Ahir Bhairav (film)
Ahir Bhairav (Assamese: অহিৰ ভৈৰৱ, English: Songs of the Dawn) is a 2007 Indian Assamese language drama film directed by Siva Prasad Thakur and produced by Dr Ronen Sarma, under the banner of Rondeep Productions (UK) Ltd. This is the first ever Assamese movie crossing the budget of Rs 1 crore and entirely shot in the UK.[1] It has been chosen by the British Film Institute, London, to be preserved in its archive.[2]
Ahir Bhairav (Songs of the Dawn) | |
---|---|
Film poster of Ahir Bhairav | |
Directed by | Siva Prasad Thakur |
Produced by | Dr Ranen Sarma |
Written by | Pankaj Thakur |
Starring | Kapil Bora Zerifa Wahid Purabi Sarma Bidyut Chakravarty Mridula Barua |
Music by | Hemanta Goswami Rajeswar Bordoloi (Bulu) |
Cinematography | Nirmal Deka (Tito) |
Edited by | Kaju |
Production company | Rondeep Productions (UK) Ltd |
Release date | 6 April 2007 |
Running time | 104 minutes |
Country | India UK |
Language | Assamese |
Budget | ₹ 1 crore |
Synopsis
The story revolves around a PIO Indian woman suffering from schizophrenia and its impact on those close to her.[3]
Casts
- Kapil Bora as Ruben
- Zerifa Wahid as Nikita
- Purabi Sarma as Manisha
- Bidyut Chakravarty as Ravik
- Mridula Barua as Jolly
- Madhurima Chowdhury as Angelika
- Ellora Barua (Guest appearance)
- Gita Lahkar (Guest appearance)
- Munmi Chakravarty (Guest appearance)
- Kirip Chaliha (Guest appearance)
- Abani Bora (Guest appearance)
- Siva Prasad Thakur (Guest appearance)
- Alex Knight ( Guest appearance)
- Sarah Rose (Guest appearance)
gollark: How well do said electron beams work at a really large distance?
gollark: So either launch it from just a railgun or something, and have some way to decelerate it enough that it doesn't wreck the parcel on landing, or have it land sensibly and either fly back or get mailed back.
gollark: You would probably want to make the ballistic package delivery stuff somewhat reusable.
gollark: Actually, I had better check, honestly.
gollark: Amazon doesn't sell nuclear weapons yet, so it's fine.
See also
References
- "New Film Release: "Ahir Bhairav"". Rupaliparda. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- "British archive picks Assam film - London institute to preserve award-winning movie on schizophrenia". The Telegraph. 7 April 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
- "Ahir Bhairav". Independent Film Library. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.