In Raj Khosla biography, a portrait of a director as a ‘gloriously flawed human being’

Raj Khosla was born in 1925, the same year as his mentor Guru Dutt. Khosla went on to become a well-regarded Hindi cinema director, making his debut with a Guru Dutt production – the crime thriller C.I.D. in 1956. Khosla then moved smoothly into other genres.
Ghost stories, melodramas, dacoit dramas – Khosla rolled them out mostly with panache until 1989, two years before he died at 66. “No other filmmaker has, arguably, made so many iconic and path-breaking films,” says the introduction to Raj Khosla, a new book about the filmmaker. “ It is as if they are all from different filmographies. How on earth can the same director have made a C.I.D. and a Do Raaste? The same guy, without breaking a sweat, created Main Tulsi Tere Aangan Ki and Dostana within a span of two years.”
Written by Amborish Roychoudhury along with Khosla’s daughters Anita Khosla and Uma Khosla Kapur, Raj Khosla is a well-researched and engrossing chronicle. Khosla’s films attested to his technical feats – especially in the shooting of songs – as well as his troubled personal life, the biography suggests.
The book will be released on May 31, which is Khosla’s birth centenary. To mark the occasion, three of his best-known films will be screened: Bombai Ka Babu, Woh Kaun Thi? and Mera Gaon Mera Desh. The event at Mumbai’s Regal...
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