Kelinlar qoʻzgʻoloni (film) explained

Kelinlar qoʻzgʻoloni
Director:Melis Abzalov
Music:Mirhalil Mahmudov
Studio:Uzbekfilm
Runtime:70 minutes
Country:Uzbek SSR, USSR
Language:Uzbek, Russian

Kelinlar qoʻzgʻoloni (Uzbek: Келинлар қўзғолони / Kelinlar qoʻzgʻoloni; Russian: Бунт невесток|italic=yes) is a 1984 Uzbek comedy film based on an eponymous play by the Uzbek writer Said Ahmad and directed by Melis Abzalov.[1] [2] Kelinlar qoʻzgvoloni is one of the most critically acclaimed Uzbek films of the Soviet period.[3] Like Melis Abzalov's previous film Suyunchi, Kelinlar qoʻzgʻoloni tells the story of an authoritative grandmother.

Plot

Farmon bibi (played by Tursunoy Jaʼfarova) is a wise and loving, but strict mother who lives with the families of her seven sons in one house. Nigora, the wife of her youngest son, rebels against Farmon Bibi while the other wives sympathize with her. In one scene, the mother and her daughters-in-law go to the bazaar. Toward the end of the film, Farmon bibi changes her attitude and gives in to the demands of her daughters-in-law.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bunt nevestok. KM. 9 March 2012. Russian.
  2. Web site: Bunt nevestok. Kino-Teatr. 9 March 2012. Russian.
  3. Web site: A Talk with the Famous Uzbek Actress Gulchehra Jamilova. BBC's Uzbek Service. 9 March 2012. Uzbek.