Barood (1976 film)
Barood | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pramod Chakravorty |
Produced by |
J.C. Bhagat H.S. Bhattacharya Jitu Thakar |
Written by | Ahsan Rizvi |
Screenplay by | Sachin Bhowmick |
Story by | Sachin Bhowmick |
Starring |
Rishi Kapoor Reena Roy Shoma Anand Ashok Kumar |
Music by | Sachin Dev Burman |
Cinematography | V.K. Murthy |
Edited by | Narendra Arora |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Hindi-Urdu[1] |
Box office | ₹19.32 crore (US$23.52 million) |
Barood is a 1976 Indian Bollywood film, directed by Pramod Chakravorty, with screenplay by Sachin Bhowmick and dialogues by Ahsan Rizvi.[2] It stars Rishi Kapoor and Reena Roy. The film was a commercial flop in India,[3] but went on to become an overseas blockbuster in the Soviet Union.[4]
Cast
- Rishi Kapoor as Anup D. "Pappu" Saxena[5]
- Reena Roy as Sapna, Bakshi's assistant
- Ashok Kumar as Balraj Gupta, Criminologist
- Shoma Anand as Seema Bakshi
- Ajit as Bakshi
- Prem Chopra as Prem, Bakshi's Madrid associate
- Madan Puri as B. Puri - Bakshi's New York associate
- Asrani as Hari Ramchandani / Harry Ramani - Veterinary surgeon
Music
- "Dil Kaanto Mein Uljahaya Hai, Ek DushmanPe Pyar Aaya" - Lata Mangeshkar
- "Samundar Samundar Yaha Se Waha Tak Ye Maujo Ki" - Asha Bhosle
- "I Love You" - Kishore Kumar
- "Bada Hi Khubsurat Is Jagah Ka Har Nazara Hai" - Kishore Kumar
- "Tu Shaitano Ka Sardar Hai Sach Hai" - Shivangi Kolhapure, Mukesh
- "Dady Phir Bhi Tumko Mujhse Pyar Hai"
Box office
Territory | Gross revenue | Adjusted gross |
---|---|---|
Domestic (India) |
₹2 crore[3] (US$2.27 million)[n 1] |
US$10 million (₹67 crore)[7] |
Overseas (Soviet Union) |
15 million SUR[n 2] (US$21.25 million)[n 3] (₹17.32 crore)[n 4] |
US$80 million (₹524 crore)[7] |
Worldwide | ₹19.32 crore (US$23.52 million) |
₹591 crore (US$88 million) |
At the domestic Indian box office in 1976, Barood grossed ₹2 crore, with a net income of ₹1 crore. While it was the 17th highest-grossing film in India that year, it was declared a commercial flop in the domestic Indian market.[3]
Despite its domestic failure an India, the film went on to become an overseas blockbuster in the Soviet Union, where it released in 1978 and topped the year's Soviet box office chart.[4] It drew a box office audience of 60 million Soviet viewers, the second highest for an Indian film in the 1970s (after the earlier Rishi Kapoor starrer Bobby) and the fifth highest for a foreign film that decade.[8] At the Soviet box office, it was the 13th biggest hit of the 1970s,[8][11] the fourth most successful Indian import of all time (after Awaara, Bobby and Disco Dancer), the ninth biggest foreign hit of all time,[11] and one of the top 30 biggest hits of all time.[8][11] It was among the highest-grossing films in the Soviet Union.[12]
See also
Notes
References
- ↑ Raj, Ashok (2009). Hero Vol.1. Hay House. p. 30. ISBN 9789381398029.
- ↑ Barood. 0:16.
- 1 2 3 https://web.archive.org/web/20131020100250/http://www.boxofficeindia.com/showProd.php?itemCat=182&catName=MTk3Ng%3D%3D
- 1 2 A Taste for Indian Films: Negotiating Cultural Boundaries in Post-Stalinist Soviet Society, page 170, Indiana University, 2005
- ↑ "Rishi Kapoor". IMDb. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
- 1 2 https://www.rbi.org.in/scripts/PublicationsView.aspx?id=15268
- 1 2 67.175856 INR per USD in 2016
- 1 2 3 4 Sergey Kudryavtsev. "Зарубежные фильмы в советском кинопрокате".
- ↑ Moscow Prime Time: How the Soviet Union Built the Media Empire that Lost the Cultural Cold War, page 48, Cornell University Press, 2011
- ↑ Archive of Bank of Russia http://cbr.ru/currency_base/OldDataFiles/USD.xls
- 1 2 3 Sergey Kudryavtsev. "Отечественные фильмы в советском кинопрокате".
- ↑ With love from India to Russia, Russia Beyond the Headlines, 22 October 2009