Deewane Tere Pyar Ke
- 7 November 1997 (1997-11-07)
Deewane Tere Pyaar Key (Urdu: دیوانے تیرے پیار کے, English title: Love Crazy) is an Urdu language film which was released on 7 November 1997.[1]
It was directed by Syed Noor[2] and produced at Evernew Studios.
Plot
This film story is about a girl named Kiran, daughter of a Pakistani man and an Indian woman living in Mauritius. This girl comes to Pakistan to see his grand parents' grave and she loses her passport and the cash money with her. Then she meets a poor boy in Lahore who helps her. They fall in love. The girl returns to Mauritius. Boy Nomi had promised her that he would come to Mauritius after her. Her uncle forced him to not come to Mauritius by influencing the country's embassy in Pakistan. Nomi travels illegally. Kiran's marriage breaks. Nomi gets caught as a terrorist. While he was struggling in Mauritius he met khan lala who becomes his friend. Meanwhile, khan lala gathers his people in Mauritius in support of nomi to prove him innocent. Court orders to deports nomi. In the plane, he finds out that Kiran and her parents had also boarded the same plane going back to Pakistan.
Cast
- Moammar Rana as Nouman (Nomi)[2][1]
- Jia Ali as Kiran[2][1]
- Badar Munir as Khan Lala
- Nadeem as father of Kiran[1]
- Yasmeen Ismail as mother of Kiran
- Deeba as Nomi's mother[1]
- Sardar Kamal as Nomi's friend
- Irfan Khoosat as Kiran's uncle
- Raja Callikan as friend of villain
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Awardee | Nominated work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | Nigar Awards | Best Film | Deewane Tere Pyar Ke | Deewane Tere Pyar Ke | Won | [3] |
Best Director | Syed Noor | |||||
Best Script Writer | Syed Noor | |||||
Best Musician | Amjad Bobby | |||||
Best Cinematographer | Aakif Malik | |||||
Best Comedian | Sardar Kamal |
References
- ^ a b c d e "Deewane Tere Pyar Ke". Pakistan Film Magazine website. Archived from the original on 21 June 2017. Retrieved 3 December 2022.
- ^ a b c "Deewane Tere Pyar Ke (1997 film)". Complete Index To World Film (CITWF) website. Archived from the original on 2 September 2017. Retrieved 3 December 2022.
- ^ "Pakistan's "Oscars"; The Nigar Awards". The Hot Spot Film Reviews website. 24 November 2017. Archived from the original on 13 June 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2022.
External links
- Deewane Tere Pyar Ke at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- Saat Lakh (1957)
- Aadmi (1958)
- Raaz (1959)
- Saheli (1960)
- Shaheed (1961)
- Chanda (1962)
- Baaji (1963)
- Khamosh raho (1964)
- Naila (1965)
- Armaan (1966)
- Chakori (1967)
- Saiqa (1968)
- Zarqa (1969)
- Anjuman (1970)
- Dosti (1971)
- Baharo Phool Barsao (1972)
- Aas (1973)
- Bahisht (1974)
- Mera Naam Hai Mohabbat (1975)
- Aaj Aur Kal (1976)
- Aaina (1977)
- Mutthi Bhar Chawal (1978)
- Khaak Aur Khoon (1979)
- Saima (1980)
- Qurbani (1981)
- Sangdil (1982)
- Dehleez (1983)
- Doorian (1984)
- Naraaz (1985)
- Hum Ek Hain (1986)
- Choron Ki Barat (1987)
- Bazar-e-Husn (1988)
- Shaani (1989)
- Insaniyat Kay Dushman (1990)
- Watan Kay Rakhwalay (1991)
- Mr. 420 (1992)
- Haathi Mere Saathi (1993)
- Sarkata Insaan (1994)
- Jungle Ka Qanoon (1995)
- Sargam (1995)
- Hawaen (1996)
- Deewane Tere Pyar Ke (1997)
- Nikah (1998)
- Jannat Ki Talash (1999)
- Tere Pyar Mein (2000)
- Khoey Ho Tum Kahan (2001)
- Yeh Dil Aap Ka Huwa (2002)