Bombay to Goa is a 1972 Indian Hindi-language road comedy film directed by S. Ramanathan and produced by Mehmood and N. C. Sippy. Released in India on 3 March 1972, the film stars Amitabh Bachchan, Aruna Irani, Shatrughan Sinha, Nazir Hussain, Mehmood and Anwar Ali in lead roles. The film is known particularly for its catchy tunes and was a "superhit" at the box office. The film is a remake of a 1966 hit Tamil film Madras to Pondicherry [1] and was an inspiration for the 2004 Marathi movie Navra Maza Navsacha which in turn was remade in Kannada in 2007 as Ekadantha.[2] The Hindu had reported that Rajiv Gandhi was offered the lead role by Mehmood but he had turned it down.[1]
Bombay to Goa | |
---|---|
Directed by | S. Ramanathan |
Written by | Rajinder Krishan (dialogue) |
Story by | Usalai Somanathan |
Based on | Madras to Pondicherry (1966) |
Produced by | Mehmood N. C. Sippy |
Starring | Amitabh Bachchan Aruna Irani Shatrughan Sinha Nazir Hussain Mehmood Anwar Ali |
Cinematography | Jal Mistry |
Edited by | A. Paul Durai Singham |
Music by | R. D. Burman |
Production company | Mahmood Productions |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Box office | est. ₹1 crore (est. ₹27.2 crore as of 2019) |
Plot
editThe lives of Atmaram (Nazir Hussain) and his wife (Dulari) are turned upside down when they see the photographs of their daughter, Mala (Aruna Irani), in a magazine. They arrange for Mala's marriage with the son of Ramlal (Agha), but Mala is opposed to marrying anyone who she has not met, and is at the same time thrilled that the two persons she trusted, one Sharma (Shatrughan Sinha) and the other Verma (Manmohan), had actually submitted her photographs to a magazine, and were now willing to sign her up for a Bollywood film. Mala is not able to understand her parents' opposition on her way to fame and runs away from home with a lot of money for Sharma and Verma. Greed overtakes Sharma, leading to the death of Verma. Mala, who witnessed Sharma kill Verma, now is on the run for her life. She boards a bus from Mumbai which is bound for Goa. Sharma soon overtakes her, and has one of his armed henchmen on the bus to kill her, and then arrives Mala's admirer and bodyguard, Ravi Kumar (Amitabh Bachchan), who not only protects Mala, but also accompanies her throughout the journey. Mala begins to trust and subsequently fall in love with Ravi Kumar. The bus journey is adventurous with the passengers, a totally mixed bunch, from all over India, different religions, cultures, and faiths, all thrown together for this journey. The bus is in the "control" of bus driver Rajesh (Anwar Ali), and bus conductor Khanna (Mehmood).
Cast
edit- Amitabh Bachchan as Ravi Kumar
- Aruna Irani as Mala
- Shatrughan Sinha as Sharma
- Mehmood as Khanna (Bus conductor)
- Anwar Ali as Rajesh (Bus driver)
- Nazir Hussain as Atmaram (Mala's father)
- Dulari as Mala's mother
- Manmohan as Verma
- Manorama as Young girl's mother in the bus
- Lalita Pawar as Kashibai
- Mukri as South Indian passenger
- Agha as Ramlal (Ravi's father)
- Parveen Paul as Ravi's mother
- Pakoda Kadhar as Pakora Boy
- Randhir as Kader Bhai
- Sunder as Pandit
- Keshto Mukherjee as Bengali passenger
- Yusuf Khan as Boxer John Ragada
- Babbanlal Yadav as John Ragada's henchman
- Asit Sen as Dhaba owner
- Birbal as Marathi passenger
- Raj Kishore as Passenger
- Darshan Lal as Army man
- Kishore Kumar as Himself (Cameo Appearance)
- Junior Mehmood as Dhaba waiter (Cameo Appearance)
- Usha Iyer as Herself (Cameo Appearance)
Soundtrack
edit- "Dekha Na Haye Re" - Kishore Kumar
- "Tum Meri Zindagi Mein" - Kishore Kumar, Lata Mangeshkar
- "Listen To The Pouring Rain" - Usha Uthup
- "Dil Tera Hai Main Bhi Teri" - Lata Mangeshkar, Kishore Kumar
- "Haye Haye Yeh Thanda Paani" - Asha Bhosle
- "Yeh Mehki Mehki Thandi Hawa" - Kishore Kumar
References
edit- ^ a b Guy, Randor (29 September 2012). "Madras to Pondicherry 1966". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 5 June 2018. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
- ^ Swamy, Rohan (13 February 2013). "The Remake Saga". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on 2 August 2021. Retrieved 17 October 2022.