Jadu Teri Nazar Ka Chal Hi Gaya Song Lyrics – Asha Bhosle
Jadu Teri Nazar Ka Chal Hi Gaya from movie Aladdin And The Wonderful Lamp – An musical adaptation of Aladin and the wonderful lamp.
Jadu Teri Nazar Ka Chal Hi Gaya from movie Aladdin And The Wonderful Lamp – An musical adaptation of Aladin and the wonderful lamp.
Piya More from movie Baadshaho – Baadshaho is inspired by real-life events during the Emergency and revolves around stolen gold, a thief (Ajay Devgn), an army officer (Vidyut Jammwal), a character inspired by Maharani Gayatri Devi. Maharani Gitanjali Devi (Ileana D’Cruz) from one of the Rajasthan’s Princely States has already lost her privy purse. The story revolves around a group of thugs who decide to loot the gold confiscated from Rani Gitanjali, and being transported to Delhi by road.
Phool Ki Daali Kehake Na Modo from movie Be Lagaam (1987) – ;
Pocketmaar – Roshan lives a poor lifestyle in Bombay along with his widowed mother. His mother thinks that her son is gainfully employed but Roshan has made crime his career and picks pockets and gambles for a living. A gangster named Shankar wants to hire him, but Roshan refuses. Then one da…
Marhaba Marhaba Marhaba from movie Humsey Hai Jahaan (2008) – ;
Mast Kalander from movie Honey Singh Album – ;
Nadi Kinare Sath Hamare from movie Babul – While golfing, Malvika Talwar meets with handsome, U.S.-returned Avinash, both fall in love with each other, and shortly thereafter get married. The following year, Malvika gives birth to a boy, and they decide to name him Ansh. Then chaos and devastation enters Malvika’s life when Avinash gets killed in an automobile accident. Malvika resigns herself to a life of a widow, her sole motive for living appears to be to look after Ansh. She is shocked when her in-laws, Balraj, and Shobhana, ask her to re-marry. Will Malvika be able to remove Avinash from her heart and mind and marry someone else?
Tu Chanda Main Teri Chakori from movie Birhan – In poor areas of rural India, large numbers of villagers-most of them young men-are leaving their homes to look for work in big cities. Many of them disappear into the anonymity of city life, leaving their families to wonder what became of them. For the people left behind, the sense of loss remains huge even many years later. Absence is a cinematic portrayal of the grief, agony and anguish of separation that is expressed with the Hindi word “birha”. In a faraway village, missing people, mothers and tired lovers yearn to see beyond the mist. They meet each other in impenetrable silences and endless mourning. They curse the moon for witnessing their insomnia. Guided by Shiv Kumar Batalvi’s birha poetry, the film captures the pain, lamentation and yearning caused by separation. The locations are not marked, characters are not named. Absence situates itself in a season of waiting and a climate of uncertainty, where only a loud screech can measure the distance between loved ones.