fbpx
Wikipedia

Haqeeqat (1964 film)

Haqeeqat (lit. Reality) is a 1964 Indian Hindi-language war-drama film directed and produced by Chetan Anand. The film stars Dharmendra, Balraj Sahni, Priya Rajvansh, Sudhir, Sanjay Khan and Vijay Anand in major roles. The music of the film is composed by Madan Mohan and the lyrics of the songs are by Kaifi Azmi. The film is based on the events of the 1962 Sino-Indian War about a small platoon of soldiers in Ladakh pitched against a much larger adversary. The film was constructed around the battle of Rezang La in Ladakh and showcases a fictionalised version of the last stand of Ahir Company, 13 Kumaon led by Major Shaitan Singh. However the film is not only a representation of war, but a dramatic retelling of the impact war has on the common soldier. Chetan Anand dedicated the film to Jawaharlal Nehru and the soldiers in Ladakh. The film is widely considered one of India's greatest black and white war-films.

Haqeeqat
Film poster
Directed byChetan Anand (director- 2nd In Charge) Noel Corke
Written byChetan Anand
Produced byChetan Anand
StarringDharmendra
Balraj Sahni
Priya Rajvansh
Sanjay Khan
Vijay Anand
Jayant
Sudhir
CinematographySadanand[1]
Edited byM. D. Jadhav Rao
Music byMadan Mohan
Kaifi Azmi (lyrics)[1]
Distributed byHimalaya Films
Release date
1964
Running time
184 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Haqeeqat won the National Film Award for Second Best Feature Film in 1965. In 2012, the colour version of the film was released. The film was screened retrospective on 12 August 2016 at the Independence Day Film Festival jointly presented by the Indian Directorate of Film Festivals and Ministry of Defense, commemorating the 70th Indian Independence Day.[2][3]

Plot edit

Set against the Sino-Indian War of 1962, the film's main plot concerns a small platoon of Indian soldiers in the hilly terrain of Ladakh. Captain Bahadur Singh (Dharmendra) is a keen young soldier who is in-charge of his platoon in Ladakh. On a visit to Kashmir and Ladakh Brigadier Singh (Jayant), receives news of creeping encroachment by Chinese troops along the border and orders Major Ranjit Singh (Balraj Sahni) to send his officers to secure the posts. Thus begins the struggle of the soldiers, who await further instructions while facing a wily adversary.

The region is disputed, with China claiming it as their own. The Indian soldiers have orders not to fire first and as a result the Chinese soldiers manage to effectively surround them and open fire first. Outnumbered and out-positioned, the Indian soldiers try retreating but the weather is against them. Captain Bahadur Singh makes all efforts to ensure his soldiers retreat safely sacrifices his life in the process. Soon after his soldiers are killed as well. As a parallel mini-story, before his death, Captain Bahadur Singh falls in love with a Ladakhi girl, Angmo (Priya Rajvansh), while posted in the region. Bahadur Singh also takes Angmo's brother Sonam under his wing as the boy dreams of becoming a soldier one day.[4][1][5]

Production edit

The film was made with government and army assistance.[6][7] Parts of the film were shot on location in Ladakh, thus becoming the first Bollywood film to be shot there.[8][9] The "left-leaning" artists,[a] belonging to Indian People's Theatre Association, did not charge any money for their work on the film. This included director Chetan Anand,Noel Corke (Director-2nd In Charge) actor Balraj Sahni, lyricist Kaifi Azmi and actress Shaukat Azmi.[11] The colour version, converted by Chetan Anand's son Ketan Anand, was released in 2012.[12] The conversion, undertaken by an Indo-Australian collaboration (Q Lab of India and Time Brush Films of Australia), was a first. The film duration was also edited down.[13]

Themes and influences edit

The film is based on the 1962 Sino-Indian War, a war that started out as a cartographic battle fought over ownership of territory.[14] The film is constructed around the battle of Rezang La, a battle which was considered the only part of the war in which India came out on top.[15][16] Out of the 120 Indian soldiers who fought in Rezang La, 114 were killed. It is said that 1300 Chinese soldiers were also killed.[15] While Major Shaitan Singh led Ahir Company of 13 Kumaon, Brigadier Tapishwar Narain Raina was in-charge of the brigade in Chushul which included 13 Kumaon. Brigadier TN Raina was awarded a Maha Vir Chakra and went on to become India's ninth Chief of the Army Staff in 1975; unlike the fate of many other generals of the 1962 war who "faded away in ignominy and disgrace".[16] The Sino–Indian war is a story of Indian soldiers being treated as "sacrificial lambs", while a nation celebrated Diwali and a government was distracted with other foreign relations in Africa and South Korea.[17]

Gita Vishawnath writes that film has scenes which "represent the active male hero and the passive female collaborator reinforce the gendered narratives of war".[14] Scenes including the portrayal of a "nationalist mother" who must produce sons for the battlefield and sisters-in-laws who are angry with their brother "because they do not want another woman in the family to suffer from long years of separation".[14] In the film, Angmo (Priya Rajvansh) is raped by an enemy soldier, however she goes on to kill a number of enemy soldiers, thus "avenging the violation of her body", her territory, before dying. Seen as a possession of man, the film shows her lying beside her lover Bahadur Singh, a win for love. Despite the "national shame" surrounding losing a war, such scenes helped cover the loss of territory to China, just as Angmo had been forced on by the enemy.[14] To be a patriotic soldier, Brigadier Singh must be ready to put his son in harms way. By showing that Brigadier Singh (Jayant) and Captain Bahadur Singh (Dharmendra) are father-son duo, the film wades through the family versus nation dilemma, and shows contradictions of serving both family and nation. The film tries to show a "moral victory for India".[14]

Cast edit

Credits adapted from Bollywood Hungama.[18]

Music edit

Haqeeqat
Film score by
Released1964
Recorded1964
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length28:18
Madan Mohan chronology
Gazal
(1964)
Haqeeqat
(1964)
Jahan Ara
(1964)

The music of this film has several notable songs. The music is composed by Madan Mohan and all of the songs are written by Kaifi Azmi.[20] In a 2012 interview with Namrata Joshi for Outlook magazine, composer Madan Mohan's son Sanjeev Kohli recalls that Chetan Anand had given the music director a brief which went something like, "Indeed at the back of the mind was the lost war, but the anguish and suffering of the armed forces and the nation was all pervading. Thus, the music had to be pathos-laden, with an air of despondency. But at the end, it needed to celebrate the contribution of those that laid down their lives."[20][21]

No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Ho ke Majboor Mujhe Usne Bhulaya Hoga"Mohammed Rafi, Talat Mahmood, Manna Dey, Bhupinder Singh07:01
2."Ab Tumhare Hawaale Watan Saathiyon"Mohammed Rafi06:06
3."Zara Si Aahat Hoti Hai To Dil Sochta Hai"Lata Mangeshkar03:51
4."Masti Mein Chhedke Tarana Koi Dil Ka"Mohammed Rafi04:10
5."Khelo Naa Mere Dil Se O Mere Saajana"Lata Mangeshkar03:34
6."Aai Ab Ki Saal Diwaali Munh Par Apne Kun Male"Lata Mangeshkar05:07
7."Main Ye Sochkar Uske Dar Se Utha Tha"Mohammed Rafi03:17
Total length:33:06

The music begins with lively romantic tunes and moves to more epic war, sad and celebratory tunes. The song "Ab Tumhare Hawaale Watan Saathiyon" sung by Mohammed Rafi has become synonymous with patriotism in India;[22] with the lyrics going as "Kar chale ham fida jan-o-tan sathiyon, Ab tumhare havale vatan sathiyon" (lit.'We have scarified our lives and our souls, the country is in your custody comrades').[23] This song, over five minutes long, comes at the end of the film with visuals of dead Indian soldiers all over the landscape.[21] The Scroll comments that the song "Ho Ke Majboor Mujhe Usne Bhulaya Hoga" has become a famous tune for weary soldiers, as a distraction from the ravages of war.[19] "Ho ke Majboor" went on to inspire "Sandese Aate Hai" from the film Border, 1997 written by Javed Akhtar, Kaifi Azmi's son-in-law.[24]

Awards edit

Reception edit

Comments on Haqeeqat and Prahaar

Their portrayal of the soldier's psyche, both in war and in peacetime, is ummatched for realism. Stark shots of jawans in Haqeeqat, bereft of equipment, numbers, supplies, artillery of air support, who die defending their posts in sub-zero temperatures against an external enemy...

Talukdar (2004)[27]

The Deccan Chronicle reports that in 1964, Satyajit Ray, on seeing the film, had told the director, "Chetan, I saw Haqeeqat. Strong visuals, excellent music, but no story". Reportedly Chetan Anand replied, "Haqeeqat is not a story. It is a mosaic."[13][28] In 1965 critic Edith Laurie said that Haqeeqat "is the first movie treatment of India’s war with China," is full of "patriotic cliches". He said the enemy was depicted as per the national narrative and that "the eye-rolling Chinese are reminiscent of sinister Japanese in America’s World War-II movies".[21]

In the film, director and writer Chetan Anand accepts India's defeat in the war, showcasing the overpowering grief that comes as a result.[29]

Film-maker Vijay Anand, a brother of Chetan Anand, said "the film glorified the Indian Army in its moment of grief. It was a tribute to our soldiers [...] You need guts to make a film like this".[26]

The film made about 1 crore (equivalent to 73 crore or US$9.2 million in 2023).[30]

Legacy and commentary edit

Haqeeqat is widely remembered as one of India's greatest black and white war films, if not the greatest.[1][26][28] Despite India losing the war and history fairly blaming Nehru for the loss, Haqeeqat "makes its admiration for Nehru clear" and in the film Anand goes along with the government line that the war and its outcome was the fault of the Chinese.[24][31][10] However Nehru died before the film could be released in 1964. Chetan Anand dedicated the film to Jawaharlal Nehru and the soldiers in Ladakh.[32] The film has been called a "cultural document about an event that had severe long-term impacts on the country".[29] For most, Haqeeqat is the only film reference of the war.[6] In 2012 Namrata Joshi wrote in Outlook magazine that Haqeeqat was to be "a reminder of China’s betrayal" and the feelings that came along with this were reflected in the film, such as the scene of a bayonet stabbing Mao Zedong's Red Book.[11]

In 2016, the film was screened at the Independence Day Film Festival by the Directorate of Film Festivals and the Ministry of Defence.[33] On Independence Day in 2017, ZeeTV premiered the film on Zee Classic.[33] In the backdrop of the 2017 Doklam standoff Haqeeqat was again remembered by the Indian media as a comparison for 1962 and the current tensions; to be specific the last stand of Ahir Company, 13 Kumaon led by Major Shaitan Singh at Rezang La.[34][35][36] In the backdrop of the 2020 China–India skirmishes, on 6 July 2020, an article in The Quint by Pankhuri Shukla comments on the "unsanitized" two-hour long portrayal of war in the film. The fights are not "sugarcoated" and the internal conflict of what is means to be a soldier are depicted.[37] In July 2020, Filmfare listed Haqeeqat as one of Bollywood's top war films.[7]

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Director Chetan Anand, lyricist Kaifi Azmi and lead actor Balraj Sahni were members or supporters of CPI aligned with Moscow".[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Kohli, Suresh (2012). Salam, Ziya Us (ed.). Houseful The Golden Years of Hindi Cinema. Om Books International. pp. Haqeeqat 1964. ISBN 978-93-80070-25-4.
  2. ^ "Pune: A film festival that celebrates freedom". The Indian Express. 9 August 2016. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  3. ^ Independence Day 15 August 2016
  4. ^ Kahlon, Sukhpreet (17 August 2018). . Cinestaan.com. Archived from the original on 28 September 2018. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  5. ^ Chintamani, Gautam (27 July 2012). "Bollywood's Killing Machine". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  6. ^ a b Unnithan, Sandeep (19 October 2012). "China's 'Haqeeqat': A stark documentary on the 1962 war". India Today. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  7. ^ a b Sharma, Devesh (1 July 2020). "Filmfare recommends: Top Bollywood war films from the '60s to '80s". Filmfare. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  8. ^ Singh, Deepali (23 August 2020). "8 Bollywood movies that capture the heavenly beauty of Ladakh, on Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Disney+ Hotstar". Vogue India. Retrieved 9 September 2020. Chetan Anand's 1964 war drama, Haqeeqat, is known to be the first Bollywood movie to be shot there.
  9. ^ Wangchuk, Rinchen Norbu (25 November 2017). "When Tradition Triumphs Modernity: Ladakh's Dry Toilets". The Better India. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  10. ^ a b Encyclopaedia of Hindi Cinema. Popular Prakashan. 2003. p. 76. ISBN 978-81-7991-066-5.
  11. ^ a b Joshi, Namrata (22 October 2012). "A Death Foretold". Outlook India Magazine. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  12. ^ Sharma, Amrapali (11 January 2012). "Haqeeqat in colour now". Mumbai Mirror. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  13. ^ a b Gupta, Ranjan Das (18 February 2012). "Fading into colour". Deccan Herald. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  14. ^ a b c d e Viswanath, Gita (11 April 2014). The "Nation" in War: A Study of Military Literature and Hindi War Cinema. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 94–97. ISBN 978-1-4438-5938-7.
  15. ^ a b "Remembering the battle of Rezang La through the eyes of two brave soldiers". ThePrint. 18 November 2018. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  16. ^ a b Gupta, Shekhar (22 October 2012). "1962, a different story". The Financial Express. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  17. ^ a b Bhagat, Pranay. "Haqeeqat (Old) - movie review by Pranay Bhagat - Planet Bollywood". planetbollywood.com. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  18. ^ "Haqeeqat Cast". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  19. ^ a b Bali, Karan. "Do Chetan Anand's best-known films stand the test of time?". Scroll.in. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  20. ^ a b Namrata Joshi (22 October 2012). "The Music Had To Be Pathos-Laden". Outlook.
  21. ^ a b c Gupta, Uttaran Das (19 June 2020). "Frames per Second: Music for tragedy". Business Standard India. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  22. ^ Sujata Dev (October 2015). Mohammed Rafi Voice Of A Nation. OM Books International. ISBN 978-9380070971.
  23. ^ Kaifi, Shaukat (25 June 2012). Kaifi and I: A Memoir. Zubaan. pp. Chapter 6. ISBN 978-93-81017-50-0.
  24. ^ a b Ayaz, Shaikh (26 August 2019). "Song of the Month: Haqeeqat's "Ho ke majboor" finds the sweet spot between romance and pining in the time of war". The Indian Express. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  25. ^ Dilip Hiro (2015). The Longest August: The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan. Nation Books. p. 449. ISBN 978-1568585031.
  26. ^ a b c S. M. M. Ausaja (2009). Bollywood in Posters. OM Books International. p. 99. ISBN 978-8187108559.
  27. ^ Talukdar, Sudip (30 March 2004). "Bollywood Battlefield. Reel Constraints of Real-life Wars". The Times of India. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  28. ^ a b Gupta, Ranjan Das (23 March 2015). "Inspired by love and war". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  29. ^ a b Upadhyaya, Amit (15 July 2018). "Haqeeqat's grand battle sequences on 1962 India-China war are unmatched in cinema history". ThePrint. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  30. ^ Jha, Lata (15 August 2016). "Ten patriotic films to watch this Independence Day". Livemint. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  31. ^ Ramnath, Nandini (23 November 2012). "CINEMA CURRENT: Something like a war". Livemint. Retrieved 7 September 2020. Although Anand was a leftist, he suspended his scepticism and peddled the Jawaharlal Nehru government's line that the war was a result of the back-stabbing and mean-spirited Chinese.
  32. ^ Bhattacharjee, Rudradeep (17 May 2020). "To 'the blossoms in the dust and the red rose': The quirkiest and most heartfelt film dedications". Scroll.in. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  33. ^ a b "Haqeeqat film 1964: An epitome of patriotism". HimBuds.com. 13 August 2017. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  34. ^ Singh, Anil (5 September 2017). "Sino-India rift reminds of 1964 movie Haqeeqat". Tehelka. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  35. ^ "Ladakh scuffle amid Doklam standoff: What we know about Pangong Tso, the lake made popular by Aamir Khan's 3 Idiots". The Financial Express. 22 August 2017. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  36. ^ Singh, Sushant (22 August 2017). "Ladakh scuffle: The importance of Pangong Tso". The Indian Express. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  37. ^ Shukla, Pankhuri (6 July 2020). "A Millennial Look at How 'Haqeeqat' Portrayed Indo-China Conflict". TheQuint. Retrieved 6 September 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Deshpande, Anirudh (2021). The Practice of History in India: Essays in Search of a New Past. Routledge. pp. 116–126. doi:10.4324/9781003240327. ISBN 978-1-032-14640-9. S2CID 242976012.
  • Bharat, Meenakshi; Kumar, Nirmal, eds. (2012). Filming the Line of Control: The Indo–Pak Relationship through the Cinematic Lens. Routledge. ISBN 9781136516061.

External links edit

haqeeqat, 1964, film, haqeeqat, reality, 1964, indian, hindi, language, drama, film, directed, produced, chetan, anand, film, stars, dharmendra, balraj, sahni, priya, rajvansh, sudhir, sanjay, khan, vijay, anand, major, roles, music, film, composed, madan, moh. Haqeeqat lit Reality is a 1964 Indian Hindi language war drama film directed and produced by Chetan Anand The film stars Dharmendra Balraj Sahni Priya Rajvansh Sudhir Sanjay Khan and Vijay Anand in major roles The music of the film is composed by Madan Mohan and the lyrics of the songs are by Kaifi Azmi The film is based on the events of the 1962 Sino Indian War about a small platoon of soldiers in Ladakh pitched against a much larger adversary The film was constructed around the battle of Rezang La in Ladakh and showcases a fictionalised version of the last stand of Ahir Company 13 Kumaon led by Major Shaitan Singh However the film is not only a representation of war but a dramatic retelling of the impact war has on the common soldier Chetan Anand dedicated the film to Jawaharlal Nehru and the soldiers in Ladakh The film is widely considered one of India s greatest black and white war films HaqeeqatFilm posterDirected byChetan Anand director 2nd In Charge Noel CorkeWritten byChetan AnandProduced byChetan AnandStarringDharmendraBalraj SahniPriya RajvanshSanjay KhanVijay AnandJayantSudhirCinematographySadanand 1 Edited byM D Jadhav RaoMusic byMadan MohanKaifi Azmi lyrics 1 Distributed byHimalaya FilmsRelease date1964Running time184 minutesCountryIndiaLanguageHindi Haqeeqat won the National Film Award for Second Best Feature Film in 1965 In 2012 the colour version of the film was released The film was screened retrospective on 12 August 2016 at the Independence Day Film Festival jointly presented by the Indian Directorate of Film Festivals and Ministry of Defense commemorating the 70th Indian Independence Day 2 3 Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 3 Themes and influences 4 Cast 5 Music 6 Awards 7 Reception 8 Legacy and commentary 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksPlot editSet against the Sino Indian War of 1962 the film s main plot concerns a small platoon of Indian soldiers in the hilly terrain of Ladakh Captain Bahadur Singh Dharmendra is a keen young soldier who is in charge of his platoon in Ladakh On a visit to Kashmir and Ladakh Brigadier Singh Jayant receives news of creeping encroachment by Chinese troops along the border and orders Major Ranjit Singh Balraj Sahni to send his officers to secure the posts Thus begins the struggle of the soldiers who await further instructions while facing a wily adversary The region is disputed with China claiming it as their own The Indian soldiers have orders not to fire first and as a result the Chinese soldiers manage to effectively surround them and open fire first Outnumbered and out positioned the Indian soldiers try retreating but the weather is against them Captain Bahadur Singh makes all efforts to ensure his soldiers retreat safely sacrifices his life in the process Soon after his soldiers are killed as well As a parallel mini story before his death Captain Bahadur Singh falls in love with a Ladakhi girl Angmo Priya Rajvansh while posted in the region Bahadur Singh also takes Angmo s brother Sonam under his wing as the boy dreams of becoming a soldier one day 4 1 5 Production editThe film was made with government and army assistance 6 7 Parts of the film were shot on location in Ladakh thus becoming the first Bollywood film to be shot there 8 9 The left leaning artists a belonging to Indian People s Theatre Association did not charge any money for their work on the film This included director Chetan Anand Noel Corke Director 2nd In Charge actor Balraj Sahni lyricist Kaifi Azmi and actress Shaukat Azmi 11 The colour version converted by Chetan Anand s son Ketan Anand was released in 2012 12 The conversion undertaken by an Indo Australian collaboration Q Lab of India and Time Brush Films of Australia was a first The film duration was also edited down 13 Themes and influences editThe film is based on the 1962 Sino Indian War a war that started out as a cartographic battle fought over ownership of territory 14 The film is constructed around the battle of Rezang La a battle which was considered the only part of the war in which India came out on top 15 16 Out of the 120 Indian soldiers who fought in Rezang La 114 were killed It is said that 1300 Chinese soldiers were also killed 15 While Major Shaitan Singh led Ahir Company of 13 Kumaon Brigadier Tapishwar Narain Raina was in charge of the brigade in Chushul which included 13 Kumaon Brigadier TN Raina was awarded a Maha Vir Chakra and went on to become India s ninth Chief of the Army Staff in 1975 unlike the fate of many other generals of the 1962 war who faded away in ignominy and disgrace 16 The Sino Indian war is a story of Indian soldiers being treated as sacrificial lambs while a nation celebrated Diwali and a government was distracted with other foreign relations in Africa and South Korea 17 Gita Vishawnath writes that film has scenes which represent the active male hero and the passive female collaborator reinforce the gendered narratives of war 14 Scenes including the portrayal of a nationalist mother who must produce sons for the battlefield and sisters in laws who are angry with their brother because they do not want another woman in the family to suffer from long years of separation 14 In the film Angmo Priya Rajvansh is raped by an enemy soldier however she goes on to kill a number of enemy soldiers thus avenging the violation of her body her territory before dying Seen as a possession of man the film shows her lying beside her lover Bahadur Singh a win for love Despite the national shame surrounding losing a war such scenes helped cover the loss of territory to China just as Angmo had been forced on by the enemy 14 To be a patriotic soldier Brigadier Singh must be ready to put his son in harms way By showing that Brigadier Singh Jayant and Captain Bahadur Singh Dharmendra are father son duo the film wades through the family versus nation dilemma and shows contradictions of serving both family and nation The film tries to show a moral victory for India 14 Cast editCredits adapted from Bollywood Hungama 18 Dharmendra as Captain Bahadur Singh Balraj Sahni as Major Ranjit Singh Priya Rajvansh as Angmo debut 19 Sanjay Khan as Indian Soldier Vijay Anand as Major Pratap Singh Sheikh Mukhtar as Commanding Officer Sudhir as Ram Singh In minor roles Indrani Mukherjee and Achala Sachdev 17 Levi Aharon Aharoni Negoker brother of Priya Rajwansh the boy in the film Music editHaqeeqatFilm score by Madan MohanReleased1964Recorded1964GenreFeature film soundtrackLength28 18Madan Mohan chronologyGazal 1964 Haqeeqat 1964 Jahan Ara 1964 The music of this film has several notable songs The music is composed by Madan Mohan and all of the songs are written by Kaifi Azmi 20 In a 2012 interview with Namrata Joshi for Outlook magazine composer Madan Mohan s son Sanjeev Kohli recalls that Chetan Anand had given the music director a brief which went something like Indeed at the back of the mind was the lost war but the anguish and suffering of the armed forces and the nation was all pervading Thus the music had to be pathos laden with an air of despondency But at the end it needed to celebrate the contribution of those that laid down their lives 20 21 No TitleSinger s Length1 Ho ke Majboor Mujhe Usne Bhulaya Hoga Mohammed Rafi Talat Mahmood Manna Dey Bhupinder Singh07 012 Ab Tumhare Hawaale Watan Saathiyon Mohammed Rafi06 063 Zara Si Aahat Hoti Hai To Dil Sochta Hai Lata Mangeshkar03 514 Masti Mein Chhedke Tarana Koi Dil Ka Mohammed Rafi04 105 Khelo Naa Mere Dil Se O Mere Saajana Lata Mangeshkar03 346 Aai Ab Ki Saal Diwaali Munh Par Apne Kun Male Lata Mangeshkar05 077 Main Ye Sochkar Uske Dar Se Utha Tha Mohammed Rafi03 17Total length 33 06 The music begins with lively romantic tunes and moves to more epic war sad and celebratory tunes The song Ab Tumhare Hawaale Watan Saathiyon sung by Mohammed Rafi has become synonymous with patriotism in India 22 with the lyrics going as Kar chale ham fida jan o tan sathiyon Ab tumhare havale vatan sathiyon lit We have scarified our lives and our souls the country is in your custody comrades 23 This song over five minutes long comes at the end of the film with visuals of dead Indian soldiers all over the landscape 21 The Scroll comments that the song Ho Ke Majboor Mujhe Usne Bhulaya Hoga has become a famous tune for weary soldiers as a distraction from the ravages of war 19 Ho ke Majboor went on to inspire Sandese Aate Hai from the film Border 1997 written by Javed Akhtar Kaifi Azmi s son in law 24 Awards edit1965 National Film Award for Second Best Feature Film Haqeeqat 25 1965 Filmfare Best Art Direction Award for M S Sathyu 26 Reception editComments on Haqeeqat and Prahaar Their portrayal of the soldier s psyche both in war and in peacetime is ummatched for realism Stark shots of jawans in Haqeeqat bereft of equipment numbers supplies artillery of air support who die defending their posts in sub zero temperatures against an external enemy Talukdar 2004 27 The Deccan Chronicle reports that in 1964 Satyajit Ray on seeing the film had told the director Chetan I saw Haqeeqat Strong visuals excellent music but no story Reportedly Chetan Anand replied Haqeeqat is not a story It is a mosaic 13 28 In 1965 critic Edith Laurie said that Haqeeqat is the first movie treatment of India s war with China is full of patriotic cliches He said the enemy was depicted as per the national narrative and that the eye rolling Chinese are reminiscent of sinister Japanese in America s World War II movies 21 In the film director and writer Chetan Anand accepts India s defeat in the war showcasing the overpowering grief that comes as a result 29 Film maker Vijay Anand a brother of Chetan Anand said the film glorified the Indian Army in its moment of grief It was a tribute to our soldiers You need guts to make a film like this 26 The film made about 1 crore equivalent to 73 crore or US 9 2 million in 2023 30 Legacy and commentary editHaqeeqat is widely remembered as one of India s greatest black and white war films if not the greatest 1 26 28 Despite India losing the war and history fairly blaming Nehru for the loss Haqeeqat makes its admiration for Nehru clear and in the film Anand goes along with the government line that the war and its outcome was the fault of the Chinese 24 31 10 However Nehru died before the film could be released in 1964 Chetan Anand dedicated the film to Jawaharlal Nehru and the soldiers in Ladakh 32 The film has been called a cultural document about an event that had severe long term impacts on the country 29 For most Haqeeqat is the only film reference of the war 6 In 2012 Namrata Joshi wrote in Outlook magazine that Haqeeqat was to be a reminder of China s betrayal and the feelings that came along with this were reflected in the film such as the scene of a bayonet stabbing Mao Zedong s Red Book 11 In 2016 the film was screened at the Independence Day Film Festival by the Directorate of Film Festivals and the Ministry of Defence 33 On Independence Day in 2017 ZeeTV premiered the film on Zee Classic 33 In the backdrop of the 2017 Doklam standoff Haqeeqat was again remembered by the Indian media as a comparison for 1962 and the current tensions to be specific the last stand of Ahir Company 13 Kumaon led by Major Shaitan Singh at Rezang La 34 35 36 In the backdrop of the 2020 China India skirmishes on 6 July 2020 an article in The Quint by Pankhuri Shukla comments on the unsanitized two hour long portrayal of war in the film The fights are not sugarcoated and the internal conflict of what is means to be a soldier are depicted 37 In July 2020 Filmfare listed Haqeeqat as one of Bollywood s top war films 7 Notes edit Director Chetan Anand lyricist Kaifi Azmi and lead actor Balraj Sahni were members or supporters of CPI aligned with Moscow 10 References edit a b c d Kohli Suresh 2012 Salam Ziya Us ed Houseful The Golden Years of Hindi Cinema Om Books International pp Haqeeqat 1964 ISBN 978 93 80070 25 4 Pune A film festival that celebrates freedom The Indian Express 9 August 2016 Retrieved 1 August 2019 Independence Day 15 August 2016 Kahlon Sukhpreet 17 August 2018 Desh ko tumhari zaroorat hai The patriotic zeal in Chetan Anand s Haqeeqat 1964 Cinestaan com Archived from the original on 28 September 2018 Retrieved 1 August 2019 Chintamani Gautam 27 July 2012 Bollywood s Killing Machine Hindustan Times Retrieved 6 September 2020 a b Unnithan Sandeep 19 October 2012 China s Haqeeqat A stark documentary on the 1962 war India Today Retrieved 6 September 2020 a b Sharma Devesh 1 July 2020 Filmfare recommends Top Bollywood war films from the 60s to 80s Filmfare Retrieved 7 September 2020 Singh Deepali 23 August 2020 8 Bollywood movies that capture the heavenly beauty of Ladakh on Netflix Amazon Prime Video and Disney Hotstar Vogue India Retrieved 9 September 2020 Chetan Anand s 1964 war drama Haqeeqat is known to be the first Bollywood movie to be shot there Wangchuk Rinchen Norbu 25 November 2017 When Tradition Triumphs Modernity Ladakh s Dry Toilets The Better India Retrieved 9 September 2020 a b Encyclopaedia of Hindi Cinema Popular Prakashan 2003 p 76 ISBN 978 81 7991 066 5 a b Joshi Namrata 22 October 2012 A Death Foretold Outlook India Magazine Retrieved 6 September 2020 Sharma Amrapali 11 January 2012 Haqeeqat in colour now Mumbai Mirror Retrieved 6 September 2020 a b Gupta Ranjan Das 18 February 2012 Fading into colour Deccan Herald Retrieved 6 September 2020 a b c d e Viswanath Gita 11 April 2014 The Nation in War A Study of Military Literature and Hindi War Cinema Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 94 97 ISBN 978 1 4438 5938 7 a b Remembering the battle of Rezang La through the eyes of two brave soldiers ThePrint 18 November 2018 Retrieved 7 September 2020 a b Gupta Shekhar 22 October 2012 1962 a different story The Financial Express Retrieved 7 September 2020 a b Bhagat Pranay Haqeeqat Old movie review by Pranay Bhagat Planet Bollywood planetbollywood com Retrieved 7 September 2020 Haqeeqat Cast Bollywood Hungama Retrieved 6 September 2020 a b Bali Karan Do Chetan Anand s best known films stand the test of time Scroll in Retrieved 6 September 2020 a b Namrata Joshi 22 October 2012 The Music Had To Be Pathos Laden Outlook a b c Gupta Uttaran Das 19 June 2020 Frames per Second Music for tragedy Business Standard India Retrieved 6 September 2020 Sujata Dev October 2015 Mohammed Rafi Voice Of A Nation OM Books International ISBN 978 9380070971 Kaifi Shaukat 25 June 2012 Kaifi and I A Memoir Zubaan pp Chapter 6 ISBN 978 93 81017 50 0 a b Ayaz Shaikh 26 August 2019 Song of the Month Haqeeqat s Ho ke majboor finds the sweet spot between romance and pining in the time of war The Indian Express Retrieved 6 September 2020 Dilip Hiro 2015 The Longest August The Unflinching Rivalry Between India and Pakistan Nation Books p 449 ISBN 978 1568585031 a b c S M M Ausaja 2009 Bollywood in Posters OM Books International p 99 ISBN 978 8187108559 Talukdar Sudip 30 March 2004 Bollywood Battlefield Reel Constraints of Real life Wars The Times of India Retrieved 29 August 2021 a b Gupta Ranjan Das 23 March 2015 Inspired by love and war The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 7 September 2020 a b Upadhyaya Amit 15 July 2018 Haqeeqat s grand battle sequences on 1962 India China war are unmatched in cinema history ThePrint Retrieved 6 September 2020 Jha Lata 15 August 2016 Ten patriotic films to watch this Independence Day Livemint Retrieved 7 September 2020 Ramnath Nandini 23 November 2012 CINEMA CURRENT Something like a war Livemint Retrieved 7 September 2020 Although Anand was a leftist he suspended his scepticism and peddled the Jawaharlal Nehru government s line that the war was a result of the back stabbing and mean spirited Chinese Bhattacharjee Rudradeep 17 May 2020 To the blossoms in the dust and the red rose The quirkiest and most heartfelt film dedications Scroll in Retrieved 7 September 2020 a b Haqeeqat film 1964 An epitome of patriotism HimBuds com 13 August 2017 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Singh Anil 5 September 2017 Sino India rift reminds of 1964 movie Haqeeqat Tehelka Retrieved 6 September 2020 Ladakh scuffle amid Doklam standoff What we know about Pangong Tso the lake made popular by Aamir Khan s 3 Idiots The Financial Express 22 August 2017 Retrieved 6 September 2020 Singh Sushant 22 August 2017 Ladakh scuffle The importance of Pangong Tso The Indian Express Retrieved 6 September 2020 Shukla Pankhuri 6 July 2020 A Millennial Look at How Haqeeqat Portrayed Indo China Conflict TheQuint Retrieved 6 September 2020 Further reading editDeshpande Anirudh 2021 The Practice of History in India Essays in Search of a New Past Routledge pp 116 126 doi 10 4324 9781003240327 ISBN 978 1 032 14640 9 S2CID 242976012 Bharat Meenakshi Kumar Nirmal eds 2012 Filming the Line of Control The Indo Pak Relationship through the Cinematic Lens Routledge ISBN 9781136516061 External links editHaqeeqat at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haqeeqat 1964 film amp oldid 1215199743, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.