“Rama Rajya” ( Hindi дос , ext .: “Rama's reign”) is an Indian film shot in two versions in Hindi and Marathi . The picture took third place in the collections of Indian films in 1943 and received rolling status of "super hit" [1] . The most famous and successful film based on the Ramayana Vijaya Bhatta [2] . It is also considered the most successful and authentic mythological musical ever created in the country, and is the only film that Mahatma Gandhi watched in his entire life [3] .
| Rama Rajya | |
|---|---|
| hindi रामराज्य | |
| Genre | |
| Producer | Vijay Bhatt |
| Author script | Kanu Vijai |
| In the main cast | Prem Adib Shobhna Samart |
| Composer | Shankarao Vyas |
| Duration | |
| A country | |
| Tongue | Hindi / Marathi |
| Year | 1943 |
| IMDb | |
Story
After defeating the demon Ravana , who had abducted Sita , Rama and his wife returned to Ayodhya . However, the washer (dhobi) requires the rest of the people to expel Sita, as she spent several days and nights away from her husband and, therefore, defiled herself. Rama yields to the demands of his people and expels Sita, who goes to live with Lord Valmiki and gives birth to twins - Lava and Kush . In the meantime, Valmiki finished writing the holy book Ramayana and makes sure the twins read and understand it.
A few years later, Rama announces the ritual of Ashwamedha Yagna to expand the boundaries of Ayodhya. During the ritual, Rama lets the horse run through different kingdoms, and the one who stops her will challenge Rama and his army. When Sita hears about this, she is upset, because the ruler can only perform this ritual together with his wife, which means Rama married again. Before she could find out if this was the case, she was told that her sons had stopped the horse - and were ready to fight the Ayodhya army.
Notes
- ↑ Top Earners 1943 . Box Office India. Date of treatment September 26, 2011. Archived October 16, 2013.
- ↑ Ramrajya // Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema / Edited by Ashish Rajadhyaksha, Paul Willemen. - British Film Institute, 1994. - P. 280. - 568 p. - ISBN 978-0195635799 .
- ↑ Ausaja, SMM Bollywood in Posters . - Om Books International, 2009. - P. 34. - ISBN 978-81-87108-55-9 .