Katha Sangama
Katha Sangama (transl. Confluence of tales) is a 1976 Indian anthology film in Kannada, directed by Puttanna Kanagal, based on three short stories;[1] Hangu by Giraddi Govindaraj, Athithi by Veena and Munithaayi by Eshwara Chandra. The film stars Kalyan Kumar, Rajinikanth, B. Saroja Devi and Aarathi in the lead roles. The supporting cast includes Lokanath, Vamana Rao, Shivaramaiah and Master Umesh. The film won three awards at the 1975–76 Karnataka State Film Awards, including the award for Best Actress (Aarathi).
Katha Sangama | |
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DVD cover | |
Directed by | Puttanna Kanagal |
Produced by | C. S. Rajah |
Screenplay by | Puttanna Kanagal |
Story by | Giraddy Govindaraja Veena Eshwara Chandra |
Based on | Hangu by Giraddy Govindaraja Athithi by Veena Munithayi by Eshwara Chandra |
Starring | Kalyan Kumar Saroja Devi Aarathi Rajinikanth Gangadhar Kutty Padmini |
Music by | Vijaya Bhaskar |
Cinematography | B. N. Haridas |
Edited by | V. P. Krishna |
Distributed by | Vardhini Art Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 132 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Kannada |
The 1984 Tamil movie Kai Kodukkum Kai was an extended version of the Munithayi segment from this movie. Rajnikanth, who played the antagonist role in the Kannada movie, played the lead role in the Tamil version. The antagonist role of the Kannada movie was also an inspiration for Rajanikanth's characterization in the 1977 Tamil movie 16 Vayathinile directed by debutant Bharathiraja who was an associate of Puttanna Kanagal.
Hangu
The movie is based on a short story by the Kannada writer Giraddi Govindaraj. It is about a poor university professor with high moral values and integrity who is offered a bribe from a wealthy contractor to push some grace marks to his son in his exam paper so that he could get enough percentage to qualify for a medical college. This happens just when the professor's young son is critically ill and requires expensive medical treatment. Whether the professor succumbs to the circumstances or he let go of his integrity forms the crux of the story.
Atithi
It tells the story of a middle-aged woman who is the warden of a girls hostel. When younger she had refused to marry the man who loved her because of her ideals about feminism. She had even decided to say unmarried her entire life. A chance encounter with the man, now happily married to someone else, makes her question her earlier decision of not accepting true love.
Munithaayi
It has a story of wealthy man marrying a blind girl (Aarathi) out of pity, but in his absence she is raped by an adolescent youth and later blackmailed. The husband eventually "forgives" her. Aarathi plays the role of the blind girl and Rajinikanth plays a small role as the man who rapes her. Rajinikanth's characterisation in this movie went on to be used in the 1977 movie 16 Vayathinile.
The 1984 Tamil movie Kai Kodukkum Kai was based on this segment and was an extended version of the Munithaayi story.
Awards
- Karnataka State Film Awards 1975–76
- Fourth Best Film
- Best Actress – Aarathi
- Best Supporting Actor – Master Umesh
Trivia
- The film was Rajinikanth's first in Kannada and his second overall.
- Director Bharathiraja was one of the assistant directors of Puttanna Kanagal in this movie, he later became a great director in Tamil. He gave Rajini a very similar kind of role in 16 Vayathinile.
The third part of this movie was later remade in Tamil as Kai Kodukkum Kai, by J. Mahendran, with Rajinikanth in the lead role and Revathi playing the blind girl.
References
- "Puttanna's big feats". The Hindu. 3 June 2005. Retrieved 8 March 2014.