Hrudaya Haadithu

Hrudaya Haadithu (Kannada: ಹೃದಯ ಹಾಡಿತು) is a 1991 Indian Kannada romantic drama film directed by M. S. Rajashekar and produced by S. A. Srinivas & B. P. Somu.[1] The story is influenced by the novel Himada Hoovu written by Vamshi.[2] The film features Ambareesh, Bhavya and Malashri in the lead roles.[3] The film was widely appreciated for its songs and lead actors performances upon release. Malashri won a Filmfare Award for her portrayal as a heart patient in the film.

Hrudaya Haadithu
Directed byM. S. Rajashekar
Produced byS. A. Srinivas
B. P. Somu
Written byVamshi
Screenplay byChi. Udaya Shankar
Based onHimada Hoovu
by Vamshi
StarringAmbarish
Malashri
Bhavya
K. S. Ashwath
Music byUpendra Kumar
CinematographyB. C. Gowrishankar
Edited byS. Manohar
Production
company
Sri Vahini Arts Combines
Release date
1991
Running time
144 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada

The songs tuned by Upendra Kumar were huge hits and he won Karnataka State Film Award for Best Music Director. Actor Rajkumar sang a song that went viral and was considered an evergreen song.

The lead actor of the movie was initially supposed to be Shiva Rajkumar. However, once the script was over, Parvathamma Rajkumar felt that Ambareesh would be a more opt choice and thus was made the protagonist.[4]

Cast

Plot

The story starts with protagonist Dr. Prasad(Ambareesh) Explaining the media about his success stories of his career as Heart surgeon. When a media person asks about the toughest case he handled, Dr. Prasad(Ambareesh) recalls his own story. At his start of his career he meets young mischievous and Lively girl Asha(Malashri) with the history of heart ailment, It so happens he meets her when she needs a quality treatment for which her father Mahadevayya(K. S. Ashwath) looking for and ready to spend entire wealth for the sake of his only daughter who is young and minor then. But situation is understood by Mahadevayya(K. S. Ashwath) from Dr.Prasad that Asha will have countable days more as her condition goes bad over time. Meanwhile, Asha develops affection towards Dr.Prasad where and which Dr.Prasad is unaware of. Asha express her desire to marry Dr.Prasad to her father, to which father approaches and begs him to agree to keep last wish of Asha. Dr.Prasad reveals that he is married to Dr.Abhlasha (Bhavya) already and she was his classmate, whom he loved and admire more. He denies the proposal and start deflecting from Asha. Learning this Dr.Abhilasha try to convince Dr.Prasad to which Dr.Prasad agrees seeing the worse consequences of rejection from him on Asha. Though he married Asha they never consummated their marriage as still Dr.Prasad has not overcome the feelings for Abhilasha. One day Asha arrives at Abhilasha's place only to find Dr.Prasad being intimate with Abhilasha. Heartbroken Asha loses her temper only to learn that they both are married from Abhilasha's parents. This shock worses Asha's situation leading to sudden collapse and Dr.Prasad performs surgery for Asha.

Now, Dr.Prasad pauses story where and which media is curious to know what happened to Asha. It is then Dr.Prasad calls both Abhilasha and Asha together to show all that he was successful in his surgery and got back Asha in such a dreadful situation. Story ends with happy note and indicates that they stayed happy ever after.

Soundtrack

The music of the film was composed by Upendra Kumar, with lyrics by Chi. Udaya Shankar.[5] All the songs, especially "Naliyuthaa" and "Kannalli Jyothi" were received extremely well.

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Naliyuthaa"Chi. Udaya ShankarRajkumar 
2."Kannalli Jyothi"Chi. Udaya ShankarManjula Gururaj 
3."Giri Navilu Yello"Chi. Udaya ShankarS. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Manjula Gururaj 
4."Thampada Gaali Beesali"Chi. Udaya ShankarS. P. Balasubrahmanyam 
5."O Nanna Mallige"Chi. Udaya ShankarS. P. Balasubrahmanyam 
gollark: Oh, and if for some reason you're an *incredibly* self-confident person who thinks all acts they do are right, you'll turn out maximally non-evil.
gollark: Being vaguely aware of that sort of thing, and also that I live in a relatively comfortable position in what is among the richest societies ever, I feel bad about *not* doing more things, which would cause me to be more evil than someone who just ignores this issue forever, which is not, according to arbitrary moral intuitions I have™, something which an evilness measuring thing should say.
gollark: With any actual planning you can just give away as much as reasonably possible. It's just an issue of good management of stuff.
gollark: There are *not* that many people who actually go to the logical conclusion of that line of thinking and go "guess I'll donate all my excess income to charities".
gollark: It would be bad for you and you could argue that not doing so maximizes long-run donation, but you aren't actually maximizing that either.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.