Idolle Ramayana

Idolle Ramayana (transl.It's a good Ramayana), shot simultaneusly in Telugu as Mana Oori Ramayanam (transl.Our village's Ramayana) is a 2016 Indian Kannada-language comedy-drama film directed by Prakash Raj.[1][2] The film was produced by Prakash himself with Ramjee Narasiman under Prakash Raj Productions and First Copy Pictures. The film is a remake of 2012 Malayalam film Shutter with Jogi and Raman Gopisetti writing the dialogues for both versions simultaneously.[3]

Idolle Ramayana
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPrakash Raj
Produced byPrakash Raj
Ramjee Narasiman
Written byJogi(Kannada dialogues)
Ramana Gopisetti (Telugu dialogues)
Screenplay byPrakash Raj
Story byJoy Mathew
StarringPrakash Raj
Priyamani
Achyuth Kumar
Aravind Kuplika
Rangayana Raghu
Raghubabu
Prudhviraj
Satyadev Kancharana
Music byIlaiyaraaja
CinematographyMukes
Edited bySreekar Prasad
Production
company
Prakash Raj Productions
First Copy Pictures
Distributed byMysore Talkies (Kannada)
Abhishek Pictures (Telugu)
Release date
7 October 2016
Running time
111 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada
Telugu

The film stars Prakash Raj and Priyamani in lead roles along with Achyuth Kumar, Rangayana Raghu, Raghubabu, Prudhviraj, Satyadev Kancharana portraying supporting roles.[4] The film's soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja. Both versions were released worldwide on 7 October 2016.

Plot

The film is set against the backdrop of Rama Navami festival. Bhujanga (Prakash Raj) is a businessman returned from Gulf is highly respected in his home town. Bhujanga has invested in a small commercial property next to his house, which he has let out to the shopkeepers and except one of his shop lies vacant. He is short-tempered and doesn't want his daughter to study further and wants her to get married. His anger increases when his daughter has been arrested for staging a protest, during the time he meets his friends every evening inside the vacant shop and they bond every night over a few drinks.

Bhujanga sees a prostitute Susheela (Priyamani) and wants to bond with her, however despite his intentions Bhujanga gets scared fearing that his reputation will be tarnished. During one such evening, Shiva (Satyadev Kancharana / Aravind Kuplikar) an auto rickshaw driver and a friend of Rajeeva brings the prostitute and locks her along with Bhujanga inside the vacant shop promising to unlock the shop shutter after they spend some time together inside the locked shop.

Meanwhile, Shiva meets one of his passengers, a film director (Prudhviraj / Achyuth Kumar), who had forgotten his bag in Shiva's autorickshaw that morning. Shiva told him he saw the bag, but he had left that inside the locked shop shutter, and that he will go back and get the bag and come. Director on knowing that he would get his bag back, celebrates by offering a couple of drinks to Shiva, however both get into trouble with the cops for drunken driving and fails to return that night to open the shutter as promised to Bhujanga. They both get released in morning as the inspector Ramdas (Rangayana Raghu) is a good friend of the director. But Shiva could not come to unlock the shutter that night as well due to certain circumstances. This way Bhujanga and Susheela are forced to spend a couple of nights together inside the locked shutter waiting for Shiva's return to unlock it.

Trapped inside the shutter, Bhujanga through what he hears from outside, learns many lessons about the real face of people who he had earlier considered as friends and foes, and his attitude about many things in life changes. His initial disgust towards Susheela's apparent lack of manners also slowly goes away as he realises she is a good soul after all.


In the end, somebody unlocks the shutter and they both come out from the shutter. But they don't see anyone around and do not understand who opened the shutter. Bhujanga is confused and he goes into home where he comes to know from his daughter that she had got her friend to open the lock (she did not reveal to friend that her father was inside). She indicates she knows everything but did not reveal it to everyone and trusts that her father is a good man whatever may happen. Bhujanga is moved by this and his experiences inside the shutter and he decides to postpone his daughter's marriage and allow her to study. The Director is seen to have got back the script from Susheela (It is not revealed how they are related), as Susheela had earlier found the script inside the bag inside the shutter. But he decides to make a film on her incidents which happened in shutter.

Cast

Actor (Kannada)Actor (Telugu)Role
Prakash RajBhujanga
PriyamaniSusheela
Teju BelawadiBhujanga's daughter
Sudha BelawadiBhujanga's wife
Bhargavi NarayanBhujanga's mother-in-law
Aravind KuplikarSatyadev KancharanaShiva
Rangayana RaghuRaghubabuPolice inspector
Achyuth KumarPrudhvirajfilm director
Ramesh PanditBroker
Shivajirao JadhavTailor

Soundtrack

Idolle Ramayana
Mana Oori Ramayanam
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedSeptember 2016 (2016-September)
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LanguageKannada
Telugu
LabelD Beats (Kannada)
a Music (Telugu)
Ilaiyaraaja chronology
Kuttrame Thandanai
(2016)
Idolle Ramayana
Mana Oori Ramayanam

(2016)
Daffadar
(2016)

Soundtrack has only one song composed and sung by Ilaiyaraaja.

No.TitleLyricsSingerLength
1."Idolle Ramayana" (Kannada Song)Jayant KaikiniIlaiyaraaja3:05
2."Mana Oori Ramayanam" (Telugu Song)Bhaskarabhatla Ravikumar⁠⁠⁠⁠Ilaiyaraaja3:06

Critical reception

Kannada version

Times of India wrote "This film is a definite must-watch for those who want cinema that doesn’t have the usual action, song and dance routines and look for a good storyline. The performances are the cherry on the cake here."[5] The Hindu wrote "For those who have not watched the original, Idolle Ramayana offers a different experience, as it is rooted in nativity."[6] Bangalore Mirror wrote "The film makes you laugh and sympathise at the plight of the characters. But what it lacks is a heartwarming experience because it is so clinically made and sanitised."[7]

Telugu version

Sify wrote "Mana Oori Ramayanam is a moral fable told with deft direction by Prakash Raj. Priyamani's excellent performance is mainstay. Despite its length and slow pace, the middle portion makes an engrossing watch."[8]

gollark: Eh, kind of?
gollark: ... do they *have* any AMD ones?
gollark: Anyway, do you want a particularly portable laptop or do you not care much?
gollark: (or better)
gollark: The boost clocks are higher though, so it's probably about the same on single-core tasks.

References

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