Sheesha (1986 film)

Sheesha

VCD Cover
Directed by Basu Chatterjee
Produced by Sattee Shourie
Starring Mithun Chakraborty
Moon Moon Sen
Vijayendra Ghatge
Mallika Sarabhai
Music by Bappi Lahiri
Release dates
3 October 1986 (India)
Running time
130 min.
Language Hindi
Budget

Rs 5 Crores

box office = rs

Sheesha is a 1986 Hindi-language Indian feature film directed by Basu Chatterjee, starring Mithun Chakraborty, Moon Moon Sen, Vijayendra Ghatge, and Mallika Sarabhai.

Plot

Sheesha is a family thriller, featuring Mithun Chakraborty and Moon Moon Sen in lead roles and supported by Vijayendra Ghatge and Mallika Sarabhai. The film is a court room drama as well. The movie was based on a Bengali novel authored by Shankar (Mansamman) and was first movie about sexual harassment in office a bold concept movie did well at box office some bold scene was also present in movie Mallika Sarabhai play a woman who case against Mithun Chakraborty and Moon Moon Sen help to mithun .

Summary

Dinesh Prakash (Mithun Chakraborty) and Manisha (Moon Moon Sen) were in love and they get married. Now Dinesh is the Executive Director at B.C. Drugs located in Chembur. In one of his birthday celebration which falls on 15 December, she invites several of their friends including Advocate Ashok Kumar (Vijayendra). But she is shocked beyond her senses when she finds out that her husband has been arrested and charged with trying to rape one Poonam (Mallika Sarabhai), the Versova-based telephone Operator of her husband's organization who visited his office after office hours for seeking help in connection with her husband's claims who is no more. Has Dinesh really done any crime? Has Poonam created a trap for Dinesh? What Manisha does? All the answers for these questions are revealed in the climax. At the end of the movie although Dinesh is exonerated, but the question remains, who is right - Dinesh or Poonam?

Cast

Music

  1. "Pyaar Hai Kya Yehi" - Kishore Kumar
  2. "Pyaar Hai kya Yehi (sad)" - Kishore Kumar
  3. "Kya Hoga Kyun Hoga" - Asha Bhosle
  4. 'Ye To Nari" - Bappi Lahiri

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.