Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay

Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay is a 2014 Bengali-language action comedy film directed by Ashok Pati and Anonno Mamun and produced by Ashok Dhanuka under the banner of Eskay Movies.[1] The film was co-produced by Action Cut Entertainment. The film features Bengali actors Ankush Hazra, Subhashree Ganguly and Vikram Chatterjee in the lead roles.[1] A co-production of India and Bangladesh, it is a remake of Telugu-language movie Arya 2. The music for the film was composed by Savvy Gupta, Hridoy Khan and Akassh.

Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Produced by
Based onArya 2
Starring
Music by
CinematographyKumud Verma
Edited byM. Susmit
Production
company
Distributed by
Release date
  • 16 May 2014 (2014-05-16)
Running time
135 minutes
CountryIndia
Bangladesh
LanguageBengali

This is the fourth collaboration between Ankush and Eskay Movies, after Idiot, Kanamachi,[2] and Khiladi.[3] This is the third collaboration between Subhasree and Eskay Movies, after Khokababu and Khoka 420.[4] This is also Ankush and Subhasree's first Indo-Bangladeshi joint venture film.

Plot

The film follows Abhijeet, played by Ankush, who is lonely college student who craves friendship. After meeting Bhoomi, played by Subhashree Ganguly, Abhijeet seeks her friendship.[5]

Cast

  • Ankush Hazra as Abhijeet / Abhi
    • Rafin Iqbal Kaif (Bangladesh) as Little Abhijeet
  • Subhashree Ganguly as Bhoomi
    • Shrosta Sarkar Sithi (Bangladesh) as Little Bhoomi
  • Vikram Chatterjee as Joy
  • Maliha Nusrat as Imonrag/ Imon / Joy's Girlfriend
  • Misha Sawdagor as Bhoomi's father, Abhijeet's father-in-law
  • Mahamuh Alam Kochi (Bangladesh)
  • Pijush Bandopadhyay (Bangladesh)
  • Supriyo Dutta (India)
  • Kharaj Mukherjee (India)
  • Sanjit Mahato (India)
  • Naznin Alam (Bangladesh)
  • Pathorokhi Chakraborty (India)
  • Shanta Islam (Bangladesh)
  • Shokuntola Baruwa (India)
  • Rohomot Ali (Bangladesh)

Production

The film is an international co-production between India's Eskay Movies and Bangladesh's Action Cut Entertainment. This began a trend of new Indo-Bangladeshi joint ventures in film, many of which were also produced by Eskay Movies.

Development

The filming of Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay began on 26 September 2013. According to the director, apart from being a typical romantic comedy-drama film, Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay also has a social message for its viewers. Initially, the leading role was offered to Tollywood star Dev, but due to scheduling problems he rejected the offer. Ashok Pati's next choice was Ankush Hazra, who accepted the role. And for the role of 'Joy' co-director Anonno Mamun approached Bangladeshi new generation and commercially successful actor Symon Sadik. But, after getting the story line Symon rejected the project. A major portion of the film was shot in Pubail (Gazipur), Bangladesh, with the remaining portions filmed in India and Thailand. The title song was shot in Kutch, Gujarat. Bangladeshi national film award winner actor Misha Sawdagor and newcomer Meghla have played important roles in the film.

Soundtrack

Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay
Soundtrack album by
Released1 January 2014 (India)
20 April 2015 (Bangladesh)
Recorded2014
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelEskay Music
ProducerAshok Dhanuka
Savvy chronology
Majnu
(2013)
Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay
(2014)
Bindaas
(2014)
Hridoy Khan chronology
Ant Story
(2013)
Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay
(2014)
Akassh chronology
Nishwartha Bhalobasa
(2013)
Ami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay
(2014)
Most Welcome 2
(2014)

The soundtrack of the film was composed Savvy Gupta and Akassh from India and Hridoy Khan from Bangladesh.[6]

The soundtrack was released in India on 1 January 2014[6] and in Bangladesh on 20 April 2015.[7]

Both the India and Bangladesh releases of the soundtrack contain the same songs, but the order of the tracks differs.[6][7]

The song "Obujh Bhalobasha" by Hridoy Khan is a new version of the song of the same name from Khan's 2009 album Bolna.

Track listing

India

TrackSongSinger(s)DurationMusicLyricist
1"Pakka Ghughu Maal"Shadaab Hashmi4:24SavvyRiddhi Barua
2"Aami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay"Mohammad Irfan4:26Saurav Bhadra
3"Calling Bell"Nakash Aziz and Saberi Bhattacharya3:26Riddhi Barua & Savvy
4"Bhalo Lage Na"Hridoy Khan4:28Hridoy KhanGoonjohn Rahman
5"Bangladesher Meye"Akassh3:30AkasshPriyo Chattopadhyay
6"Obujh Bhalobasha"Hridoy Khan and Palak Muchhal5:31Hridoy KhanMaliha Tajnin Tani

Bangladesh

TrackSongSinger(s)DurationMusicLyricist
1"Aami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay"Mohammad Irfan4:26Savvy GuptaSaurav Bhadra
2"Bangladesher Meye"Akassh3:30AkasshPriyo Chattopadhyay
3"Bhalo Lage Na"Hridoy Khan4:28Hridoy KhanGoonjohn Rahman
4"Calling Bell"Nakash Aziz and Saberi Bhattacharya3:26Savvy GuptaRiddhi Barua & Savvy
5"Obujh Bhalobasha"Hridoy Khan and Palak Muchhal5:31Hridoy KhanMaliha Tajnin Tani
6"Pakka Ghughu Maal"Shadaab Hashmi4:24Savvy GuptaRiddhi Barua

Reception

A review by The Times of India praised the soundtrack and the composers, Savvy Gupta, Hridoy Khan and Akassh, for the foot-tapping numbers. However, the film also noted that film's placement of certain songs in the film were "out of nowhere", specifically "Calling Bell" and "Tumi Jodi", the latter of which was listed in the soundtrack as "Obujh Bhalobasha".[1]

Release

The film released on 16 May 2014.

Critical reception

The Times of India praised director Ashok Pati for being visually treat and keeping the story together, but also criticized some scenes in the middle for being mindless and yawning. Calling the film and out-and-out entertainer, the review gave the film 3/5 stars.[1]

gollark: Hmm, I do use autorandr, actually. This could become a problem.
gollark: Currently, Openbox via LXDE.
gollark: Well, Wayland functions***.
gollark: X also uses 5 to 20% of one of my cores for no apparent reason. The resulting reduction in CPU use will* be noticeable**.
gollark: (Screen tearing troubles me)

References

  1. "Aami Shudhu Cheyechi Tomay Movie Review". The Times of India. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  2. "Kanamachi creates a buzz". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 7 April 2015. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  3. India, Press Trust of (29 September 2013). "Khiladi 'invades' Bengal turf ahead of pujas". Business Standard India. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  4. "Khoka 420 Movie Review". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 1 February 2017. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  5. "Subhasree and I can go for a long drive at 3 am". The Times of India. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  6. Aami Sudhu Cheyechi Tomay by Savvy, Hridoy Khan, Akassh, 1 January 2014, retrieved 18 June 2017
  7. "Ami Sudhu Cheyechi Tomay". GP Music. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
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