Kantara (film)
Kantara | |
---|---|
Directed by | Rishabh Shetty |
Written by | Rishabh Shetty |
Produced by | Vijay Kiragandur Chaluve Gowda |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Aravind Kashyap |
Edited by |
|
Music by | B. Ajaneesh Loknath |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Hombale Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 148 minutes[2] |
Country | India |
Language | Kannada |
Budget | ₹16 crore[3] |
Box office | est. ₹450 crore[a] |
Kantara (transl. Mystical Forest) is a 2022 Indian Kannada-language action thriller film[20][21] written and directed by Rishab Shetty, and produced by Vijay Kiragandur,[22] under Hombale Films. The film stars Rishab Shetty in a dual role as a Kambala champion who is at loggerheads with an upright forest officer named Murali (played by Kishore).
Set and filmed in Keradi in coastal Karnataka, principal photography began in August 2021.[23] The cinematography was handled by Arvind S. Kashyap, with B. Ajaneesh Loknath scoring music for the film and the action sequences were choreographed by the action director Vikram More. The production design was handled by debutant, Dharani Gange Putra.
The film was released on 30 September 2022 to critical acclaim, with praise for its cast performances (particularly those of Shetty and Kishore), direction, soundtrack, and the portrayal of Bhuta Kola. It was a major commercial success and emerged as the second highest-grossing Kannada film of all time after K.G.F: Chapter 2, released the same year. It was also 2022's fourth highest-grossing film in India. A prequel called Kantara: Chapter 1 has been announced. Kantara was featured at the 54th IFFI Indian panorama section,[24] where it won the Silver Peacock - Special Jury Award.[25] During the promotion of his latest film as a producer, Rishab Shetty mentioned that the Kannada version alone attracted an audience of 1.25 crore in Karnataka.
Plot
[edit]1847: There lived a king that had a great kingdom as well as a loving wife and children, but could not find peace. He sets out on a journey to discover true happiness and comes upon a holy stone in a forest occupied by Panjurli Daiva, a deity that protects the villagers that reside in the forest. He donates a vast portion of his land to the villagers in exchange for taking the stone with him. Panjurli warns the king that his family and successors should keep their word and not reclaim the land, which will incur the wrath of Panjurli's companion, the ferocious demigod named Guliga Daiva.
1970: The King's descendant asks a Bhoota Kola performer, who is possessed by Panjurli to make the locals hand over the land to him, which the performer refuses and states that if the former goes to court for the decision of the land, then the Daiva will give his decision on the stairs of the court only. The descendant is skeptical of the performer's possession by Panjurli, to which the performer replies he would vanish if he is possessed, after which he runs into a forest and is indeed never seen again. As warned and professed by the performer, a few months later on the steps of the court, the king's successor dies mysteriously of heart attack, where he was going to argue the land case.
1990: Murali, a forest officer, is tasked with converting the villagers' land into a forest reserve. However, he is challenged by Shiva, a Kambala athlete from the Kaadubettu village and the missing performer's son. Shiva is backed by his patron and the village's landlord, Devendra Suttooru, who is the king's descendant in the present. Although Shiva has repeatedly been asked to perform the Bhoota Kola, he refuses due to the trauma of his father's disappearance. Instead, his cousin Guruva takes his place. Murali and his staff start erecting a fence along the earmarked forest reserve and Shiva falls in love with his friend Leela. He uses his connections with Devendra to appoint her as a forest guard. The villagers try to stop the fencing, but the police and forest guards (including Leela) brutally suppress them, creating a rift between Leela and Shiva even though she was following orders and could do nothing about the situation.
As the feud between Murali and Shiva intensifies, Murali decides to arrest Shiva and his friends and heads to their hideout along with Devendra's henchman Sudhakara. During the search, Murali's jeep accidentally gets crushed by the trunk of a tree, which was cut by Shiva as the latter miscalculated the position of the jeep. While Murali survives with severe injuries, Shiva and his companions go undercover to avoid arrest. A few days later, they return to the village to meet their families; Shiva makes up with Leela and tells her that he will surrender. However, they are caught by the police and forest guards the next morning. Guruva asks Devendra to bail out Shiva, but during their conversation, Devendra tries to bribe him to impersonate Panjurli in the next Bhoota Kola and make the villagers hand over the land, revealing Devendra's true intention of acquiring his land from the villagers. Guruva refuses and Devendra kills him. Learning that Murali has figured out his ulterior motive, Devendra decides to set Shiva against Murali.
Having learnt about Guruva's death, Shiva meets Devendra, who lies that Murali is Guruva's killer. Enraged, Shiva goes to kill Murali, but learns from his blacksmith friend Mahadeva that Devendra himself killed Guruva. While under the influence of drugs, Shiva is attacked by Devendra's henchmen, but manages to escape and meet the villagers, whom Murali has told about Devendra's land seizure. After Shiva reveals that Devendra killed Guruva, he and Murali set aside their grudge and unite the village. Devendra and his henchmen attack, leading to an intense battle where several of the villagers are killed. After nearly dying in the fight, Shiva hits his head against Panjurli's stone. Guliga Daiva possesses Shiva, enabling him to brutally kill Devendra and his henchmen.
A few months after the battle, Shiva performs the Bhoota Kola, and is possessed by Panjurli. He, Murali and the villagers join hands in a symbolic gesture. Later, Shiva disappears into the forest after meeting what seems to be his father's spirit. In the mid-credits scene, Shiva and Leela's son asks Sundara about his father's disappearance.
Cast
[edit]- Rishab Shetty in a dual role as
- Kaadubettu Shiva, Kantara's son and a Kambala champion, who gets possessed by Guliga Daiva and Panjurli Daiva
- Kantara, Shiva's father and a Daiva Kola performer
- Sapthami Gowda as Leela, Shiva's Love interest
- Kishore as Murali, a Deputy Range Forest Officer (D.R.F.O)
- Achyuth Kumar as Devendra Suttooru
- Pramod Shetty as Sudhakara
- Prakash Thuminad as Raampa
- Manasi Sudhir as Kamala, Shiva's mother
- Naveen D. Padil as Lawyer
- Suchan Shetty as Ravi
- Swaraj Shetty as Guruva, Shiva's cousin
- Deepak Rai Panaaje as Sundara
- Shanil Guru as Bulla
- Pradeep Shetty as Mohana
- Rakshith Ramachandra Shetty as Devendra's Henchman
- Prabhakar Kundar as Madhavacharya, Swordsmith
- Chandrakala Rao as Sheela, Sundara's Wife
- Sukanya as Ammakka, Devendra's Wife
- Sathish Acharya as Tabara, Leela's Father
- Pushparaj Bollar as Garnall Abbu
- Raghu Pandeshwar as Raghu, Forest Officer
- Mime Ramdas as Naaru
- Basuma Kodagu as Guruva's father
- Ranjan Saju as Lacchu
- Rajeev Shetty as Rajeev Bhandari
- Atish Shetty as Devendra's specially-abled son
- Radhakrishna Kumbale as a native resident
- Naveen Bondel as Demigod Interpreter
Cameo appearances
- Shine Shetty as Devendra's father
- Vinay Biddappa as the King
- Pragathi Rishab Shetty as the King's wife
Production
[edit]Development
[edit]Director Rishab Shetty cited the conflict between nature and human beings as the theme of the film,[23] while adding specifically that the strife between forest officers and the inhabitants in his hometown Keradi, Karnataka, in the 1990s, as the source of inspiration for the film. He further added, "It is a film from our land, from our roots, stories that are heard through generations, untapped and deeply rooted to our culture".[26] Shetty conceived the story in 2021 during the COVID-19 lockdown.[23] Elaborating on the title of the film, he said, "Kantara is a mysterious forest and this is a story that happens around the area... The film title has a tagline calling it a dhanta kathe or a legend. I did not want to give the film a straight or direct title. The word is not used often. While it has Sanskrit origins, it is used in Kannada too. It is used in Yakshagana too, where we call a very mysterious forest Kantara".[27]
Filming
[edit]The film had to present three timelines: 1847, 1970s and 1990s. Since many references through books were not available, the makers took the help of the tribes residing in Keradi where it was also filmed. Costume designer Pragathi Shetty stated that the makers "travelled the entire village and met the tribal community, who gave details about their dress". She added, "We had most of the junior artists roped in from Kundapura, and it was a challenge for me to convince them to wear tribal costumes. We also took reference to design the costume for the forest guard, played by Sapthami Gowda. We heard each year, the colour of the uniform would change, and everything, including the badges was customised". Filming took place in four forest locations in the area which included a set being built reflecting the 1990s. Art director Darani Gangeputra said, "A lot of natural sources were used to create the setups", further adding, "apart from this, we created a school, temple, and a tree house. We had 35 people from Bangalore and 15 people from the Keradi village, who helped us to study the culture".[28] The set involved a village, including rustic homes with cowsheds, coops for hens, courtyards, areca plantations and an authentic Kambala racetrack. Shetty learned about the intricacies of Kambala and trained for four months before performing the sequence for the film in early 2022.[29]
Music
[edit]The music of the film was composed by B. Ajaneesh Loknath. Alongside him, 30–40 musicians were brought in. Mostly involving folk music represented using Jaanapada songs using traditional instruments, the team took was assisted by Mime Ramdas. Songs usually sung by common people during crop harvest and those popular among the tribals of the area were used as a part of the album and the background score.[28] The song "Varaha Roopam" was supposedly plagiarised from the song "Navarasam" as claimed by the band Thaikkudam Bridge which released Navarasam in 2017. This song gives a nostalgic feeling.[30] When the film was released on Amazon Prime, the song was modified with a new orchestral arrangement and vocals while the lyrics remained the same.[31] After a brief legal battle, the plagiarism case was finally dismissed by the Kerala High Court on 25 October 2023 after the parties involved reached a private settlement and the original song was returned to the movie.[32]
Release
[edit]Kantara was released in theatres in Kannada on 30 September 2022 in more than 250 theatres across Karnataka, and simultaneously in the US, UK, Europe, Middle East and Australia among other places globally.[33] After the success in Kannada, the makers announced that the film will be dubbed in Telugu, Hindi, Tamil and Malayalam languages and was released on 14 October 2022 in Hindi and 15 October 2022 in Telugu and Tamil.[34][35] Though the Hindi version was announced to be released in over 800 screens across the country,[36] later it was reported to be released in 2500 screens in the Hindi version.[37] Following a social media campaign based on the film's connection to Tulu culture,[38] a Tulu language dub of the film was announced, with a release date of 25 November 2022 outside of India and 2 December in India.[31][39] It became the first Kannada movie to be released in Vietnam.[40]
Home media
[edit]The satellite rights of the film were acquired by Star India Network for the Kannada, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Tulu languages. The rights of the Hindi version were acquired by Sony Max. The digital rights of the film were secured by Amazon Prime Video, and was digitally streamed from 24 November 2022 in Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Tamil languages.[41][42] The Hindi version was streamed on Netflix from 9 December 2022, and was also announced by the platform that an English dubbed version of the film will be available for streaming in January 2023.[43]
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]The first day net collection was estimated to be 3.5–4.25 crore with a gross of around ₹6 crore.[44] The first weekend gross collection was reported to be ₹22.3 crore (with net collection of around 19 crore to ₹23 crore).[45] The estimated first week gross earning was reported to be around ₹38–50 crore.[46] The footfalls across Karnataka was estimated to be more than 19 lakh in the first week of its release.[47] The film reportedly collected ₹4.3 crores on its 11th day, which was the highest for a Kannada film on second Monday.[48] The footfalls of the film was estimated to be around 40 lakhs by the time it grossed ₹60 crore.[49] On its second Tuesday, the film was reported to have higher domestic net collections than both Ponniyin Selvan: I and Godfather.[50] Kantara also earned more than these films in Karnataka.[51] The film was reported to have collected over ₹70 crore in Karnataka alone by the end of the second week.[52]
The film crossed the ₹100 crore mark within 15–17 days.[53] The film collected ₹36.5 crore in its third weekend.[54] The film crossed the ₹150 crore mark in 18 days.[55] The movie grossed ₹170 crore including ₹150 crore in India[56] and 111 crores in Karnataka.[57] The movie grossed ₹170.05 to ₹175 crores at the end of three weeks.[58] The worldwide gross was reported to be ₹188 crores with ₹170 in India alone and ₹32 crores in the fourth weekend.[59] The film collected US$1 million in North America and 200K AUD in Australia, thereby becoming the first Kannada film to achieve those landmarks.[60] With a footfall of ₹77 lakhs in less than 4 weeks, it became the most viewed film in Karnataka among all the films produced by Hombale Films.[61] The film crossed the ₹200 crore mark in 25 days with a gross collection of ₹211.5 crore, including ₹196.95 crore from India alone.[62] The film grossed ₹126 crores in Karnataka.[63]
The film crossed the ₹250 crore mark in less than a month of its release.[64] The domestic net collections of all the versions crossed ₹200 crore in 30 days.[65] The film grossed ₹1.06 crore at the UK box office.[66] The movie grossed ₹280 crore in 30 days.[67] The footfalls crossed 80 lakhs in 32 days in Karnataka alone.[68] The movie crossed the 300 crore gross collection milestone in 33 days.[69] The film grossed ₹65 crore in its fifth week.[70] The movie grossed ₹325 crore worldwide in 36 days.[71] Its sixth weekend collection of ₹25.5 crores was reported to be the highest sixth weekend collection as well as the highest sixth week collection for an Indian movie beating the record of Baahubali 2: The Conclusion which had collected ₹22.20 crores in its sixth week.[72] The movie was reported to have grossed around ₹350 to ₹355 crores in 41 days with a footfall of more than 1 crore in Karnataka alone.[73] The movie was reported to have grossed ₹360 crores in 44 days.[74] The collections of the non-Hindi version was reported to be ₹280 crores at the end of six weeks.[75] While the collections in Karnataka reached ₹180 crore, the domestic gross collections reached ₹275 crores.[76] The movie was reported to have collected around ₹370 to ₹377 crores at the end of 50-day theatrical run.[77] Its seventh week collection of ₹24 crores was the highest for an Indian movie surpassing ₹11 crores collected by Baahubali 2: The Conclusion in its seventh week.[78] The worldwide gross collections crossed the 400 crore mark in 53 days.[79][80] The domestic collections of the movie was reported to be the third highest of the year 2022.[81] The movie completed 50-day theatrical run in Australia, United Kingdom, Canada, United Arab Emirates and United States.[82] India's largest Hindi language newspaper Dainik Bhaskar reported the collections to be ₹446 crores at the end of 68 days.[83] The movie crossed the ₹450 crores mark in 74 days.[84][85][86][14][87][13][15][88] Udayavani reported the collections to have breached the ₹500 crore mark.[89]
Telugu version
[edit]The Telugu version grossed ₹5 crore on its first day.[90] The Telugu version grossed ₹21.15 crore in its first week.[91] The Telugu version grossed ₹28 crore in 10 days.[92] The Telugu version also grossed ₹9 crore in 4 days (from 21 to 24 October) outperforming other Diwali releases.[93][94] The movie collected ₹50.30 crore in 25 days run from the Telugu states.[95] The Telugu version grossed ₹60 crore in 39 days with a net collection of ₹42 crore during the same period.[96]
Hindi version
[edit]The first-day net collection of the Hindi version was reported to be around ₹1.27–1.5 crore.[97] The first-weekend collection of the Hindi version was ₹8 crore.[98] The movie earned nett collections of ₹15 crore in the Hindi version at the end of its first week run.[99] The net collections of the Hindi version was ₹29.1 crore in 13 days, crossing the lifetime domestic net collections of the Hindi version of Ponniyin Selvan: I.[100] The nett collections of the Hindi version was ₹31.7 crore at the end of two weeks.[101] The nett collections of the Hindi version at the end of 3 weeks was ₹51.50 crore.[102] The movie collected ₹2.10 crore on its fourth Friday which was higher than the three new Hindi releases of that week.[103] Despite the film running for three weeks, it saw its highest ever box office number (₹4.5 crore) on its fourth sunday, taking the total nett collections to ₹62.40 crore at the end of 24 days.[104] At the end of four weeks, it collected ₹69.75 crore nett.[105] At the end of five weeks, it collected ₹79.25 crore nett.[106] The Hindi version grossed ₹96 crore in 39 days with a nett collections of ₹82 crore.[96] Its gross of ₹12.7 crore in the eighth week was the highest grossing eighth week collection for a Hindi movie breaking the 21-year-old record of Gadar: Ek Prem Katha (2001) which had grossed ₹7 crore in its eighth week.[107] It earned 80 times its first day net collections – the highest for a dubbed movie.[108]
Critical reception
[edit]Muralidhara Khajane of The Hindu wrote "Rishab Shetty succeeds in meticulously bringing a tale of myths, legends and superstition, and that too in his native dialect". He commended the acting performances of Shetty and Kishore, and further wrote, "The locations are colourful and vivid, and the background music by B. Ajaneesh Loknath represents the ethos of the land. Cinematographer Arvind S Kashyap's meditative shots showcase the native culture and capture the rustic locales in their grandeur. The filming of the Kambala sequences... is testimony to his brilliant takes".[109] A. Sharadhaa of The New Indian Express called the film "a compelling revenge-action drama with a neat blend of crime and divinity". Sridevi S. of The Times of India called the film "a visual grandeur" and rated the film 4/5, commending the acting performances while writing that the "biggest take away is the pre-climax and climax, which is conceived and performed to perfection".[110]
The reviewer for The News Minute stated that the film was presented by Shetty "in his self-referential tale in the garb of a masala film that is not only entertaining but also uncannily original". They wrote, "Rishab Shetty, the actor, is particularly effective in the film and that's because he is fully aware of the pitch and tone of his performance. He looks the right shape and size for a Kambala sportsman and exudes a fine balance of naivety and arrogance when it comes to the 'manly' side of his personality". However, they felt that the "writing falters a bit" in that "repetitive scenes dished out about... ideological differences" of the central characters.[111] Priyanka Sundar of Firstpost rated the film 3.5/5 and praised the performance of Shetty while calling the music "also a star of the film that not only supports the narrative but elevates it as well". She criticized the portrayal of Leela, the love interest of the lead character as having "not really one-note" and that she was used as "an attractive lamppost".[112]
Vivek M. V of Deccan Herald's rated the film 3.5/5 and felt the same in relation to Leela's character, while adding that the plotline meant Kishore's performance was "forced to remain one-note". However, he felt the music and cinematography make it "a technical marvel". He further wrote, "Having shared the screen with gifted actors, it has taken a career-best effort from Rishab to emerge the best".[113]
Impact
[edit]The Government of Karnataka, in response to the movie, has initiated a monthly allowance for Buta Kola performers who are above the age of 60.[114]
Prequel
[edit]It was said that in Mangalore, Shetty had sought the permission of the god Panjurli to film a prequel.[115] The prequel titled Kantara: Chapter 1 will begin filming in November 2023 and is scheduled to release in late 2024. The first look was released on 27 November 2023.[116]
Controversies
[edit]The song "Varaha Roopam" was mired in controversy when the popular Kerala band Thaikkudam Bridge accused the makers of plagiarism. They claimed "Varaha Roopam" bore similarities to their song Navarasam and filed a lawsuit. The Kozhikode District Sessions Court imposed an interim injunction, temporarily barring the use of "Varaha Roopam" on streaming platforms without Thaikkudam Bridge's permission.[30] The criminal proceedings were later quashed by the Kerala High Court pursuant to a settlement reached between the parties.[117]
Notes
[edit]- ^ India Today,[4] The Times of India,[5] Firstpost,[6] International Business Times,[7] The Financial Express,[8] Times Now,[9] ABP News,[10] Asianet,[11] DNA[12] – reported the collections to be ₹400 crore, other sources – Hindustan Times,[13] WION,[14] Outlook,[15] The New Indian Express,[16] Dainik Bhaskar,[17] Udayavani [18] and PTC Punjabi [19] have reported it to be around ₹450 crore.
References
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- ^ "Kantara". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 22 September 2023.
- ^ "'Kantara': How a Kannada film took on the mighty". Deccan Herald. 7 October 2022. Archived from the original on 8 October 2022. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
- ^ "Rishab Shetty's Kantara remains unstoppable, grosses Rs 450 crore worldwide". India Today. 22 November 2022. Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
- ^ "'Kantara's worldwide collection crosses the monumental mark of Rs 450 crores! – Times of India". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
- ^ "Rishab Shetty's Kantara is unbeatable: Worldwide collection at the box office crosses the monumental mark of 450 Crores". Firstpost. 22 November 2022. Archived from the original on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
- ^ S, Ambili (22 November 2022). "Kantara crosses Rs 450 crore in box office collection; all set for OTT debut this week [details]". ibtimes.co.in. Archived from the original on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
- ^ "Kantara worldwide box office collection: Rishab Shetty film crosses Rs 400 crore mark | The Financial Express". The Financial Express. 22 November 2022. Archived from the original on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
- ^ "Kantara box office collection: Rishab Shetty film continues to roar, mints Rs 450 crore worldwide". TimesNow. 22 November 2022. Archived from the original on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
- ^ Bureau, ABP News (22 November 2022). "Rishab Shetty's Kantara Is Unstoppable, Crosses Rs 450 Crore Worldwide". news.abplive.com. Archived from the original on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
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- ^ "Kantara box office collection: Rishab Shetty starrer is sixth Indian film in 2022 to earn over Rs 400 crore worldwide". DNA India. Archived from the original on 4 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
- ^ a b Kumar, Nelki Naresh. "Rishab Shetty Remuneration for Kantara: కాంతార సినిమాకు రిషబ్శెట్టి తీసుకున్న రెమ్యునరేషన్ ఎంతో తెలుసా". Hindustantimes Telugu. Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
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- ^ "Hrithik Roshan reviews 'Kantara' says, climax gave him goosebumps". 12 December 2022. Archived from the original on 12 February 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
- ^ "Netflix to stream Kannada hit Kantara in Hindi". Livemint. 7 December 2022. Archived from the original on 7 December 2022. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
Kantara is an action thriller written and directed by Rishab Shetty, and produced by Vijay Kiragandur, under Hombale Films, best known for the KGF franchise.
- ^ "'Well made': FM Sitharaman watches Kantara, congratulates director Rishab Shetty". Business Today. 2 November 2022. Archived from the original on 2 November 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday watched the Kannada action thriller 'Kantara' at Inox Cinemas in Bengaluru, Karnataka.
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- ^ Suresh, Sunayana (6 August 2021). "Rishab Shetty's Kantara is about the human versus nature conflict". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 2 October 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
- ^ a b Sharadhaa, A. (27 September 2022). "The pillars of 'Kantara'". The New Indian Express. Archived from the original on 2 October 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
- ^ Daithota, Madhu (12 February 2022). "How Rishabh Shetty raced buffaloes through slush to get the Kambala sequence right". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 2 October 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
- ^ a b "Kerala-based music band Thaikkundam Bridge accuses Kantara film team of plagiarism". The Times of India. 24 October 2022. Archived from the original on 24 October 2022. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
- ^ a b Nachiyar, Nalme (24 November 2022). "Kantara on Prime: Rishab Shetty's blockbuster gets digital premiere with new version of 'Varaha Roopam' song". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Archived from the original on 25 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
- ^ "'Varaharoopam' Song: Dispute is Private in Nature & Settlement Can be Accepted- Kerala HC Quashes Copyright Case Against 'Kantara' Movie". 30 October 2023.
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{{cite web}}
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External links
[edit]- 2022 films
- 2020s Kannada-language films
- Indian action drama films
- 2022 action drama films
- Indian avant-garde and experimental films
- Films directed by Rishab Shetty
- Films set in Karnataka
- Films shot in Karnataka
- AA Films films
- Films set in 1847
- Films set in 1970
- Films set in 1990
- Films about the caste system in India
- Films about Hinduism
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- Indigenous films
- Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment National Film Award winners
- Films featuring a Best Actor National Award-winning performance