Teesri Manzil
- 1966
- 2h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
A woman blames a nightclub drummer for the suspicious death of her sister, and seeks revenge. However, the pair work together to solve the mystery and become romantically involved, after he ... Read allA woman blames a nightclub drummer for the suspicious death of her sister, and seeks revenge. However, the pair work together to solve the mystery and become romantically involved, after he introduces himself under another name.A woman blames a nightclub drummer for the suspicious death of her sister, and seeks revenge. However, the pair work together to solve the mystery and become romantically involved, after he introduces himself under another name.
Ram Avtar
- Laughing Passenger
- (as Ram Awtar)
S.N. Banerjee
- Hotel Manager
- (as S.N. Bannerji)
Featured reviews
The basic instincts of directors come to the fore when they make a movie. Guru Dutt is an observer of life and never resorts to melodrama even in his tragedies. Gulzar is a mischievous person and this comes out in Anand, Chupke Chupke where he wrote dialogues or in the tragic Namkeen where he directed.
Vijay Anand has a trained upbringing in terms of directorship when he saw and observed Chetan Anand at work.
Here, he has not written the film but as a director his stamp is there in each frame of the film. He is a director by instincts, and a very good one. Apart from his writing and shooting and editing skills, where too he is unmatched.
While the filmmakers may have been trying for a Hitchcock-like blend of suspense, humor and romance, the eye-popping pastels of the film's Eastmancolor cinematography and outlandish, energetic musical numbers blend to create a delightful Bollywood concoction. Lead actor Shammi Kapoor is wonderfully fruity in what is probably his best performance, and dancing queen Helen is in classic bad girl mode. Not to be missed by anyone interested in 1960's Indian pop cinema.
Teesri Manzil (1966) :
Brief Review -
Bollywood discovers a musical thriller on a mass level. Unlike Hitchcock movies or novel-based Hollywood mysteries, Bollywood always believed in commercial thrillers back in time. The idea was discovered in the 1950s, and Vijay Anand was one of those directors who looked at thrillers as commercial outings. A decade later, when Bollywood was done with whatever thrillers they could make on commercial levels, Anad teamed up with one of the finest writers of Bollywood, Nasir Hussain, to discover a high level musical trailer for Bollywood. The result was Teesri Manzil. As always, there is murder, and the murdered person is either the hero's or heroine's relative. The same 50s idea, but here the musical touch and suspense were kept till the last frame. Yes, you can predict the killer right after the first half gets over, but why that murder was committed is the real suspense here. I guessed the murderer in his second scene only, but I just wanted to know how he was related to the dead person. The mysterious behavior of the screenplay was worth it, and the murderer's involvement in the hero and heroine's lives also fit well. The film is about Vicky, a singer, who is accused of murdering a girl who was in love with him. Her sister falls in love with Vicky but breaks things up after realizing his true identity. To patch things up and clear his name, he must prove his innocence and also save himself and his friends from the real killer, who now wants him dead. Shammi Kapoor and Asha Parekh have done well yet again, but the most memorable aspect of Teesri Manzil is its music. This was the first ever chartbuster album by legendary music director R. D. Burman. O Mere Sona Re Sona, O Haseena Zulfon Wali Jane Jahan and Aaja Aaja Main Hoon Pyar Tera are all-time classics! Had it not been for the music, I don't think audiences would have shown much interest in this intense film. I must say, well done, Mr. Vijay Anand.
RATING - 7/10*
By - #samthebestest.
Bollywood discovers a musical thriller on a mass level. Unlike Hitchcock movies or novel-based Hollywood mysteries, Bollywood always believed in commercial thrillers back in time. The idea was discovered in the 1950s, and Vijay Anand was one of those directors who looked at thrillers as commercial outings. A decade later, when Bollywood was done with whatever thrillers they could make on commercial levels, Anad teamed up with one of the finest writers of Bollywood, Nasir Hussain, to discover a high level musical trailer for Bollywood. The result was Teesri Manzil. As always, there is murder, and the murdered person is either the hero's or heroine's relative. The same 50s idea, but here the musical touch and suspense were kept till the last frame. Yes, you can predict the killer right after the first half gets over, but why that murder was committed is the real suspense here. I guessed the murderer in his second scene only, but I just wanted to know how he was related to the dead person. The mysterious behavior of the screenplay was worth it, and the murderer's involvement in the hero and heroine's lives also fit well. The film is about Vicky, a singer, who is accused of murdering a girl who was in love with him. Her sister falls in love with Vicky but breaks things up after realizing his true identity. To patch things up and clear his name, he must prove his innocence and also save himself and his friends from the real killer, who now wants him dead. Shammi Kapoor and Asha Parekh have done well yet again, but the most memorable aspect of Teesri Manzil is its music. This was the first ever chartbuster album by legendary music director R. D. Burman. O Mere Sona Re Sona, O Haseena Zulfon Wali Jane Jahan and Aaja Aaja Main Hoon Pyar Tera are all-time classics! Had it not been for the music, I don't think audiences would have shown much interest in this intense film. I must say, well done, Mr. Vijay Anand.
RATING - 7/10*
By - #samthebestest.
I first saw this film a few years ago and since then I must have seen it at least 20 times. First and foremost, the songs are excellent. I could listen to every single one again and again, especially O Haseena Zulfon Wali. Mohd Rafi truly is the greatest Indian playback singer to date. Asha Bhosle provides excellent support, particularly in the O Mera Sona Re song. Secondly, both the acting of Shammi Kapoor and Asha Parekh is great, both of them can pull off the comedy and the seriousness. Thirdly the plot of the movie is quite good too, with enough suspense to keep you hooked until the very end. This movie has been credited as the first murder mystery in Indian cinema and although at times its very clichéd and a little unbelievable, it still holds your attention.
All in all a typical 1960's movie but with that added masala that is bollywood!!
All in all a typical 1960's movie but with that added masala that is bollywood!!
This is probably Shammi Kapoor's best performances after JUNGLEE(1961
Its quiet different to see him in the role of a framed musician with an eye for the ladies He has like three bad girls who love him
A young woman fell in love for Shammi and committed suicide but the girls sister thinks her sister was seduced and jilted which is why she wants revenge
The movie is a Hithcock-influenced romance with a small murder mystery thrown in
The movie has fantastic song stand outs like O Hasina Zulfonwali Jaane Jahan and Tumne Mujhe Dekha
Shammi Kapoor stands out in his role Asha Parekh is the spunky revenge seeking sister Premnath is convincing Helen's role is small but effective Prem Chopra is average Rashid Khan is scary with his stare the rest are okay
Its quiet different to see him in the role of a framed musician with an eye for the ladies He has like three bad girls who love him
A young woman fell in love for Shammi and committed suicide but the girls sister thinks her sister was seduced and jilted which is why she wants revenge
The movie is a Hithcock-influenced romance with a small murder mystery thrown in
The movie has fantastic song stand outs like O Hasina Zulfonwali Jaane Jahan and Tumne Mujhe Dekha
Shammi Kapoor stands out in his role Asha Parekh is the spunky revenge seeking sister Premnath is convincing Helen's role is small but effective Prem Chopra is average Rashid Khan is scary with his stare the rest are okay
Did you know
- TriviaThis film originally had Dev Anand in the leading role, but following a spat between him and producer Nasir Hussain, he walked out of the film. When Shammi Kapoor was approached for the role, he told Nasir Hussain he would work in the film only if Dev Anand tells him personally he is not working in the film out of his own will, and that he is fine with him doing the film. That is what happened.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hum Tum (2004)
- SoundtracksTum ne mujhe dekha hokar meherbaan
Sung by Mohammad Rafi
Details
- Runtime2 hours 52 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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