

A villain steals your sister, she falls for him, and YOU'RE the bad guy now?
The evil Chand (Motilal) and his rich father Mangaldas (Date) persecute the nice Sunder (Ishwarlal): he kidnaps Sunder's sister Kokila (Khursheed) and frames him for theft. Sunder is jailed. The abducted Kokila succumbs to the villain's charms and her love reforms him. When released, Sunder, unaware of the fact that his enemy has reformed, seeks revenge on the very day that Chand and Kokila are to marry.
Acting
Motilal's villain-to-reformed-lover transformation.
Direction
Kardar's staging of the wedding-day revenge climax.
Production
1940s studio-era sets and costume melodrama.

Director
Abdul Rashid Kardar
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Holi belongs to Bombay Talkies' late pre-independence output, when studios grappled with modernizing Indian melodrama while maintaining 'traditional' moral frameworks—note how the 'reformed villain' trope lets audiences have transgression and punishment simultaneously.
Khursheed's Kokila was one of her final major roles before Partition disrupted the Bombay film industry; she later migrated to Pakistan and her career never recovered the same visibility, making this a ghost of what 1940s stardom could have been.