Suraj ka satvan ghoda videorecording direction, Shyam Benegal

By: Contributor(s): Material type: PicturePicturePublication details: Bombay Bambino c1993Description: 1 videodisc (ca. 130 min.) sd., col 4 3/4 inSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 791.43954 SU
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Suraj Ka Satvan Ghoda is a 1992 Indian Hindi film directed by Shyam Benegal and based on the novel The Sun's Seventh Horse by Dharmavir Bharati. The storyteller Manek Mulla (played by Rajit Kapur) tells his friends three stories of three women he had known at different points of time in his life: Rajeshwari Sachdev (a metaphor for the middle class), Pallavi Joshi (the intellectual and affluent), and Neena Gupta (the poor). The three stories are revealed to be three different strands of a single tale as seen from the points of view of the different lead characters in the film. The lowest, slowest or the weakest in a group or society determines the speed or progress of the whole. The title of the film, a metaphor for the film itself, draws an analogy between society and the mythological iconography of the Sun's chariot drawn by seven horses. The narrative style adds to the abstractness; the film is presented as a flashback of a contemporary artist, Shyam. He remembers the many stories narrated by Mulla, a born raconteur during their gossip sessions with two of their mutual friends.
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Multimedia Multimedia OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Central Library Special collection- CD/DVD (Multimedia) 791.43954 SU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 300304

Lyrics, Vasant Dev

Originally produced as motion picture in 1991

Based on the play by Dharamvir Bharati, b. 1926

Suraj Ka Satvan Ghoda is a 1992 Indian Hindi film directed by Shyam Benegal and based on the novel The Sun's Seventh Horse by Dharmavir Bharati. The storyteller Manek Mulla (played by Rajit Kapur) tells his friends three stories of three women he had known at different points of time in his life: Rajeshwari Sachdev (a metaphor for the middle class), Pallavi Joshi (the intellectual and affluent), and Neena Gupta (the poor). The three stories are revealed to be three different strands of a single tale as seen from the points of view of the different lead characters in the film.
The lowest, slowest or the weakest in a group or society determines the speed or progress of the whole. The title of the film, a metaphor for the film itself, draws an analogy between society and the mythological iconography of the Sun's chariot drawn by seven horses. The narrative style adds to the abstractness; the film is presented as a flashback of a contemporary artist, Shyam. He remembers the many stories narrated by Mulla, a born raconteur during their gossip sessions with two of their mutual friends.

In Hindi with English and Arabic subtitles.

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