1- Gino Washington – Come Monkey With Me 2 – Pixies – Monkey Gone to Heaven 3 – Rufus Thomas – Can Your Monkey Do the Dog 4 – Boss Hog – Monkey 5 – Beastie Boys – Brass Monkey 6 – Red Monkey – Red Monkey 7 – Need New Body – Land Hobo Monkey Dancer 8 – Sonny Day And The Rare Breed – Tarzan 9 – The Monkees – Theme From The Monkees 10 – hammerhead – monkey mountain 11 – The Jesus Lizard – Monkey Trick 12 – The Pygmies – Dont Monkey With Tarzan 13 – Major Force – Here Comes the Funky Monkey
The Great Gambler is a 1979 Bollywood film directed by Shakti Samanta and starring Amitabh Bachchan in a dual role, Zeenat Aman, Neetu Singh, Prem Chopra, Madan Puri, Iftekhar, Utpal Dutt and Helen.
Sangam is a 1964 Indian Hindi movie produced by R.K. Films and directed by Raj Kapoor. The music was composed by Shankar Jaikishan and lyrics by Hasrat Jaipuri. Sangam was Raj Kapoor’s first color film, the film was distinguished by its technicolor and epic length (even by Bollywood standards). The film became a smash hit in India and is considered a classic today. One of the features of the film that became widely used later on in Bollywood are the foreign locales (Venice, Paris, Switzerland) for the honeymoon sequence. They started the trend of Indian films of shooting songs abroad (primarily Switzerland), in “exotic” landscapes. [wikipedia]
Mughal-e-Azam (Urdu: مغلِ اعظم, Hindi: मुग़ल-ए आज़म) is an Indian epic film, remniscient of the older style of Indian cinema. It was produced and directed by K. Asif and released in 1960. It took nine years to finish and was the most lavish production for its time.
The film broke box office records in India when released and held the record for the highest grossing film ever until the 1975 film Sholay broke its record.
Indiatimes Movies ranks the movie amongst the Top 25 Must See Bollywood Films. Its most famous dance sequence takes place in the Sheesh Mahal (Palace of Mirrors) of the Lahore Fort, where a defiant slave-girl (played by Madhubala) dances for the Mughal Emperor and his court, singing Pyar Kiya to Darna Kya, “I have loved, so what is there to fear?” This song was one of three sequences shot on Eastman Kodak color film, while the rest of the movie was in black and white. The singing is, of course, playback singing by Lata Mangeshkar and lip-synched by Madhubala.
In 2004, a colorized version of the movie was released theatrically for the first time. The movie was again a success. [wikipedia]