Gauri: The Unborn

Gauri: The Unborn is a 2007 Hindi-language Horror film directed by Akku Akbar, starring Atul Kulkarni and Rituparna Sen Gupta. It received great critical acclaim, but commercially was an average grosser. The film was produced by Shogun Films.[1]

Gauri: The Unborn
Directed byAkku Akbar
Produced byShogun Films
Written byMohan Azaad
K. Gireesh Kumar
StarringAtul Kulkarni
Rituparna Sengupta
Anupam Kher
Music byRaju Singh
CinematographyViswamangal Kitsu
Edited byK. Ravi Kumar
Kiran Rajput
Release date
30 November 2007 (2007-11-30)
Running time
98 min
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

It was remade as a Malayalam film, Kana Kanmani (2009) directed by Akku Akbar.

Plot

Sudeep(Atul Kulkarni) and Roshni(Rituparna Sengupta) are a happy-go-lucky couple who have a school going child Shivani(Rushita Pandya) and lead a happy life in the suburbs of Mumbai. One day, during a sports event at school Shivani accidentally slips and falls to the ground, unknown to her and her mother that an invisible entity was responsible for the fall. Since the incident Shivani had begun behaving quite stubborn. Nevertheless, the family take no heed to the change and move on.

Meanwhile, Sudeep's company promotes him and offers him a business trip to any place he desires. Though Sudeep and Roshni decide on Mauritius, Shivani insists that they should visit their ancestral home first which surprisingly Shivani had never seen or visited before. After much persuasion the family decide to visit the ancestral home for just a few days and then go to Mauritius. When they reach, Roshni and Sudeep observe Shivani's behaviour becoming more erratic and stubborn. During this time supernatural events occur in the house.

To their horror, the couple discover that the reason for Shivani's strange behaviour was due to an evil entity that had possessed her. Through this entity, a series of flashbacks revealed that before Shivani, Roshni and Sudeep had an unplanned pregnancy which ended in abortion within three months. The entity revealed itself to be Gauri, the name the couple had given had their first child been a girl. Through Shivani, Gauri told them that she was jealous of the love and affection they were giving to Shivani and as revenge for killing her, within three days she would kill Shivani on the third night.

The couple try many attempts to protect Shivani from the clutches of Gauri but fail every time while Gauri teases the couple with supernatural attacks. On the third night they pray anxiously for Shivani's life, even requesting Gauri to leave Shivani's body. However Gauri does not harm or kill Shivani because she realised that her parents had and will not provide the kind of love to her as that of Shivani's. While bidding a tearful goodbye, Gauri's final wish was that if she ever felt scared she'd like to be around her parents for a short while. The couple accept her wish and since then have accepted Gauri's presence in their lives.

Cast

Soundtrack

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gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Card
gollark: > Modern SIM cards allow applications to load when the SIM is in use by the subscriber. These applications communicate with the handset or a server using SIM Application Toolkit, which was initially specified by 3GPP in TS 11.14. (There is an identical ETSI specification with different numbering.) ETSI and 3GPP maintain the SIM specifications. The main specifications are: ETSI TS 102 223 (the toolkit for smartcards), ETSI TS 102 241 (API), ETSI TS 102 588 (application invocation), and ETSI TS 131 111 (toolkit for more SIM-likes). SIM toolkit applications were initially written in native code using proprietary APIs. To provide interoperability of the applications, ETSI choose Java Card.[11] A multi-company collaboration called GlobalPlatform defines some extensions on the cards, with additional APIs and features like more cryptographic security and RFID contactless use added.[12]
gollark: Yes.
gollark: But instead they're actually quite powerful things which run applications written in some weird Java dialect?!

References

  1. Gauri: The Unborn Review Indian Express, 2 December 2007.


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