She interacts with a progressive, Bikash, effectively included in the continuous flexibility battle, and is soon infatuated with him. Circumstances lead Bikash to announce that Kalyani is his wife, and he guarantees to wed her when he can. In any case, he vanishes, placing Kalyani in a cumbersome circumstance. Compelled to emigrate to the town, she works in a clinic. Approached to take care of for a rationally shaky lady, she is stunned to find that the lady is Bikash's wife.
Disturbed as it seems to be, she recieves the news of her dad's demise. Not able to hold up under this twofold stun, and the fits of rage of Vikas' wife, Kalyani executes her and is detained forever. This is advised in flashback to the jailor, Deven, a specialist who is taken in by Kalyani's temperament and devotion to obligation. Choosing to wed her, Deven gets Kalyani's sentence drove. While in transit to Deven's home, Kalyani keeps running into an at death's door Bikash.
A splendidly shot film, there are numerous entries in the film that leave a profound engraving on the watcher - an exemplary sample being with the last clash in the middle of affection and security as Kalyani is settling on Bikash and Deven. S D Burman's music for the film recieved across the board approval. Concerning the tunes - minor saajan hain us paar, o panchhi pyare, stomach muscle ke baras bhej, mora gora rang, jogi hit se tu aayaa negligible dware - there has infrequently been a film with a more noteworthy number of paramount tunes.