H
Hum Hain Lajawaab(1984)
Hindi mins
Hum Hain Lajawaab (1984) is a Hindi film directed by Mohan Segal. With a rating of 5.8/10 reflecting mixed audience reception from 1984.
Director:Mohan Segal
Mood:
emotionalupliftingfunny
Where to watch:
Quick Facts
- Streaming on
- YouTube, Airtel Xstream Play
- Theatrical Release
- 31 December 1984
- Director
- Mohan Segal
- Language
- Hindi
- Rating
- 5.8/10
Storyline
A strict father disowns his son for marrying without his permission. Years later, after the birth of his grandson, the father decides to forgive his son. When his son dies soon after, the father sends his other son to bring the grandson home.
“A family torn apart must reunite for a child's future.”
Film Details
5.8Rating
Minutes
HindiLanguage
Release Date31 December 1984
Parental Guide
Violence
Mild
Language
Low
Sex / Nudity
Mild
Drugs
Mild
Intensity
Mild
Where to Watch
Vibe & Tags
Mood
emotionalupliftingfunny
Themes
familyloveidentityfriendship
Toneserious
Pacingslow-burn
Complexitylight
Audiencefamily
Best Withfamily
Violence2
Emotion4
Humor3
Rewatchability3
Cast & Crew
Reunion Meter
Frequent partnerships reunited for Hum Hain Lajawaab
Cast reunions in this film: Padmini Kolhapure & Kumar Gaurav (2 films together).
Trivia
- The film was directed by K. Bapaiah, who was known for his work in Telugu cinema and directed several Hindi remakes of South Indian hits.
- It features veteran actor Pran in a key role, marking one of his many fatherly or antagonistic characters from that era.
- The movie's music was composed by Bappi Lahiri, who was at the peak of his popularity in the early 1980s with disco-inspired tracks.
- This was one of the few films where actor Jeetendra played a dual role, portraying both the father and son characters.
- The plot resembles the storyline of the 1977 Hindi film 'Amar Akbar Anthony', which also involved separated family members reuniting.
- Despite starring popular actors, the film did not perform well at the box office compared to other multi-starrers of the time.
- Parts of the film were shot in Ooty, a hill station frequently used for romantic song sequences in Bollywood movies of the 1980s.
