Jeet Hamaari (transl. Victory is ours) is a 1983 Indian Hindi-language film directed by R. Thyagarajan and written by Ram Govind, starring Rajinikanth, Rakesh Roshan, Ranjeeta, Anita Raj in the lead roles. It was simultaneously shot in Tamil as Thai Veedu, with Rajinikanth, Anita Raj, Silk Smitha reprising their roles from the original Tamil version.[1][2][3]
Jeet Hamaari | |
---|---|
Directed by | R. Thyagarajan |
Written by | Ram Govind |
Produced by | C. Dhandayuthapani |
Starring | Rajinikanth Rakesh Roshan Ranjeeta Anita Raj |
Cinematography | V. Ramamurthy |
Edited by | M. G. Balu Rao |
Music by | Bappi Lahiri |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Everest Multimedia |
Release date |
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Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Plot
editThakur Vikram Singh is informed by a museum curator that an ancestral sword donated by his father has been stolen. This is important because it bore half the location of a hidden treasure. The other half is on a sword still in Singh's possession, and he must guard it. He finds a thief, Avtar Singh attempting to steal the sword and stops him. Avtar grabs Thakur's son, Mohan and escapes. He is to exchange sword for son at the black hills, but his car is stolen by a thief, who raises Mohan as his own under the name Raju. Raju grows up to be a car thief, and eventually encounters his family as his enemies.
Cast
edit- Rajinikanth as Mohan / Raju
- Rakesh Roshan as Anand
- Ranjeeta as Geeta
- Anita Raj as Anita
- Shakti Kapoor as Vijay
- Madan Puri as Avtar Singh
- Om Shivpuri as Thakur Vikram Singh
- Padma Chavan as Thakurain Nirmala Singh
- Silk Smitha as Soni
- Satyen Kappu as Raju's Foster Father
- Jagdish Raj as Police Commissioner Saxena
- Gurbachan Singh as Inspector Musibat Singh
Music
editIndeevar penned every song except "Aanewala Aaya Hai" (Maya Govind). The songs were reused from the original.
Song | Singer |
---|---|
"Har Kadam Par" | Kishore Kumar |
"Nachke Dikhao" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam |
"Aapne Mujh Mein Kya Dekha" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, K. J. Yesudas, S. Janaki |
"Tumko Agar Hai Pyar" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Asha Bhosle |
"Aanewala Aaya" | Asha Bhosle |
References
edit- ^ Pugsley, Peter C. (2016). Tradition, Culture and Aesthetics in Contemporary Asian Cinema. Routledge. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-4094-5313-0.
- ^ Salam, Ziya Us (21 December 2012). "Superstar chronicles". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 22 September 2020. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
- ^ "Rajinikanth's tryst with Bollywood: Hum, Andhaa Kaanoon, Chaalbaaz". 23 May 2014.
External links
edit- Jeet Hamaari at IMDb