Halo (1996 film)

Halo is a 1996 Indian film directed by Santosh Sivan. It tells the story of Sasha (Benaf Dadachandji), who is searching for her lost puppy in the streets of Mumbai and the variety of people that she meets.[1]

Halo
Directed bySantosh Sivan
Produced byChildren's Film Society, India
Written bySantosh Sivan Sanjay Chhel
StarringBenaf Dadachandji, Bulang Raja, Viju Khote, Mukesh Rishi, Tinnu Anand
Music byRanjit Barot
CinematographySantosh Sivan
Edited byKanika Myer, Bhara J.
Release date
7 February 1996
Running time
92 min
CountryIndia

Awards

Plot

Halo revolves around a seven-year-old girl, Sasha (Benaf Dadachandji), who is in quest of her lost puppy. Having lost her mother in childhood, she yearns for mother's love and always feels lonely, even though there is a doting father in Rajkumar Santoshi. During vacation, when all the other kids are busy playing, she sits silently and doesn't even eat properly. So, the gluttonous servant fabricates a story that a miracle will happen in form of a Halo. There comes a street dog and Sasha believes it to be the miracle, the God-sent Halo. She adopts it and names it Halo. Now her life revolves around him. She sleeps, she drinks, she eats with him. Her father doesn't object. One day Halo is lost. Sasha is terribly upset. The quest of her lost puppy takes her through the terrifying streets of Mumbai to the neurotic editor of a newspaper, a gang of smugglers (led by Tinnu Anand), a police commissioner (Mukesh Rishi) and a colorful gang of street urchins.

Public viewing

The movie was first relayed on Children's Day in 1996 on Doordarshan.

gollark: Who uses digital video disks these days?
gollark: I mean, money/free trade is quite good at what it does, especially since the incentives naturally line up ish since you want to maximize effective use of resources you have access to, can directly fix things yourself without going through a central authority, etc. But it may be possible to implement this some other way without some of the issues wrt. externalities and stuff.
gollark: If we could use magical bee cuboids to produce all goods and services with no human labour, I would prefer this.
gollark: Not the work.
gollark: Which is the good part.

References

  1. Verma, Suparn (4 April 1997). "I want to make films only I can make". Rediff On The Net.
  2. Gulzar, Govind; Saiba Nihalani (2003). "Biography: Sivan, Santosh". Encyclopaedia of Hindi Cinema. Encyclopædia Britannica (India). p. 633. ISBN 81-7991-066-0.


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