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Contents

   



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1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Box office  





4 Music  





5 References  





6 External links  














Bal Bramhachari







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Bal Bramhachari
Directed byPrakash Mehra
Written byPrakash Mehra
Anwar Khan
Ravi Kapoor
Screenplay byRavi Kapoor
Produced byPrakash Mehra
StarringPuru Raaj Kumar
Karisma Kapoor
Deepak Tijori
Aasif Sheikh
CinematographyBasheer Ali
N. Satyen
Edited byShyam Gupte
Music byBappi Lahiri
Distributed byPrakash Mehra Productions

Release date

  • 6 September 1996 (1996-09-06)

Running time

163 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget2 crore[1]
Box office4.57 crore[1]

Bal Bramhachari ( English: Forever Ascetic) is a 1996 Indian Action Romantic Drama film. The Producer and Director of film is Prakash Mehra. Puru Raaj Kumar and Karisma Kapoor is in lead role. With this film Puru Raaj Kumar (Son of Raaj Kumar) make debut in Bollywood started his acting career.

Plot

[edit]

Thakur Raghuveer Singh and his wife have no children, and there is no hope of getting a child. Thakur Raghuveer Singh donates a huge plot of land to his friend Professor Vijay Thripati to fulfil his friend's dream to build a college. As Raghuveer Singh yearns to have a child and the professor and his wife ask him to adopt their son. Bhujbal Choudary is not happy because Thakur Raghuveer Singh donated his land to his friend Professor Vijay Thripati enraged as he wants to build a factory instead of a college. To churn out the students from the college, he arranges fake diplomas that have no meaning as an anti-social activity. Then he plans to kill the professor and his wife on the day the foundation stone is being laid for the college. The professor is killed; however his wife manages to escape and take shelter in a Hanuman Mandir there, she gives birth to a son in Hanuman temple. On the request of the dying mother, the priest hands over the baby boy to Thakur Raghuveer Singh. Thakur has already decided to adopt Balak Ram's son named Balbir, so later, he adopts both the children. Balak Ram, who has an evil eye on the Raghuveer Singh property and wants to acquire it as well as wants to kill Professor Vijay Thripati's son named Mahavir Singh, also adopted by Thakur.

Mahavir is specially blessed by Bhagwan Bajrangbali and possesses special powers, and he devotes god Hanuman. Thakur's adopted son studies in the same college run by Bhujbal Chowdary. While in college, Balbir meets with Seema and falls in love with her. Seema's friend, Asha Rana, is attracted to Mahavir, but Mahavir has taken a vow of celibacy 'brahmachari', and does not like any woman to come near to him. But Asha tries all of her seductive powers to make Mahavir change his mind. Eventually, Mahavir falls in love with Asha and decides to tie the knot. He also learns of his birth father and his dream. And then takes revenge against their attacker, in a shadowy form that he has magically seen in his dreams.

Cast

[edit]

Source[2]

Box office

[edit]

Bal Bramhachari was released on 6 September 1996 and grossed Box office collection was estimate 4.57 crore against the budget of 2 crore.[3]

Music

[edit]

There are 06 songs in the Movie and all the music are composed by Bappi Lahiri and the lyrics are written by Prakash Mehra

# Title Singer(s)
1 "Nazrein Lad Gayiyan" Kavita Krishnamurthy
2 "Kabhi Na Kabhi Jaana" Alka Yagnik
3 "Ram Dhun Gaao Kripal Dhun Gaao" Udit Narayan
4 "Zara Chhuke To Dikha" Asha Bhosle
5 "Tu Hain Ladki Main Hoon Ladka" Abhijeet Bhattacharya, Sadhana Sargam
6 "Humko Kya Karna" Vinod Rathod, Bappi Lahiri

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Bal Bramhachari – Movie". Box Office India.
  • ^ "Bal Bramhachari - Movie - - Box Office India". boxofficeindia.com. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
  • ^ "BAL BRAMHACHARI".
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bal_Bramhachari&oldid=1211835836"

    Categories: 
    1996 films
    1996 drama films
    1990s action drama films
    Films scored by Bappi Lahiri
    Indian romantic action films
    Indian action drama films
    1990s Hindi-language films
    1990s Indian films
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Use dmy dates from September 2020
    Use Indian English from September 2020
    All Wikipedia articles written in Indian English
    Template film date with 1 release date
    Articles containing explicitly cited English-language text
    Rotten Tomatoes ID same as Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 4 March 2024, at 18:46 (UTC).

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