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Awaara

  • 1951
  • 3h 13min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,8/10
4791
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Awaara (1951)
Raju lives as a derelict as a result of being estranged from his bitter father, a district judge, who threw Raju's mother out of the house years ago. Raju shacks up with a Dacoit (pickpocket bandit) as his surrogate father only to realize that the man is actually responsible for the original misunderstanding between his parents. Raju kills him, and then tries killing his father, but fails, is arrested, and is taken to court right before his very own father, who presides there as the Judge. Raju has his childhood girlfriend as his legal representative, and the onus is now on his father, who must pass judgment without showing any personal sentiment.
Riproduci trailer1:06
1 video
34 foto
DrammaMusicaleRomanticismo

Esplora il dibattito natura-contro-educazione. Il figlio di un bandito finirà sempre per essere un criminale?Esplora il dibattito natura-contro-educazione. Il figlio di un bandito finirà sempre per essere un criminale?Esplora il dibattito natura-contro-educazione. Il figlio di un bandito finirà sempre per essere un criminale?

  • Regia
    • Raj Kapoor
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Khwaja Ahmad Abbas
    • V.P. Sathe
  • Star
    • Raj Kapoor
    • Nargis
    • Prithviraj Kapoor
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,8/10
    4791
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Raj Kapoor
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Khwaja Ahmad Abbas
      • V.P. Sathe
    • Star
      • Raj Kapoor
      • Nargis
      • Prithviraj Kapoor
    • 31Recensioni degli utenti
    • 14Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Awaara (1951) Trailer
    Trailer 1:06
    Awaara (1951) Trailer

    Foto34

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    + 28
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    Interpreti principali24

    Modifica
    Raj Kapoor
    Raj Kapoor
    • Raj Raghunath
    Nargis
    Nargis
    • Rita
    Prithviraj Kapoor
    Prithviraj Kapoor
    • Justice Raghunath
    • (as Prithviraj)
    K.N. Singh
    K.N. Singh
    • Jagga
    Shashi Kapoor
    Shashi Kapoor
    • Young Raj
    • (as Shashiraj)
    Cuckoo
    Cuckoo
    • Bar Dancer
    Brij Mohan Vyas
    Brij Mohan Vyas
    • Dubey (Rita's Father)
    • (as B.M. Vyas)
    Leela Mishra
    Leela Mishra
    • Mr. Raghunath's Sister-In-Law
    • (as Leela Misra)
    Baby Zubeida
    Baby Zubeida
    • Young Rita
    Leela Chitnis
    Leela Chitnis
    • Leela Raghunath
    Honey O'Brien
    Om Prakash Mehra
      Raju
        Mansaram
        Rajan
        Manek Kapoor
        Prayag Raj
          Ravi
          • Regia
            • Raj Kapoor
          • Sceneggiatura
            • Khwaja Ahmad Abbas
            • V.P. Sathe
          • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
          • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

          Recensioni degli utenti31

          7,84.7K
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          Recensioni in evidenza

          9yusufpiskin

          Raj

          Raj Kapoor directs and stars in this classic Bollywood drama, which looks at the complicated lives of a poor man (Kapoor) and a privileged woman (Nargis). In Hindi with English subtitles.

          This is the fifth collaboration between the two leads and this is one film from Indian cinema that I absolutely loved from start to finish the first time and exactly the same result occurred on a re-watch.

          Kapoor gives a very good performance starring as Raj Raghunath, the man who is about to have one big moment of truth in the courtroom after he kills a criminal. Preparing to take the case to court, he is backed by his lawyer Rita (Nargis), who also happens to be his long-lost love.

          Kapoor suits his role very well and makes the most of the time he has on the screen, while Nargis offers really good support in her role as the woman who is strongly prepared to defend Raj in court.

          Elsewhere, there are strong supporting performances to be had from Prithviraj Kapoor and Leela Chitnis in their respective roles as Judge Raghunath and Leela Raghunath. Judge is the man taking charge of the latest proceedings at the latest case in the courtroom, while Leela is the woman who is thrown out of the house as it is believed she is up to no good...

          Keep an eye out for Shashi Kapoor who appears as the younger version of Raj.

          The direction from Raj Kapoor is excellent because he allows the facial expressions to be seen to a strong effect throughout, as well as keeping a very good pace going from start to finish, while the script is very well written by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas as he makes the movie easy to follow.

          The technical aspects that stand out best are the set, camera and music, because the set is decent to view throughout, while the camera makes good use of the locations and the music is enjoyable to listen to.

          Overall, Awaara is one well-acted film which terrific performances from Raj Kapoor and Nargis and this is one film that can definitely keep you gripped. One of the best Bollywood movies to have been made in the year of this release.
          8aswang_purrmeow

          My First Taste of Bollywood

          I have always like watching movies. However, as time went by, I have only known of Hollywood, European, Japanese, and Filipino cinema.

          When I learned that Awara is one of Time Magazine's Top 100, I got a copy. The movie called my attention because I haven't seen a Bollywood movie.

          I watched Awara, and I was entertained. All the genre you can think of, you'll find it there. Name it: melodrama, action, comedy, romance, music, fantasy. Raj Kapoor craftily weaved them in the almost three hour-long classic.

          Behind the melodrama is the social commentary. The conflict between a person versus the orthodox beliefs of the milieu is a recurring theme each of us face in everyday life. Pressures to adhere to the norm led the main character to his plight. Children growing up in squalid areas is an important issue tackled.

          The musical sequences showed the movie's multi-faceted nature. It showed references to Chaplin, Rodgers/Hammerstein, and the like. Particularly amazing is the dream sequence in an east meets west setting. Elements of Hindu-Buddhist mythology are mingled with those of ancient Greco-Roman.

          The eclectic experience solidified my belief that Bollywood is indeed a pillar of world cinema. I look forward to watching more.
          howard.schumann

          One of the most popular films of all time in India

          Musicals in America in their heyday were mostly about the lives of prominent show business personalities or small town middle class Americana, never about the outcast or the urban slum dweller. This is not the case with the films of Indian director, Raj Kapoor, especially in Awaara, a 1951 film and the later Boot Polish. These films call attention to the less fortunate and, in the case of Awaara, the vagabond whose life of crime is the inevitable outcome of growing up in the slums.

          In Awaara, Kapoor's real father (Prithviraj Kapoor) plays a heartless judge who accuses his pregnant wife (Leela Chitnis) of infidelity after she was kidnapped by bandits and throws her out of his home (the logic of this eludes me since she was already pregnant when kidnapped). The stern judge staunchly believes that a thief's son will always be a thief and a good man's son will always turn out good. In a series of flashbacks, the film dramatizes the unfortunate consequences of this belief system. Raju, played by the director Raj Kapoor as an adult and by his brother Sashi Kapoor as a child, is born on the streets and grows up in the slums.

          Under the guidance of a ruthless bandit named Jagga (K. N. Singh), he turns to stealing to help support his mother. Raj has little to comfort him except for a picture hanging on the bare walls of his house of Rita, his childhood sweetheart played by the stunning Nargis, a real life lover of Kapoor. The romance between Raj and Rita is one of the central motifs of the film and the chemistry between the two is electric. This is especially evident in the boat scene where she performs an exotic dance to the Dum Bhar song, and after she calls him a junglee (savage) and he slaps her in an incident that serves to bring them closer together.

          Raju, the tramp, is forced to live on his wits but does so with humor and a Chaplinesque charm. When he finds out the true circumstances of his childhood, however, he sets out to get revenge against his father, the judge, and ends up facing a charge of attempted murder in the judge's own courtroom. Rita, a lawyer herself, defends him as she promised she would years ago. She puts the judge on the witness stand and asks pointed questions about how he condemned his wife and child to a lifetime of poverty. Rita holds him and society responsible for the conditions that led Raju to commit his crime and asks the judge to forgive him and admit that Raju is his son. Raju, in turn, offers an impassioned plea to the court to punish him as a criminal but not to neglect the conditions that gave rise to his life of crime. In the end, a very moving scene of attempted reconciliation between father and son had me wiping away the tears.

          Awaara is reminiscent of both 40s film-noir with its dark cobblestone streets and menacing shadows and, in its social conscience, of the great Italian neo-realists like de Sica. But basically, Awaara is still in the Bollywood tradition; that means drama, romance, music, comedy, and action -- all put together in a total package to appeal to a wide audience. With great songs and dances, amazing dream sequences, style and panache, strong drama, and an inspiring message, it is not surprising that Awaara became one of the most popular films in Indian cinematic history. It is one of my favorites as well.
          10petya_kirova

          Weldone! It was one of the masterpieces of the world movies from the 50s

          When I was little, my grandmother often told me about a movie from her younger ages - Awaara /released as Bradyaga/. She was always telling me, that when it came to Bulgaria it was a total hit. People watched it more that 20 times! (especially the gypsies, who thought of Indian people as their ancestors). If I ask somebody, who is over 50 year old about that film, I am sure, that he will remember it. And when the main actor - Raj Kapoor visited the country, thousands of people traveled to see him. My grandma, who was one of the best portrait photographers at that time and was asked to make his pictures with the leaders of the country, remembers that he and his wife never acted like international movie stars. They met with ordinary people, visited hospitals and orphanages. Why was that film so special? Especially in Bulgaria - a country on a Balcan peninsula with such a different culture from India? First of all, it was so different from the Soviet films that were broad-casted at that time. It was full of life, passion, love, music, and nevertheless - it was a social film - about the problems of the different classes. And it made a country so far away close. It was the first step for the good relationships between our two countries. A few years ago I have the chance to watch this movie. And I can tell, its messages are still up to day. Something that you can tell for every really good film. Watch it, you will not regret it.
          mehmetmutluozdemir

          This film effected Turkish cinema more than anything

          This movie is itself a legend. In 1988 TRT (Turkish national television) was to show that film. As I was a little child I could not now about the movies but that day my mother, grandmother, my uncles wife all got together and prepared delicious foods, and watched that movie on TV. Perhabs on that day all women in Turkiye were watching that film.

          Mavi Boncuk, a delicious movie has reference to this film. On that movie Munir Ozkul says: - Aaah Awaara (at the time he looks to Awaara's poster) I've grown my children by selling it's tickets, played for 6 months on those days.

          It is a fact that Awaara was a great success, on those days a film was playing for only a week but Awaara was in vision for 6 great months. I only remembered a scene from the film I watched when I was 6 years old, this is the scene that Raju stole a watch. Then 3 years ago I bought this film and watched with friends, my friends were very impressed with the movie, and we watched again and again.

          Awaara is a milestone for Turkish cinema, it is filmed again by great Turkish actor Sadri Alisik in 1966. Arabesk is stated to enter Turkiye with Awaara. Adalet Cimcoz and Ferdi Tayfur spoke Nargis and Raj Kapoor in Awaara's Turkish dubbing version and film is great with that excellent dubbing.

          Films song is also sung in Turkish lyrics by Sadri Alisik and song was also a hit.

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          • Quiz
            In Awaara, there are three genaration of the Kapoor family in the film. There is Deewan Kapoor in the film, who was the grandfather of Raj Kapoor (father of pritviraj ) who plays the role of judge, who comes in the beggining of the film and in the end, then Raj Kapoor's father, Pritviraaj and also his young brother, Shashi Kapoor (junior raj kapoor ) were also in this film. As a filmaker this was Raj Kapoor, his third film. This film got very famous in Russia. In a outdoor scene of Raj with Nargis, in the background, the music of the song ' na mangu sona chandi' could be heard there, 20 years later this tune was used in a song of. Bobby.
          • Connessioni
            Featured in Century of Cinema: And the Show Goes On: Indian Chapter (1996)
          • Colonne sonore
            Awara Hoon
            Sung by Mukesh

            Music composed by Shankarsingh Raghuwanshi and Jaikishan Dayabhai Panchal (as Shankar-Jaikishan)

            Lyrics by Shailendra

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          Dettagli

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          • Data di uscita
            • 14 dicembre 1951 (India)
          • Paese di origine
            • India
          • Lingua
            • Hindi
          • Celebre anche come
            • The Vagabond
          • Aziende produttrici
            • All India Film Corporation
            • R.K. Films Ltd.
          • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

          Specifiche tecniche

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          • Tempo di esecuzione
            • 3h 13min(193 min)
          • Colore
            • Black and White
          • Proporzioni
            • 1.37 : 1

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