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Vivah
Vivah (Hindi: विवाह, Urdu: وواہ, Deutsch: Hochzeit) ist ein erfolgreicher Liebesdrama aus Bollywood.
Handlung
Poonam verlor ihre Eltern als sie noch sehr klein war. Und so hat ihr Onkel Krishnakant und ihre Tante Rama sie in ihr Haus aufgenommen. Doch Rama ist eifersüchtig auf Poonam, da sie hübscher ist als ihre eigene Tochter Rajni. Aber Poonam und Chothi verstehen sich von klein auf sehr gut.
Eines Tages besucht Bhagat-ji, ein Juwelier und guter Freund von Krishnakant, die Familie. Sofort ist er von Poonams Art und Weise entzückt und beschließt einen geeigneten Ehemann für sie zu finden. Er hat schon einen Jüngling im Visier. Es ist Prem, der Sohn des Industriellen Harichandra, der auch ein Freund von Bhagat-ji ist.
Sie schicken ein Bild von Poonam an Harichandra, der sofort von Poonam begeistert ist. Als er Prem von Poonam erzählt ist Prem erst skeptisch. Doch sein Bruder versucht ihn zu beruhigen und erzählt ihm von seiner eigenen Erfahrung und der Heirat mit seiner jetzigen Frau Bhavna. Dadurch ist Prem etwas beruhigt und stimmt dem Treffen mit Poonam zu.
Als Prem mit seiner Familie von Delhi nach Madhupur zu Poonams Familie reisen, kommen sich die beiden etwas näher. Schüchtern stimmen die beiden der Heirat zu und werden verlobt. Da alles so gut funktioniert hat, beschließt Poonams Onkel gemeinsam mit Prems Familie Urlaub in seinem Ferienhaus Som Sarovar zu machen.
In Som Sarovar können Prem und Poonam, dank den arrangierten Treffen von Bhavna, alleine sein und verlieben sich Kopf über Hals ineinander. Als Prem und die Familie aus geschäftlichen Gründen das Ferienhaus vorzeitig verlassen müssen, bleiben die beiden per Internet, Telefon und Post in Verbindung. Erst durch die große Entfernung offenbaren sie ihre Gefühle füreinander, die sie aus Scham nicht zeigen konnten.
Zwei Tage vor der offiziellen Hochzeit bricht ein Feuer in Krishnakants Haus aus. Als Poonam Chothi aus dem brennenden Haus retten möchte, erleidet sie schwere Brandverletzungen, die mit Ausnahme ihres Gesichtes, den ganzen Körper zieren.
Nachdem Prem von Poonams Unfall gehört hat, besucht er sie sofort im Krankenhaus. Poonam ist sehr unglücklich und unsicher, da sie nicht weiß ob Prem sie noch heiraten möchte. Für Prem ist es jedoch selbstverständlich Poonam als Braut mit nach Hause zu nehmen. Und als Zeichen dafür trägt er ihr Sindur auf den Scheitel.
Der Dokter informiert die Familien, dass es noch Hoffnung gibt. Poonam kann operiert werden, aber der Eingriff kann sehr riskant sein und die Verletzungen brauchen viel Zeit bis sie ganz verheilen. Der Eingriff ist jedoch erfolgreich überstanden und Prem pflegt Poonam einige Zeit im Krankenhaus bis er sie zur Hochzeit mit nach Hause nimmt.
Dies und Das
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Product Description
Poonam (Amrita Rao) is an orphaned middle-class girl who lives with her chacha (Alok Nath) and chachi (Seema Biswas). Poonam's chachi has been unable to accept Poonam as her own child as she is more beautiful than chachi's daughter, Rajni (Amrita Prakash). Poonam's simple and affectionate demeanor touches the heart of Bhagatji (Manoj Joshi) who takes her marriage proposal for Prem (Shahid Kapoor), son of renowned businessman Mr. Harishchandra (Anupam Kher). In spite of being brought up in the fast city life of New Delhi, Prem is rooted to the ground and has retained his family's traditional values and upbringing.
Respecting his father's wishes, Prem agrees to meet Poonam to get to know her better. What follows is a 'meeting' arranged by the two families. Prem and Poonam are suddenly in the midst of a situation they have never been in before. They discover their soul mates in each other and are engaged - to be married in six months. Prem and Poonam go through the most magical and romantic period of their lives. Six months fly by and just when everything is set for Prem and Poonam to get married... a crisis puts the love of Prem and Poonam through a trial by fire. 'Vivah' is a heart-warming tale of their unconditional love... This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #22912 in DVD
- Released on: 2010-01-06
- Format: NTSC
- Original language:
Hindi
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 160 minutes
Customer Reviews
After the engagement, the courtship begins...
So, just this once, toss those hip modern values out the window along with that bathwater. This movie is VIVAH, and it unabashedly hearkens back to India's more traditional conventions, and specifically that of the arranged marriage. Released in 2006 VIVAH tells the story of two young people, Prem and Poonam, strangers to one another yet destined to be wedded. So it'd be nice if they like each other.
Poonam (Amrita Rao) is an orphaned girl from the small town of Madhupur, who was raised in her uncle's household. She is beautiful and demure and brought up to be obedient and traditional. Despite this, her aunt dislikes her intensely, simply because Poonam is far prettier than her own daughter, never mind that Poonam and her daughter get along very well. Poonam has tried to make the best of it, basking in the love lavished on her by her doting uncle and cousin. But, all her life, she's longed for a mother's affection...
Prem (Shahid Kapoor) is the youngest son of an industrial magnate in Delhi. Carefree and just about to settle into his career, Prem is very surprised and unprepared when his father proposes an arranged marriage for him. Yet Prem is respectful enough to at least meet his potential bride, an act which proves fatal to his bachelorhood. Instantly charmed by Poonam, Prem promptly gives the nod to the marriage contract. As for Poonam, it's hard to tell what she's really thinking because she's so damned demure, but she seems to reciprocate Prem's interest. So the contract is finalized, friendships are struck, a romance is fostered, and the nuptials set to take place in six months' time.
As the following weeks and months elapse and the families get better acquainted, Poonam and Prem continue to get ever closer, until that old familiar happens: Poonam and Prem fall in love. And, suddenly, the big day can't come soon enough. But complications surface. Poonam's aunt still bears her a deep jealous resentment and, so, what should have been an idyllic time for Poonam is sabotaged by her aunt's venomous snipings at her uncle, over his extravagant financing of the wedding and over his seeming disregard for his own daughter's future prospects. Then, on the eve of the wedding, a life-threatening tragedy unfolds, and Poonam and Prem and their families will be tested as never before.
Even in Bollywood cinema, the idea of the arranged marriage has taken its share of negative hits. So, every once in a while, for balance's sake, it's nice to see a film which espouses the positives of this age-old institution. I don't necessarily agree with it as I'm more with the free choice side of the fence. But it's nice to hear from the other point of view. And, more importantly, while not a classic, I do think VIVAH is a movie worth watching. It certainly did well enough at India's box office.
Granted, not much of a plot here in VIVAH. Basically, the film is built on simple moments as it tracks the progression of the arranged marriage, from the contractual conception to the courtship to the consummation of the marriage ceremony. Nothing gossip-worthy happens, and, other than the virulent aunt, all is easy-peasy until the last thirty minutes when the tragic twist surfaces. Sadly, the musical interludes are lackluster. And the sedate pacing and lack of narrative punch might've turned me off, except that the superb cast managed to keep me involved. These characters are likable enough (except for the aunt) that you even get immersed in the slow scenes. VIVAH applies a huge chunk of the running time in developing Poonam and Prem's blossoming relationship, as they overcome their mutual shyness and awkwardness and begin to fall for each other. Theirs isn't a raging romance. Their subdued personalities don't lend too much to fiery, over-the-top demonstrations, although there is a moment when Prem shouts "I love you!" in an airport. Rather, theirs is a connection arrived at by achieving a certain mutual comfort level and by clinging to a commitment to and a respect for traditional culture and customs. But, also, that they're both very attractive people probably didn't hurt any.
Again, the glue of VIVAH is the cast. The two young leads, Shahid Kapoor and the ravishing Amrita Rao, turn in sensitive, if bland, performances. The supporting actors turn out to be as equally important. Particularly great are Anupam Kher and Alok Nath, who respectively play Prem's wealthy but grounded father and Poonam's loving uncle and surrogate father. And the fact that you end up hating on Poonam's dour-faced aunt is, of course, a reflection of Seema Biswas's very good acting skills.
For those with the 2-dvd set, the first disc has the film and song selections. The second disc contains the 19-minute-long "Making of the Film" featurette (average) and the 21-minute-long "Making of the Music" (dull).
Graced with a gentle, low key charm and a heartwarming simplicity, the waterworks really come on in the tense and emotional last half hour (Grab your hanky). And yet VIVAH may prove to be too Pollyanna for some. Are arranged marriages really this wonderful? Does love really come after marriage? Well, no, and sometimes. VIVAH is a celebration of this institution and is, for all purposes, a Bollywood fairy tale, an idealization of arranged matrimony. As such, it's about as real and convincing as, well, as a Bollywood motion picture. Would that all arranged marriages work as well as this one did.
Beautiful story about love on many levels
The main story focuses on the growing relationship between the main characters, but the relationships between the main characters and other members of the family as well as the two families, form a core part of the story development. All the characters were great in their roles, particularly the main characters. There is a lot of subtlety in expression and body language that's wonderfully expressive. The music fit very nicely. It's a long movie and it would be hard for me to cut anything. Definitely have a hanky for a rough patch. Very sweet treat without crossing the line to syrupy. I can't bring myself to subtract from the rating for it, but I do wish the "extras" DVD contained deleted scenes.
Not entirely satisfied - plays like a copy
I ordered the DVD Vivah. The DVD arrived on time, but the quality is poor. The movie plays like it is a copy rather than an original of the movie.
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