The actual surname of the Ramsay family is Ramsinghani, and they are a
Hindu family hailing from
Sindh province in present-day
Pakistan. They belong to a trading caste, and in the early decades of the 20th century, the Ramsinghani family used to run electronics shops (mainly radio sets) in
Karachi and
Lahore. In 1947, due to the
Partition of India, they were forced to flee their native land. Penniless and destitute, Fatehchand U. Ramsay (F.U. Ramsay) came with his extended family, including his wife, seven sons and two daughters, to India. They were resettled in Mumbai, and Fatehchand, along with his elder sons, set up a tiny electronics shop in
Lamington Road, thanks to a dealership agreement with the same manufacturer of radio sets and other electronics goods who had been their principal in Karachi. The shop did reasonably well, but the family was large, and income was not sufficient. Then, as is now, Mumbai was the center of showbiz in India. For reasons that are not clearly understood, but perhaps lured by the lottery-like wealth which the film industry brandished, Fatehchand joined a group of other Sindhi refugee businessmen to produce the film
Shaheed-e-Azam Bhagat Singh (1954). It was a dismal flop, despite featuring a rendition of
Sarfaroshi ki tamanna in
Mohammad Rafi's voice. A long hiatus followed, but the lure of the movies was great, and Fatehchand later produced the films
Rustam Sohrab (1963) and
Ek Nanhi Munni Ladki Thi (1970). These films flopped, and the Ramsays were reeling under huge debts when inspiration struck. In a scene in
Ek Nanhi Munni Ladki Thi, Prithviraj Kapoor wears a devil's mask to carry out a robbery and terrifies Mumtaz. The film didn't work, but it was noticed that the “monster” sequence was popular with the audience. This encouraged the Ramsays to experiment with
Do Gaz Zameen Ke Neeche (1972), based on a story narrated by Fatehchand's daughter Asha to her father. The film was advertised in a half-hour, late-night show on radio, which helped it get the “Houseful” board up when it was released. Its success sparked a trend of shoe-string budget movies that were wrapped up in a month with a crew of 15. The Ramsay Brothers have made more than 30 horror films in India, which epitomes the lower depths of 1980s Bollywood sleaze and gore, but which have secured their place in Hindi cinema's hall of fame as the pioneers of horror. They are producers, directors and editors for many famous Hindi horror movies such as
Guest House,
Veerana,
Purana Mandir,
Purani Haveli,
Darwaza and
Bandh Darwaza,
Saboot and the TV series,
Zee Horror Show. Their first film,
Do Gaz Zameen Ke Neeche, proved to be a milestone for them and for Indian horror film industry. At a time when the average Hindi film took about a year and
INR 50 lakhs to complete,
Do Gaz Zameen Ke Neeche was shot in 40 days on a budget of Rs 3.5 lakhs. All the seven Ramsay brothers boarded buses with small-time actors, a sparse film crew, their wives and parents and drove to a government guesthouse in
Mahabaleshwar that cost Rs 12 a room – they took eight rooms. They didn't spend on sets because they shot on location. They didn't spend on costumes because these were picked out of actors’ wardrobes. The cameras were all borrowed. All the departments for making the film were taken care of by the seven brothers. The film ran to full houses in the first week after its release. It made Rs. 45 lakhs at the Indian box office. Their 1980s horror films are generally a combination of sex and supernatural entities. Their production
Mahakaal in 1993 was also successful and it was a mixture of horror, romance and comedy. ==Filmography==