Ghungroo Ki Awaaz (1981) Poster

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The sound of the ankle-bell
jmathur_swayamprabha12 October 2011
Among the three Anand brothers of Bollywood, Chetan Anand always remained a highly respected film-director whereas Dev Anand remained an evergreen romantic hero. The youngest brother - Vijay Anand (popularly known as Goldie) was also a respected director like his elder brother Chetan and presented gems like Guide, Teesri Manzil, Jewel Thief and Tere Mere Sapne through his great direction. However like his another elder brother Dev, he was also fond of acting and to cater to his acting interest, he did a few Bollywood movies as an actor viz. Haqeeqat, Tere Mere Sapne, Kora Kaagaz, Main Tulsi Tere Aangan Ki etc. One such movie is Ghunghroo Ki Aawaaz (1981) which is a suspense-thriller.

Ghunghroo Ki Aawaaz (the sound of the ankle-bell) starts with a double murder committed by the hero - Thakur Ranjeet Singh (Vijay Anand) who is the heir of an erstwhile princely state and lives with his maternal uncle - Thakur Jasbir Singh (Dr. Shreeram Lagoo) who is the only living relative of his. The double murder committed by him is of a courtesan Kaajal (Rekha) whom he loved very much (that's why he had brought her to his palace) and her supposed clandestine lover - Shaakaal (Dheeraj Kumar). However after the murder, he starts hearing the sound of the anklet of Kaajal (because she was a courtesan) and seeing her spirit (who talks to him also) which keeps on haunting him every night. His maternal uncle hushes up the police case and advises him to change the climate by moving out of the estate for quite some time. Ranjeet Singh moves to Mumbai, taking a break from the estate life and going away from the spirit of Kaajal. Now comes the twist in the tale.

In Mumbai, Ranjeet Singh happens to meet Kiran who is the look-alike of Kaajal. He gets confused but while coming back from Mumbai to his place, he brings Kiran with him as his nurse. Now new chain of events start in the estate, creating a number of hallucinations for Ranjeet Singh. Finally, he gets mentally disturbed to this much extent that he is shifted to an asylum. However he gets out of the asylum and starts searching the truth behind the spirit of Kaajal and the sound of her anklet. Finally the mystery gets unravelled before him.

Ghunghroo Ki Aawaaz was directed by the horror-kings of Bollywood during the seventies and the eighties - the famous Ramsay brothers. However this is not a horror movie. This is a suspense movie. It starts on an interesting note and keeps the viewer hooked for the major part of it. Only the climax is a let-down. The plot of this movie appears to be partially inspired by the classic mystery of Raj Khosla - Woh Kaun Thi (1964) and partially by the classic mystery of Alfred Hitchcock - Vertigo (1958). A few good songs and a good climax would have turned it into a much better flick.

This old-fashioned mystery can be called a pure mystery sans all other Bollywood formulae - comedy, romance and action. Therefore, despite some songs, there is little relief for the viewer during the suspense-drama. Since this is not a classic mystery, some relief would have helped making it spicy and interesting according to the taste of the regular (Indian) movie buffs.

Technically the movie is good. The mysterious environment has been maintained throughout the part of the movie that takes place in the estate. Since there is no comedy or romance, it is free from superfluous scenes and not unduly long. The director has revealed the suspense to the audience before it is revealed upon the hero in the story which has weakened the final sequence of the movie. Due to this directorial mistake, the viewer's interest in the final reel (the last 10-15 minutes) gets nullified. In fact, the presentation of last scene appeared a bit irritating to me. I feel, had Vijay Anand himself directed this story (instead of the Ramsay brothers), he would have made it in a much better way.

R.D. Burman's music is passable. Only the title track which is a good suspense song - O Mere Humraaz, Kaisa Hai Ye Raaz (sung by Kishore Kumar) remains in memory after the movie is over.

Vijay Anand was not just a great director, he was a good actor too. He has proved it in all the roles played by him in different movies. In Ghunghroo Ki Aawaaz also, he does not disappoint. In fact, it is his movie only. Rekha has performed in two different personalities (of Kaajal and Kiran) and being a great actress, she has done well. Others including Dr. Shreeram Lagoo, Leela Mishra, Padma Khanna, Dheeraj Khumar, Iftekhar etc. have also performed satisfactorily according the requirement of the assigned roles.

I recommend this long-forgotten mystery to all the mystery-fans who like to watch pure mysteries (without other attractions in the script). I also recommend it to the fan-following of Vijay Anand and Rekha.
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1/10
Pot Pouri .. what a waste
ani21812211 November 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Remember seeing Vertigo? Remember the Woman in white? Well, mix the two in a screwed up mixer grinder, add fungus and bad breath as condiments, and presto, we have something called Ghungroo ki Awaz. Sir Alfred Hitchcock would have certainly moved in his grave if he ever saw this pathetic reproduction of his classic by the once classy filmmaker Goldie Anand. Sure somebody has said 'All the glitters is not gold. Here Goldie's gold has been sold to horror merchants the Ramsay's, and they churn out an experience which is horrible and intolerable.

We knew Goldie had a few positive traits: He could elegantly shoot songs and weave them into the fabric of a film, he could handle large scale outdoors, he could inject suspense in the manner very few Bombay filmmakers have been able to do (remember JewelThief, Johnny Mera Naam, Teesri Manzil, and who can forget Guide)..frightfully, Ghungroo ki awaz has Goldie playing nothing but the lead character, some vague thakur (landlord) , enjoying the grand opulence even today without having to do anything, falling in and out of love with the same girl (a la Vertigo), having haunting nightmares of the girl (a la Woman in white), finally discovering it's one girl after all (who does no keep souvenirs from killers, the killer played by Dr Shreeram Lagu, probably his worst role till then).

Goldie is also the producer of this film. He himself would have agreed that this is undoubtedly his worst production ever. Good script (how can something inspired by Hitch be bad?) ruined left right and center by bad screenplay, inept direction, frame less editing, pathetic acting .. the only silver lining is Rahul Dev Burman's music..,the title song "O mere humraaz" is a masterpiece, sung to perfection by Kishore Kumar.

Else.. avoid the film at all costs.. definitely not more than 1 out of 10 in my books..if you want to listen to the songs, buy them from your local CD store..
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4/10
Goldie Anand couldnt pull it off...
nadkarnisumeet25 January 2021
Ghungroo Ki Awaaz review :

A rare collaboration of Vijay (Goldie) Anand with Ramsay Brothers; Ghungroo Ki Awaaz was a suspense drama in mould of Mahal (1949) and Woh Kaun Thi (1964) and it was a complete departure from Ramsays usual horror template. Rekha was cast opposite Goldie himself in the lead role.

In fact, Goldie had multi-tasked for this film playing the producer, hero, writer as well as lyricist. Music by RD Burman was decent and the background score was influenced from his own 'The Great Gambler' (1979) and Jewel Thief (1967). While Goldie was always a brilliant director with gems like Guide (1965) and Jewel Thief (1967) to his credit, his acting skills sadly left a lot to be desired, especially in this film.

Rekha looked disinterested throughout and her voice was dubbed by Padma Khanna who also had a small role of a hooker in the film. Dheeraj Kumar appeared totally miscast as a goon.

Overall, not a bad film for early 80s, Ghungroo Ki Awaaz would've probably worked with a better hero, more taut script and crisp editing. Goldie just couldnt pull it off...

Regards, Sumeet Nadkarni.
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