Miss Frontier Mail Explained

Miss Frontier Mail
Director:Homi Wadia
Producer:Wadia Movietone
Screenplay:Homi Wadia
Story:JBH Wadia
Starring:Fearless Nadia
John Cawas
Sardar Mansoor
Music:Master Mohammed
Cinematography:Vasant B. Jagtap
Studio:Wadia Movietone
Distributor:Wadia Movietone
Runtime:155 minutes
Country:India
Language:Hindi

Miss Frontier Mail is a 1936 Indian action crime thriller film directed by Homi Wadia and produced by Wadia Movietone.[1] The film starred Fearless Nadia, billed as the "Indian Pearl White" in the film. Her co-stars were Sardar Mansur, John Cawas billed as "Eddie Polo", Atish Sayani and Gulab.[2] It was the third in the Diamond Thriller series. Like each film in the series, this too was a success.[3] Nadia plays Savita whose father is the station master framed for a murder committed by a masked man. The masked man is intent on disrupting the railway service of the town to make way for an airline service. The highlights are Nadia's stunts on top of a speeding train fighting a gang of rail-road bandits.

Plot

The deputy station master (Ishwarlal) at a railway station is murdered by a man in a mask. In the scuffle, his mask comes off, and one of his hench-men sees his face. They escape from there just before the station master Maganlal (Master Mohammed) arrives, who handles the knife which has been used to kill the deputy. The police appear and arrest him for the murder. His daughter Savita (Nadia) and son Jayant (Jaidev) get the news by a wire sent by their uncle, Shyamlal (Sayani Atish). Nadia, a.k.a. Frontier Mail, is fond of hunting, playing tennis and racing fast cars, while Jayant is an amateur film maker. Soon Jayant and his friend (Munchi Thoothi) get involved in the villain's antics as they manage to film him and his gang readying to blow up a bridge. The masked man dynamites the bridge as he's been contracted to do so by a man who wants to promote his airline business. There is also a gangster's moll Gulab (Gulshan), who is romantically linked first with Shyamlal and then with Kishore (John Cawas). Gulab later reforms and sides with Nadia and her brother in hunting down the masked man. Sunder (Sardar Mansur), is the son of the head of the railway's authority. He becomes infatuated with Savita and rushes to help her. They are involved in several chases culminating in a fight scene on top of a speeding train, where Savita fist-fights the gang alongside Sundar. She lifts some of the men and hurles them down on the tracks. It's finally revealed that the masked man who calls himself Signal X is none other than Savita's uncle Shyamlal.

Cast

Savita, a.k.a. Miss Frontier Mail

Kishore

Production

The film was originally titled Frontier Mail. JBH Wadia had to face the wrath of the B.B. and C.I Railway as the posters of the film showed a crashing train. Later after a country-wide poll, it was decided to call the film Miss Frontier Mail.[4] The film experimented with technology in the form of car chases, dynamites, the intercom system and the film camera.[5] This allowed the film its modernistic treatment along western lines with car chases, planes and trains.[6] The film had the ubiquitous horse, Punjab Ka Beta (Son of Punjab), and the Austin credited as "Rolls Royce Ki Beti" (daughter of Rolls Royce). Accidents while filming were kept in the final cut.[6]

Reception

According to The Bombay Chronicle 29 July 1936, it was running to full houses even in its tenth week. It also called it the Wadia brothers "Speediest Diamond Thriller". According to the Hindustan Times, on 19 June 1936, there were unruly scenes in Delhi with the police called in to manage the crowd.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Crow. Jonathan. Miss Frontier Mail. https://web.archive.org/web/20140602201305/http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/253903/Miss-Frontier-Mail/overview. dead. 2 June 2014. Movies & TV Dept.. The New York Times. 2014. 2 June 2014.
  2. Web site: Miss Frontier Mail 1936. 2 June 2014.
  3. Book: Prakash. Gyan. Mumbai Fables. 10 October 2010. Princeton University Press. 9780691142845. 109.
  4. Web site: Thomas. Rosie. TheFilm That Mistook its Star for a Train. WestminsterResearch. Westminster University. 2 June 2014.
  5. Book: Majumdar. Neepa. Wanted Cultured Ladies Only!: Female Stardom and Cinema in India, 1930s-1950s.. 16 October 2009. University of Illinois Press. 9780252034329. 113.
  6. Book: Kaur, Sinha. Bollyworld: Popular Indian Cinema Through a Transnational Lens. 14 June 2005. 8132103440. 55. SAGE Publications India . 2 June 2014.