Maanasamrakshanam

Maanasamrakshanam is a 1945 Indian Tamil language film, produced and directed by K. Subramaniam with S. D. Subbulakshmi, G. Pattu Iyer, V. N. Janaki, T. R. Ramachandran and Kali N. Rathnam in the lead roles.[1] The film is lost.[2]

Maanasamrakshanam
Film Poster
Tamilமானசம்ரக்‌ஷணம்
Directed byK. Subramaniam, C. S. V. Iyer
Produced byK. Subramaniam
Story byK. Subramaniam
StarringS. D. Subbulakshmi
G. Pattu Iyer
V. N. Janaki
T. R. Ramachandran
Kali N. Rathnam
and others
Music byK. C. Thyagarajan (Background score)
CinematographyThambu
Production
company
Madras United Artistes Corporation
Release date
1945
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

During World War II, Japan invaded Burma (now known as Myanmar in 1941. Many Indians have adopted Burma as their country and were living there. The invasion brought many hardships to these Indians. They started migrating to India walking hundreds of miles through jungles and mountains while the enemy was on pursuit. The heroine set up an organisation in India to take care of the lost children. This organisation was called Maanasamrakshana. The heroine is involved in nationalistic activities. She defeats the villain's anti-national activities. She faces her own relatives who misappropriates her wealth.[1]

Cast

S. D. Subbulakshmi
G. Pattu Iyer
V. N. Janaki
T. R. Ramachandran
Kali N. Rathnam
T. K. Sampangi
M. R. S. Mani
T. R. B. Rao
M. A. Ganapathi Bhat
V. S. Santhanam Ayyangar
Ramanuja Chariar
V. A. S. Mani
Master Sathasivam
Nagalakshmi
Kumari Subbulakshmi

[1]

Crew

  • Producer: K. Subramaniam
  • Directors: K. Subramaniam, C. S. V. Iyer
  • Cinematography: Thambu (a cousin of K. Subramaniam)
  • Art Direction: F. Nagoor, Ghodgaonkar
  • Music (Background Score): K. C. Thyagarajan
  • Lyrics: Papanasam Rajagopala Iyer (Papanasam Sivan's brother)[1]
gollark: Why stop there when you could use Windows 3↑↑↑↑3, which is 3↑↑↑↑3/11 times more than Windows 11?
gollark: Windows 98 is 8.9 times more than Windows 11, so you should use it.
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/426116061415342080/924004285048561674/Capture_2021-12-24-13-15-49.png
gollark: If that worked, then by induction only one person would be allowed to be unhappy due to bad things.
gollark: It's not like the existence of worse things eliminates bad things.

References

  1. Guy, Randor (7 November 2010). "Maanasamrakshanam (1945)". thehindu.com. Archived from the original on 22 April 2017. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  2. https://thefederal.com/features/tamil-film-legacy-disappearing-into-a-blackhole/


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