Dillagi is a Basu Chatterjee directed movie based on a Bengali story. The movie can be termed a sweet and simple story with hardly any twist or turn. In comparison to some of his other classic movies, this one is a pale offering.

The Plot
Dillagi opens with a new lecturer arriving in a new lecturer Swarnakamal/Kamal (Dharmendra) arriving in a girls college. He is a Sanskrit teacher. On the very first day he has a funny interaction with some students. He also meets Phoolrenu/Renu (Hema Malini), the Chemistry lecturer. Kamal is a bachelor who falls in love with Renu at first sight!

But Renu is made up of a different material. A no non-sense and disciplinarian personality. First of all she doesn’t like Kamal teaching the girl students romantic dramas of Kalidas etc terming it as a bad influence. She is also the hostel warden and would expect the students to behave in a normal and controlled manner, meaning no time for entertainment and ensure full concentration on studies. The students have nicknamed her carbon and carbon dioxide because of her properties! Needless to say she has no interest in romance or respond to Kamal’s romantic overtures time and again.

The students have started calling Kamal as “jijajee.” Among the staff, Geeta (Mithu Mukherjee) admonishes Renu on her dry romantic life but Renu tells her she is happy as she is. Renu has a widowed mother and younger brother Ramesh (Asrani) in Kashipur. She will get married after her brother’s marriage.

Meanwhile Kamal’s efforts to woo Renu continue but not even the arrival of Basant ritu (season) and Holi festival will bring any change in Renu’s colorless romantic disposition! She doesn’t like his advances and would like him to leave the college at the earliest. She rejects his offer to act in the college’s silver jubilee function. Kamal selects Geeta to play the role of Shakuntala with him as Dushyant. Renu does feel a bit jealous when she sees Kamal and Geeta’s romantic duet on stage. Are these the first seeds of change?

The summer holidays arrive and Renu leaves for her hometown Kashipur. Kamal informs her he will come to visit her. His sister stays in the same town. While Renu doesn’t show much interest, she eagerly waits for his arrival.
Is this change for the better? Will Renu mellow down and will a chemistry develop between the opposite elements?

The Music
The songs are written by Yogesh and music by Rajesh Roshan. The tunes are melodious but none too memorable.

My Thoughts
The film is not boring but there is expectation of some drama which unfortunately does not happen. There is a bit of twist in the end when Renu selects another college lecturer as her prospective groom and later realises it is not Kamal. The interactions between Kamal and Renu are worth watching and indeed the 2 lead characters share great chemistry on screen.
It is fun to watch Dharmendra play such a toned down character (similar to Chupke Chupke (1975)) which is different from his regular image. He brings out the Sanskrit teacher character brilliantly frequently bursting out in Sanskrit in front of the heroine which she dislikes. Wish he had done such more such roles showing his flair for light comedy. Hema Malini complements him, (and yes, talks in a very Hema Malini special accent!).
Other cast are adequate including Mithu Mukherjee, Asrani with Shatrughan Sinha and Deven Verma in special appearances.

