"Awaara" is a legendary Bollywood film starring Raj Kapoor, renowned for its memorable music, compelling narrative, and timeless performances.
"Awaara" is a legendary Bollywood film starring Raj Kapoor, renowned for its memorable music, compelling narrative, and timeless performances.
Awaara
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Awaara
Directed by Raj Kapoor
Written by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas
Screenplay by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas
Story by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas
V.P. Sathe
Produced by Raj Kapoor
Starring Prithviraj Kapoor
Nargis
Raj Kapoor
Leela Chitnis
K. N. Singh
Shashi Kapoor
Cinematography Radhu Karmakar
Edited
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by G.G. Mayekar
Music by Shankar–Jaikishan
Production
companies
All India Film Corporation,
R.K. Films
Distributed by R.K. Films
Release date 14 December 1951
Running time 193 minutes
Country India
Language Hindi
Box office est. ₹156 million ($30.7 million)
Duration: 2 hours, 43 minutes and 40 seconds.2:43:40
Awaara (1951)
Awaara, also written Awāra[n 1] and known overseas as The
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Vagabond,[1][2][3] is a 1951 Indian Hindi crime drama film, produced and directed by Raj Kapoor, and written by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas. It stars Raj Kapoor along with his real-life father Prithviraj Kapoor, as well as Nargis, Leela Chitnis and K. N. Singh. Other members of the Kapoor family make an appearance, including Raj's youngest brother Shashi Kapoor, who plays the younger version of his
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character, and Prithiviraj's father Dewan Basheshwarnath Kapoor, playing a cameo in his only film appearance. The film's music was composed by Shankar Jaikishan.
The film expresses socialist themes,[1][4] and blends social and reformist themes with the crime, romantic comedy and musical melodrama genres.[5] The plot centers on the intertwining lives of a poor thief Raj (played by Raj Kapoor), the
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privileged Rita (played by Nargis), and Judge Raghunath (played by Prithviraj Kapoor) who is unaware that Raj is his son. In the film, Kapoor's poor "little tramp" character references Charlie Chaplin and was further developed in other Kapoor films such as Shree 420. Awaara is considered a milestone in the history of Bollywood.
The film became an overnight sensation in South Asia, and
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found even greater success further afield in the Soviet Union, East Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe.[6][7] In particular, the song "Awaara Hoon" ("I am a Vagabond"), sung by Mukesh with lyrics by Shailendra, became hugely popular across the Indian subcontinent, as well as in countries such as the Soviet Union,[8][9] China,[1][4] Bulgaria,[7] Turkey, Afghanistan, and
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Romania. The film was also nominated for the Grand Prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 1953.[10] The film is estimated to have sold over 200 million tickets overseas, including more than 100 million in China and about 100 million in the Soviet Union.[11][12] Owing to its popularity in so many countries, the film is a candidate for the most successful film of all time.[7] In 2012, Awaara was included in the
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20 new entries to All-Time 100 greatest films by Time magazine.
Plot
Raghunath is a wealthy district judge. He convicts Jagga, son of a criminal, of rape with thin evidence. He believes that "good people are born to good people, and criminals are born to criminals.". Jagga later escapes and kidnaps the judge's wife, Leela, for revenge. When he finds out that she has just become pregnant, he releases her
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after four days and plans a different kind of revenge. People suspect her of adultery and the judge throws her out of their house, rejecting her pleas that the child is his.
Leela gives birth to Raj on the streets and they live in poverty. Raj befriends Rita in school. He is removed from the school rolls while trying to maintain a job as a shoeshiner and Rita moves to another city. Jagga convinces Raj to steal, in
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order to save his starving mother. Raj grows up into a skilled criminal, going in and out of jail, and working for Jagga's gang. Leela thinks that he is a businessman. Raj never forgets Rita, keeping her birthday picture at his home.
For a bank robbery, Jagga asks Raj to steal an automobile. He snatches a woman's purse when she steps out of the car, but finds no keys. He pretends to pursue the thief in order to ward off any suspicion and returns the purse to the woman, who is charmed by his personality and
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apparent selflessness. Later, when Raj successfully steals a car, he hides from the police in a mansion where he meets the same woman. Seeing the same birthday picture, Raj realises that she is his school friend Rita. He tells Rita he's a thief but his figurative statements made her think he is a finance professional. Rita, now studying law, is a ward of the judge who is suspicious when he hears that Raj doesn't know who his father is. Raj and Rita fall in love. Worrying that Rita will not accept him due to
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his thievery, Raj starts working at a factory but is fired when the manager finds out that he was a thief.
Rita invites him to her birthday party. Raj goes back to Jagga for a loan so that he can buy a gift for her. Jagga mocks his attempts to reform and asks him to commit more crimes. Raj refuses but later steals a necklace from a man on the street, not knowing the man was the Judge. At Rita's birthday, when Raj gives her a necklace without a case and the Judge gives her a case without a necklace, she realises that Raj is indeed a thief. Rita goes to Raj's mother and learns his life story. She decides that Raj is not bad,
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but was forced into committing crimes by bad influence and the desperation of living in poverty. Raj is ashamed, still believing he is no good for her, but she forgives him.
Raj goes to the Judge to ask if he can marry Rita, but the Judge turns him away. Meanwhile, Jagga and the gang commit the bank robbery, but it goes wrong and they have to run from the police. Jagga hides in Raj's house, where Leela recognizes him and he attacks her. Raj enters and fights him off, killing Jagga in self-defense. Raj goes
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on trial for Jagga's death with Raghunath as the judge. When Leela goes to the courthouse to provide her eyewitness account, she sees Raghunath and chases after him but is struck by a car. Rita collects the testimony from Leela in the hospital, and later Raj is allowed to visit her. Leela tells Raj that the judge is his father and asks her son to forgive him. But Raj becomes angrier at the judge for making him and his mother suffer. He escapes from jail and tries to kill the judge for revenge, but is stopped by Rita. Rita defends Raj in the trial for assault, who reveals the father-son relationship. Raj chooses not to
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defend his actions and says that he is a bad man. He asks the court not to think of him, but the millions of other children who grow up in poverty and end up turning to crime because high society does not care about them. While he awaits his verdict, Raj is visited by Judge Raghunath, who finally accepts that Raj is his son and tearfully asks for forgiveness. In the end, Raj is spared execution but sentenced to three years in prison for his crime. He promises that after getting released, he will reform himself for
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Rita, who promises to wait for him.
Cast
Prithviraj Kapoor as Judge Raghunath
Raj Kapoor as Raj
Nargis as Rita
Leela Chitnis as Leela
K. N. Singh as Jagga
Cuckoo as Bar dancer
B. M. Vyas as Dubey
Leela Mishra as Raghunath's Sister-In-Law
Shashi Kapoor as Young Raj
Baby Zubeida as Young Rita
Honey O'Brien as Dancer
Basheshwarnath Kapoor as Judge
Supporting cast
Rajoo, Mansaram, Rajan, Manek Kapoor, Paryag, Ravi, Vinni, Bali, Shinde.
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