Harano Sur

Harano Sur (Bengali: হারানো সুর; English: The Lost Melody) is a 1957 Indian Bengali-language romantic drama film by Ajoy Kar, starring Suchitra Sen and Uttam Kumar, with music by Hemanta Mukherjee, and sung by Geeta Dutt. The film is regarded as one of the finest examples [1] of Bengali cinema of this early golden [2] period. The film is loosely based on the 1942 Hollywood flick Random Harvest which had been remade earlier in Tamil as Amara Deepam and in Hindi as Amar Deep.[3]

Harano Sur (Lost Music)
Directed byAjoy Kar
Produced byUttam Kumar
StarringSuchitra Sen
Uttam Kumar
Utpal Dutt
Pahari Sanyal
Distributed byAlochhaya Productions
Release date
6 September 1957
Running time
162 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageBengali

Synopsis

Uttam - Suchitra in the film

An amnesiac after a train accident, Alok Mukherjee (Uttam Kumar) is rescued on escaping from the asylum where he is admitted by doctor Roma Banerjee (Suchitra Sen) who takes him to her father's (Pahadi Sanyal) country house in a village called Palaspur. There, while treating him she falls for him and he for her. They marry but a second accident makes him recall his life as a rich businessman in Calcutta and forget the memories spent with Roma. Roma follows him to Calcutta and meets him there but he doesn't recognise her. He hires her as governess to his niece instead. Roma keeps trying to simulate Alok's memory but is looked at suspiciously by Lata, Alok's fiancée in Calcutta who thinks Roma is snatching Alok away from her and who complains to Alok's mother. The latter has Roma kicked out. Alok realizing she is from Palaspur and that is where he got back his memory goes there and regains his memory of times spent with Roma there. All's well that end well.

Soundtrack

All lyrics are written by Gauriprasanna Mazumder; all music is composed by Hemant Kumar.

Songs
No.TitlePlaybackLength
1."Tumi Je Amar"Geeta Dutt3:08
2."Aaj Dujanar Duti Path"Hemant Kumar3:36
Total length:6:44

Awards

References

  1. "Harano Sur". www.upperstall.com. Archived from the original on 26 February 2008. Retrieved 30 March 2008.
  2. "The Early Years of Bengali cinema".
  3. Rajadhyaksha, Ashish and Willerman, Paul. Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema. New York: Routledge (2012), p. 1955
  4. "5th National Film Awards" (PDF). Directorate of Film Festivals. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
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