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"'''Phir Milenge Chalte Chalte'''" is a song from the 2008 Indian film '']'' rendered by ]. In the movie itself, it appears as a dream ] during another movie. The song is pictured on ] and in chronological order, ], ], ], ], and ]. The five parts of the song correlate and pay homage to fifty years of ] and some of the biggest actors over the time span. The lyrics themselves are mostly composed of song or film titles from each actor portrayed. The chorus itself has an allusion to a ] movie '']'' with the lyric "हुम हैं राही प्यार कि" which is also a famous song in ''Nau Do Ghyarah''.<ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
==1950s== | |||
] is the first actor to be portrayed by Shah Rukh Khan, while Kajol portrays ]. The two acted in 16 films together. | |||
There are many allusions to his movies throughout this part of the song. | |||
The underlying melody is similar to that of "Awaara Houn" from the 1951 film '']''. In the video, the people on the arches are dressed similarly to Raj Kapoor's character in ''Awaara''. The second shot is of a giant ], again, reiterating the homage to ''Awaara''. Later on umbrellas appear paying tribute to '']''. | |||
The first line is "Pyar Hua, Ikrar Hua" which is the name of a famous song from ''Shree 420''. | |||
The next stanza makes reference to three more movies, '']'' (1959), '']'' (1951), ''Amar Prem'' (1948) and '']'' (1964). | |||
"माना दिल तो है अनारी, ये आवारा ही सही। अरे बोल राधा, बोल होगा संगम है नहीं।" | |||
''Anari'', ''Awaara'' and ''Sangam'' are all names of movies, while Radha Krishna was the name of Raj Kapoor's character in ''Amar Prem''. | |||
The melody changes from "Awaara Houn" to "]" from ''Shree 420'' at the line above. | |||
==1960s== | |||
The song spends two stanzas on the 1960s to pay tribute to big actors of different styles. The first is ] and the second is ]. | |||
Dev Anand is the next man to be paid homage and Bipasha Basu portrays ]. The first line of the stanza is "Dil ka Bhawan Kare Pukar" which is the name of a song from Anand's 1963 movie '']''. | |||
"]" is the next line, and is the name of a 1961 film. | |||
The third line, "Jiya ohh, Jiya Kuch Boldon" is a line from ''Jab Pyar Kisi Se Hota Hai'''s title song. | |||
The next stanza starts with the line "Tere Ghar ke Samne Banunga", an allusion to the first line of the aforementioned movie's title song. | |||
The last two lines are from the same song "Par Bhal Ke Liye" from the 1961 movie '']''. | |||
Khan portrays ] in the third part of the song. His co-star is ] who plays ]. | |||
The underlying tune is "O Haseena Zulfon Wale" from the 1966 movie '']''. The set copies that of the song in the movie, and is also the first line of this stanza. Right before the song starts though, the melody changes from "O Haseena" to "Aaja Aaja" from the same movie. The next line is "Chahe Koi Mujhe Junglee Ka Hai" from the 1961 movie '']''. The last line is from the movie '']'' (1969). | |||
==1970s== | |||
The set of the penultimate stanza is a cartoon version of '']'''s "Jai Jai Shiv Shankar". ] is the actor and ] represents ]. The opening melody and scene is similar to that of "Mere Sapno Ki Rani" from '']'', in which both Khanna and Tagore acted, hinting at the pairing. This song is later alluded to. | |||
In the first scene, Zinta is reading a book called '']'', which is also the name of a Rajesh Khanna movie. The first two lines are from "Jai Jai Shiv Shankar". | |||
The third line alludes to his 1985 film ''Zamana''. The next line repeats the name of '']'' from 1972. The last line of the first stanza is the name of a song ("Zindagi Ek Safar") from the 1971 movie '']''. The second stanza holds two more allusions to '']'' and again ''Mere Jevan Saathi'' with the lines/song titles "Kuch Toh Log Kahenge" and "O Mere Dil Ke Chain". | |||
==1980s== | |||
] is the last actor to be portrayed and Rani Mukherjee portrays ]. The first melody is "Bachna Ae Haseeno" from '']''. The song "Dard-E-Dil" from '']'' starts off the second line and the movie '']'' finishes. Second line, another blatant allusion to ''Hum Kisi Se Kum Nahin''. The last line, "Yeh vada raha, o meri chandni" has allusions to the films ''Yeh Vada Raha'' and '']''. | |||
==Notes== | |||
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Latest revision as of 02:22, 14 June 2023
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