Canada in English?
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