Ek Baar Phir (Once Again) (1980) Poster

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7/10
A fine sensitive drama.
cohuman26 January 2023
The story is very simple . The movie hardly has 10 characters in all . All 3 main actors are very fine without much loud talk . Raw is the only word for the new comer- Pradeep. Wonder where he went after this movie . Probing eyes , unruly mane of hair , a low voice. He is super as a sensitive student of art who paints on the road side for making some money , then as he slowly meets and understands lonely Deepti , he grows mature bit by bit then as an obsessed lover , unable to forget her ,then desperate to meet her again and finally some one who decides to live with her impulsively .She unwinds slowly in his presence as they go shopping for vegetables or flowers for his humble flat . He is also not apologetic about his megre life style . Deepti and Suresh are both very skilled actors and show it in every frame . A bold movie of its times. Fair and fragile Deepti wears simple cottons with minimum make up and looks every bit the vulnerable confused wife and reluctant lover . Her husband is not what she thought he would be . It comes as a shock to her . Suresh is on top with his magnetic bariton as an egoistic self centered star . Reminds us of Rajesh Khanna's final days as a fading star in many scenes. Saeed Jaffery is likeable in his small role as a co actor and a family friend .The final dialogue between Deepti and Suresh when she decides to leave him are very fine . Words come flooding from her mouth as she has to face his fury over phone . The last scene is left for us to translate . Both without much money or any fixed career decide to be together without much thought. The movie remains with us for a long time . Has some hummable songs too . We get to see London of the early 80s when it was not as crowded as it was today .
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9/10
A path-breaking movie
jmathur_swayamprabha6 September 2010
Now-a-days, it's just a routine to openly discuss the male-female or husband-wife relationships without any prejudices or biases. However it was difficult to imagine a free and frank Hindi movie around three decades back. However in 1980, such a movie came which created a lot of uproar, controversy and discussions in this regard. It was the maiden venture of the producer-director Vinod Pande. And it gave Hindi cinema an outstanding actress belonging to the genre of Shabaana Aazmi and Smita Patil, i.e., Deepti Naval.

Ek Baar Phir (once again) tells the story of a middle class girl who is too glad to be married to a popular bollywood film star. However soon after her marriage, the realities of her married life as well as the real face of her husband starts getting revealed to her. Herself, being a clean-hearted girl of good moral character and full of Indian virtues and adorable values, is taken aback by the newly emerging facts she hadn't even dreamt of while getting married. Concidentially she happens to visit Britain and there she comes across a struggling student who is an artist too. By interacting with him, she is able to discover the truth that he is the kind of a person that she always wanted to see as her man. Then she takes a bold decision about her life in general and her married life in particular.

Ek Baar Phir was by all means a path-breaking movie in that period of three decades back. At that time, the Indian psyche was not at all ready to see a woman on the screen as the typical Hindi movie heroine who leaves her husband moves alongwith somebody else (though years back Mumtaz had done a similar thing in Aapki Kasam, leaving her doubting husband Rajesh Khanna but that was the story of a different genre). By showing that, director Vinod Pande had taken a big risk but that was the first genuine step in the way of woman-lib in Hindi movies (say Indian movies).

The treatment of the story is utterly realistic and the movie got critical accolades because of the brilliant direction. The heartlessness of the bollywood heroes and the cruel system prevailing there has been shown on the screen with utmost sensitivity. Three decades back, neither the banks were giving loans for making movies (as it was not considered an industry) nor the underworld was supposed to be financing them. So the financial position of certain not-so-well-off movie makers was so precarious that sometimes they had to fall to the level of selling their houses. And because of such kind of situation, they had even to even fall at the feet of the egoistic and money-minded superstars. That was the time of super-stardom of heroes which was misused by them (and their secretaries too) to exploit the poor producers.

However the biggest plus point of the movie is its honest examination of husband-wife relationships which makes it a winner all the way. For the first time in a Hindi movie, it was shown that the wife was not ready to adjust with husband's vices and not ready to be carried away by his success, richness and social stature. She wanted to see her husband as a man of principles and ideals (just like her) and not content by becoming the proverbial Cindrella who has got the prince of her dreams. She finds the heartlessness, money-mindedness and loose character (womanizing when away from her due to outdoor shooting) as disgusting.

Even bolder thing shown by the revolutionary director Vinod Pande was that when the good wife disenchanted with the husband whom she can no longer respect in her heart, finds a man on her wavelength, she decides to break out of the wedlock and move alongwith her newly found love without caring for the obloquy of her (and her family of birth as well as her in-laws). Prior to this movie, an Indian woman was always expected to make sacrifices and endure everything. This was the movie which openly declared her right to evaluate, choose and decide for the first time in the history of Hindi movies. That's why I have termed this movie as a path-breaking movie, a trend-setter for (male-female) relationship-based Hindi movies.

One of the most natural actresses of Indian cinema, Deepti Naval showcases her abundant talent in her debut movie itself. It's, by and large, her movie and she has infused life into the role of the sensitive but suffocated wife. Suresh Oberai has been one of the most underrated actors of bollywood. He is simply brilliant in the role of the selfish, infidel, insensitive and money-minded husband. Pradeep Varma has also performed well in the role of the wife's newly found love.

Music by Raghunath Seth is admirable. The best song is the Bhupinder-Anuradha Paudwal duet - Ye Paudhe Ye Patte Ye Phool Ye Hawaayen. The other songs too are quite good. The beautiful lyrics have been written by the director Vinod Pande himself.

Cinematography, editing and other technical aspects of the movie are also up to the mark. Overall the movie is able to keep the viewer focused despite the emotional plot which does not contain many twists and turns. It's definitely an interesting saga, well-narrated.

Any movie buff who is willing to know how the woman of Hindi movies got herself free from the shackles imposed upon her by the stale-tradition and the patriarchal psyche continuing for ages and a revolutionary change set in the Indian cinema, should not miss this movie. This movie is for all those who are interesting in watching meaningful cinema.
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