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Ghungroo Ki Awaaz(1981)
Hindi138 mins
Ghungroo Ki Awaaz (1981) is a 138-minute Hindi film directed by Tulsi Ramsay. Starring Agha, Padma Khanna and Gangu Ramsay. With an audience rating of 6.8/10, Ghungroo Ki Awaaz stands as one of the notable Hindi releases of 1981.
Director:Tulsi Ramsay
Mood:
darkemotionalsuspenseful
Where to watch:
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Quick Facts
- Theatrical Release
- 31 December 1981
- Director
- Tulsi Ramsay
- Language
- Hindi
- Runtime
- 2h 18m
- GudVibe Rating
- 6.8/10
Storyline
A man buys a woman's freedom and marries her, but suspects her of being unfaithful. After he takes violent revenge, her ghost haunts him. He later meets her exact double and brings her home, but the ghost returns for vengeance, driving him insane.
“A vengeful spirit returns to haunt her killer's new love.”
Film Details
6.8Rating
138Minutes
HindiLanguage
UCertificate
Release Date31 December 1981
Release Typetheatrical
Parental Guide
Violence
High
Language
Low
Sex / Nudity
Mild
Drugs
Mild
Intensity
High
Vibe & Tags
Mood
darkemotionalsuspenseful
Themes
revengelovecorruptionjustice
Tonegritty
Pacingslow-burn
Complexitymoderate
Audienceniche
Best Withwith-partner
Violence3
Emotion4
Humor1
Rewatchability3
Reviews & Ratings
Your Rating
6.8/10Rating
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Cast & Crew
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Trivia
- This was one of the few horror films directed by Shyam Ramsay without his brother Tulsi Ramsay as co-director.
- The film's soundtrack, composed by R.D. Burman, includes the popular song 'Mera Naam Hai Kajal' sung by Kishore Kumar and Asha Bhosle.
- Actress Reena Roy, who played the dual role, was a major star known for dramatic roles, making her horror film appearance notable.
- The movie was part of a wave of early 1980s Ramsay Brothers horror films that often featured haunted mansions and vengeful spirits.
- It was released the same year as the Ramsays' more famous film 'Purana Mandir', which overshadowed its box office performance.
- The plot uses the common Hindi cinema trope of a 'lookalike' to drive mystery, a device also seen in films like 'Kohraa' and 'Mahal'.
- Shyam Ramsay also handled the cinematography for the film, which was unusual as he typically focused on directing.

