Anthuleni Katha
Anthuleni Katha | |
---|---|
Directed by | K. Balachander |
Written by | K. Balachander M. S. Perumallu Acharya Atreya |
Produced by | Rama Arannangal |
Starring | Jaya Prada Rajinikanth Phataphat Jayalaxmi Sripriya |
Cinematography | B. S. Lokanath |
Music by | M. S. Viswanathan |
Release date | 27 February 1976 |
Running time | 2 hours, 30 minutes |
Language | Telugu |
Anthuleni Katha (transl. Never Ending Story) is a 1976 Telugu language film directed by K. Balachander, starring Jaya Prada in the lead role, with Rajinikanth, Sripriya and Phataphat Jayalaxmi in supporting roles. Kamal Haasan played a cameo. The film is a remake of the 1974 Tamil film Aval Oru Thodar Kathai, which was also directed by Balachander. This is Jaya Prada's first starring role, reprising the role played by Sujatha in the original and is considered to be one of her best films. This was also Rajinikanth's first major role. This film was shot in black-and-white.[1]
Plot
Saritha (Jaya Prada) is a working woman in a poor family. She works hard to support her widowed sister, unmarried sister, her blind younger brother, her mother, her drunkard brother Murthy (Rajinikanth) and his family. Her father abandons the family and goes on a pilgrimage. Her brother not only does not take responsibilities, but also creates additional problems for her.
She has a longtime boyfriend, who wants to marry her, but she doesn't because of her commitment to her family. His eyes now wander to Saritha's widowed younger sister (Sripriya), who reciprocates his feelings. Saritha, after reading her boyfriend's love letter to her sister, arranges for them to get married, thus giving up her chance of having a life with him. She eventually accepts a marriage proposal of her boss (Kamal Haasan), when she realizes that her brother has become responsible enough to take care of her family. She also helps her distressed friend, played by Phataphat Jayalaksmi to settle in life. She decides to resign from hard work, but could not as the result of the turning point in a typical Balachandar style climax.
Cast
- Jaya Prada as Saritha
- Rajinikanth as Murthy
- Phataphat Jayalaxmi as Chandra
- Sripriya as Bharathi
- G. V. Narayana Rao as Vikatakavi Gopal
- Prasad Babu as Thilak
- Pradeep Shakthi
- Kamal Haasan as Arun Ghosh (Cameo)
Crew
- Camera assistant: R. Raghunatha Reddy
- Assistant directors: Ananthu, S.A. John
- Art: A. Ramaswamy
- Associate director: Eranki Sarma
- Story: M. S. Perumallu
- Music: M. S. Vishwanathan
- Assistant music director: Joseph Krishnamurthy
- Dialogues and lyrics: Acharya Atreya
- Camera: Lokanathan
- Producer: Rama Aranangal
- Story, screenplay, direction: K. Balachander
Soundtrack
All songs are penned by Athreya and the muscles and is composed by M. S. Viswanathan.
- "Are Emiti Lokam", cast by Phaphat Jayalakshmi and voice by L. R. Eswari
- "Tali Kattu Subhavela", cast by Narayana Rao and voice by S. P. Balasubrahmanyam
- "Kallalo Unnadedo Kannulake Telusu", cast by Jaya Prada and voice by S. Janaki
- "Ugutundu Nee Inta Uyyala", cast by Jayaprada and voice by P. Susheela
- "Devude Icchadu Vidhi Okkati", cast by Rajinikanth and voice by Yesudas.
Awards
- Nandi Award for Best Actress – Jaya Prada
- Nandi Award for Best Feature Film – Third prize (Bronze)
- Special Award – Jaya Prada
- Best Actress – Jaya Prada (Nominated)
Original and remakes
The film is a remake of Tamil super hit film Aval Oru Thodar Kathai (1974), also directed by K. Balachander. It was also shot on black & white film. Jaya Prada played the role of Sujata , Rajinikanth did the role of Jai Ganesh, Kamal Haasan played the role of Narayana Rao. The same tunes were used in both languages. Sripriya, Phataphat Jayalaxmi and the rest of the cast are the same in both versions. The Tamil film was later was dubbed into Malayalam as Aval Oru Thudarkatha (1975).
In 1977, Mala Sinha starred in the Bengali remake titled Kabita, playing Jaya Prada. Kamal Haasan made his Bengali film debut with this film by acting in the same role that he played in the Tamil original film. Bharat Shamsher directed the black-and-white film.
The film was remade in Hindi as Jeevan Dhaara (1982) by director Tatineni Rama Rao. Rekha did the role of Jaya Prada. Raj Babbar did the role of Rajinikanth. Rakesh Roshan did the role of Kamal Haasan, Amol Palekar did the role of Narayana Rao. Karan Razdan did the conductor role, Simple Kapadia (sister of Dimple Kapadia) did Phataphat Jayalaxmi's role. The film was shot in color. The film was a decent hit.[2]
In 1983, Balachander produced the Kannada remake titled Benkiyalli Aralida Hoovu, directed by Chandulal Jain and starring Suhasini, whose real-life uncle Kamal Haasan played the guest role of a bus conductor in this remake.[3] The film was shot in color.
Trivia
- In 2001, Jaya Prada herself acknowledged the impact the film had in her personal life, as she very much related to the lead character.[4]
References
- ^ "Anthuleni Katha Telugu Film". youtube. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
- ^ "Articles: Movie Retrospect: Anthleni Katha". Telugu Cinema. 9 July 2007. Archived from the original on 9 July 2007.
- ^ rediff.com: Kamal Haasan's many talents
- ^ "I want to experience motherhood: Jayaprada". ScreenIndia. Archived from the original on 30 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-03.
External links
- Use dmy dates from June 2013
- Indian films
- 1976 films
- Telugu-language films
- Films directed by K. Balachander
- Indian black-and-white films
- Telugu remakes of Tamil films
- Films about women in India
- Telugu films scored by M. S. Viswanathan
- Indian feminist films
- Indian drama films
- 1976 drama films
- Films about poverty in India
- Unemployment in fiction
- Films about widowhood in India
- Films with screenplays by K. Balachander
- Films shot in Visakhapatnam