Ram, your Ganga is tainted) is a 1985 Indian Hindi-language romantic drama film co-written and directed by Raj Kapoor.
Even though, it received a U (Universal) age rating from the Indian Film Certification Board, which was later amended to U/A.
Naren sees Ganga Taking Bath in a white saree under the waterfall and she also helped him to collect the holy water .
They are happily married but suddenly Naren has to return to Calcutta as he wanted to convince his parents about Ganga.
Bhagwat Choudhary, a rich politician, buys Ganga and brings her to his "bagan bari" (house near a garden) as a personal concubine.
According to Padmini Kolhapure, she was the initial choice for the female lead role but declined because the script had a kissing scene.
[5] According to Philip Lutgendorf, the movie is an allegory that "synthesizes classical and mythic narrative, soft-core political and social commentary (here condemning the corruption of politicians and capitalists and championing the nascent environmental initiatives of Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi).
The narrative recapitulates the Abhijñānaśākuntalam story that first appeared in the epic Mahabharata and then was reworked, some six hundred years later, by the poet Kalidasa.
This song sequence is the climax of the plot where the bride-to-be is face-to-face with the other "saut", the culturally "polluted" dancer who has made that journey from the pure source of the Himalayas to the ever-flowing and ever-absorbing Ganges with all of the human impurities.
It also differentiates between the love of Radha and Meera and reconnects the movie back to the Krishna Leelas.
[1] The film also caused a stir because of two scenes: one in which Mandakini bathes under a waterfall wearing only a flimsy white saree through which her breasts are partially visible and another in which she is shown breast-feeding a child.
Some critics claimed that the scenes were vulgar and exploitative, and were used to get around the Censor Board's stringent rules against nudity.