Ravikant Nagaich

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Ravikant Nagaich
Born(1931-07-05)5 July 1931
Died6 January 1991(1991-01-06) (aged 59)
Occupation(s)Director
Cinematographer
Years active1955–1988
SpouseRani

Ravikant Nagaich (5 July 1931 – 6 January 1991) was an Indian film personality born at Atrauli, Aligarh- Uttar Pradesh, India. He started his filming career as a cinematographer in Telugu films, N.T. Rama Rao's Sri Seetha Rama Kalyanam in 1961 being his first film.[1] With Farz, he turned to Hindi movies and direction. This low-budget thriller inspired by James Bond was a surprise hit and helped Ravikant and the film's lead pair's (Jeetendra and Babita) career. Dharmendra acted as Agent 116 Gopal in Keemat (1973). Jeetendra reprised his role as Agent 116, Gopalkishan Pandey in Raksha (1982) and again in The Gold Medal.[2]

He went on to direct 24 more films with Duty (1986) being his last. Though he had some big-budget hits like Mere Jeevan Saathi and The Train, his low-budget fare such as Surakksha and Wardat – again in the secret agent mode like Farz, Keemat, and Raksha – are his remembered hits due to the tacky stunts and special effects and the fact that despite these drawbacks, the films did well.[3] Mithun Chakravorty too benefitted from Surakksha to move to commercial films as Jeetendra had earlier with Farz.

He also produced two films in the 1980s: Wardaat and Shapath.

Filmography

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1960s

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1970s

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1980s

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  • Morchha (1980) (director, cinematographer)
  • Rajadhi Raju (1980) (cinematographer)
  • Sahhas (1981) (director)
  • Wardaat (1981) (producer and director)
  • Laparwah (1981) (director)
  • Raksha (1982) (director)
  • Saugandh (1982) (director)
  • Shapath (1984) (producer and director)
  • Tarkeeb (1984) (director)
  • The Gold Medal (1984) (director)
  • Duty (director)
  • Super Boy 3D (1988) (Kannada) (director)

References

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  1. ^ "Creating the magic with Lenses and practical effects". Hans India. 21 May 2017. Retrieved 16 September 2024.
  2. ^ "Ravikant Nagaich". Cinemaazi. Retrieved 16 September 2024.
  3. ^ Naresh Kumar, K. (9 July 2017). "The matinee week". Hans India. Retrieved 16 September 2024.
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