Chakra Dhari

Chakra Dhari (English: He who holds the wheel) is a 1948 Indian, Tamil-language film produced by Gemini Studios. Chittor V. Nagaiah and Pushpavalli acted in the lead roles while Gemini Ganesan who was a budding actor then, appeared in a minor role.[2][1]

Chakra Dhari
Poster
Tamilசக்ரதாரி
Directed byK. S. Gopalakrishnan[lower-alpha 1]
Produced byS. S. Vasan
Written byGemini Story Dept.
Story byGemini Story Dept.
Based ona story from the book titled Sri Maha Bhaktha Vijayam
StarringChittor V. Nagaiah
Pushpavalli
Surya Prabha
Gemini Ganeshan
Nagarcoil Mahadevan
Music byM. D. Parthasarathy
CinematographyThambu
Edited byN. K. Gopal
Production
company
Distributed byGemini Studios
Release date
  • 3 December 1948 (1948-12-03) (India)
[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

Gora is a potter who lives in a village near Pandharpur in Maharashtra. He is a strong devotee of Lord Panduranga. He is not interested in earning money which worries his wife Thulasi. Venkat is Gora's elder brother and an affluent man. His wife Sona does not like Gora and his family. One day while Gora was mixing clay, his child Hari comes there, playing. Gora was in a devotional ecstasy and did not notice his child. The child is killed trampled under the mud. Thulasi threatens to destroy the idol of Panduranga but Gora tries to kill her with an axe. She tells Gora that he should not touch her in future and he also vows that he will not touch her. However, Thulasi gets her sister Shantha to marry her husband Gora so that they can beget a child. But Gora refuses to touch Shantha too. The sisters seduce Gora one night. Gora is shocked and cuts his hands for breaking the vows. Lord Panduranga and his consort Rukmini come in disguise and work for Gora. Due to their divine powers happiness is restored in the family. Gora gets back his hands and Hari come back alive. The whole family becomes devotees of Lord Panduranga.[2]

Cast

Adapted from the film credits. (See External links)

=

Production

This tale has been filmed many times in many languages such as Marathi, Hindi, Kannada, Telugu and twice in Tamil.[2]

Soundtrack

Music was composed by M. D. Parthasarathy with P. S. Anantharaman as assistant. Parthasarathy also sang one or two songs. Lyrics were penned by Papanasam Sivan, Kothamangalam Subbu and Sangu Subramaniam. Singers are V. Nagaiah and Nagarcoil Mahadevan. Playback singers are S. S. Mani (S. Subramanian), T. V. Rathinam, Balasaraswathi and M. Kalpagam.[3][4] The song Kadhali Radhaiyai kalangavittan is set in the raga Kharaharapriya.

No.SongSinger/sLyricistDuration (m:ss)
1.Vaa vaa ambuliyeT. V. RathinamKothamangalam Subbu02:22
2Salangai Kulunga VaaM. Kalpagam02:42 /
3Ayane MayaneS. S. Mani03:30
4Aiyamaare Vanga Ammaamare vanga07:16
5Kannale Vettadhe ennaiye08:43
6Unakkum EnakkumNagaiah03:07
7Enna Ruchiyo, Aha, Enna Ruchiyo
8Vittalanai Panivom
9Ammaa Ammaa EnaBalasaraswathi
10Kanne Vaadaa Maniye Vaadaa
11Kanne ThaaleloT. V. Rathinam
12Kakkai SirakinileNagaiahPapanasam Sivan03:21
13Prabhu Pandu Ranga02:47
14Pandu Rangan karunayale02:07
15Bhakthiyudan Puganzhndhu PaaduvomeNagarcoil Mahadevan02:03
16Poojai SeithomeT. V. Rathinam and group02:29
17Musical Dance02:31
18Oradiyal ulagalandaNagaiahSangu Subramaniam01:40
19Kadhali Radhaiyai kalangavittanM. Kalpagam02:43

Reception

The film was a success at the box-office. Film historian Randor Guy wrote in 2008 that the film is "Remembered for its soul-filling music, fine photography and Nagaiah’s performance."[2]

Notes

gollark: Even Google drops support faster than you get with, say, x86 desktops.
gollark: Because of their ridiculous monolithic system image design you have slow reboot-requiring updates, and a whole mess with recovery mode. And support gets dropped really fast. And half of it is in proprietary Google Play Services now instead of AOSP.
gollark: Ah yes, "leeching" an open source project, of course.
gollark: Android updates are horrible.
gollark: > Chromium> respects your privacy

References

  1. Film News Anandan (23 October 2004). Sadhanaigal Padaitha Thamizh Thiraipada Varalaru [History of Landmark Tamil Films] (in Tamil). Chennai: Sivakami Publishers. Archived from the original on 21 November 2016.
  2. Guy, Randor (5 December 2008). "Chakra-Dhari 1948 - CHEN". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 14 January 2017. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  3. "Gemini's Chakra-Dhari". Pesum Padam (in Tamil): 52–55. December 1948.
  4. Lakshmi Ramachandran. Kothamangalam Subbu Thiraiyisai Paadalgal [Kothamangalam Subbu Film Songs] (in Tamil). Manivasagar Publishers, Chennai 108 (Ph:044 25361039). First edition September 2016. pp. 76, 77, 88, 160, 162, 163 & 165.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.