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Paper Flowers

Kaagaz Ke Phool

India

1959

148 Min
Black and White
2.35:1
Hindi
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Guru Dutt

PROD Guru Dutt

SCR Abrar Alvi, Kaifi Azmi

DP V.K. Murthy

CAST Waheeda Rehman, Guru Dutt, Kumari Naaz, Johnny Walker, Mahesh Kaul

ED Y.G. Chawhan

MUSIC Sachin Dev Burman

Synopsis

The film tells, in flashback, the story of Suresh Sinha (Guru Dutt), a famous film director. His marriage to Bina (Veena) is on the rocks because her wealthy family sees filmmaking as a job lacking in social status. He is also denied access to his daughter Pammi (Naaz) who is sent to a private boarding school.

On a rainy night Sinha meets a woman Shanti (Waheeda Rehman) and gives her his coat. She comes to the film studio to return the coat, unintentionally disrupting the shooting by walking in front of the camera. While reviewing the rushes, Sinha recognises her potential as a star in the making and casts her as Paro in Devdas. —Wikipedia

Director

Original

Guru Dutt

Guru Dutt is remembered in the history of Indian cinema as the brooding intense romantic who attempted to reflect the changing social situation in India in the fifties. Within his short life, he created some of India’s most socially-conscious movies like Pyaasa (Thirsty, 1957), Kaagaz ke Phool (Paper Flowers, 1960) and Baazi (1951). He also introduced Waheeda Rehman in CID (1956) and propelled her to stardom through his films.

Born in Calcutta in 1925, Guru Dutt worked as a telephone operator before he embarked on his career as an actor and director in 1944. The fifties was the time when India, under Nehru’s brand of state socialism, was embarking on massive industrialization. The conventional wisdom has it that rapid changes introduced by industrialization were undermining ‘traditional values’. What is certain is that industrialization, and the accompanying migration from rural to urban areas, was creating — as it still does in India — anomie, dislocation, and new social norms… read more

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roujin

29Mar11

Dutt got better and better throughout his career; and this is without a doubt his most formally impressive work. Now if only I could see it in its original cinemascope version...

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Andre

9Jun10

Uau! Just saw this one. It is definitely a peak in cinema but it is impossible not be reminded of Minnelli's The Bad and Beautiful, another outstanding masterpiece, which not only have similar looks but also an identical spiral into madness.

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The Tragic Portrait of a Great Director

By Rohit on November 24, 2010

It is sad that I took so long to watch this movie. Unfortunately, like the movie, Guru Dutt has been more or less forgotten by the people. He is highly revered by film makers in India and his films…  read review

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