Olave Jeevana Lekkachaara

Olave Jeevana Lekkachaara! (Kannada: ಒಲವೇ ಜೀವನ ಲೆಕ್ಕಾಚಾರ!) is a 2009 Indian Kannada language film directed by Nagathihalli Chandrashekhar.[1] with Srinagara Kitty and Radhika Pandit in the lead roles. Chandrashekhar has brilliantly handled the subject in the film which is laced with humour and sarcasm. It's a sentimental family entertainer, with a message for all. With excellent control over the script and neat narration, Nagathihalli has presented his point of view based on his short story Bhoomi Gundagide.

Olave Jeevana Lekkachaara
ಒಲವೇ ಜೀವನ ಲೆಕ್ಕಾಚಾರ!
Directed byNagathihalli Chandrashekhar
Produced byK. Manju
Mark Balaji
StarringSrinagara Kitty
Radhika Pandit, Rajanikanth natana
Music byMano Murthy
CinematographyAjay Vincent
Release date
12 June 2009
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada

Plot

Balu (Srinagara Kitty) comes to Halekote village, where he falls in love with Rukmini (Radhika Pandit). However, he is brainwashed by a college lecturer (Rangayana Ragu). The lecturer is a self-made revolutionary, who infuses negative thoughts about life and marriage. Balu leaves Rukmini to come back to Bangalore, where he becomes a lecturer and imposes the same theme: rich should become poor; poor should become rich. He changes his mind after seeing the positive sides of family life and decides to return to Rukmini. But the developments shock him.

Cast

Soundtrack

The music of the film was composed by Mano Murthy.

Track#SongSinger(s)
1"Ba Baare Shaakuntale"Vijay Prakash
2"Baalu Moore Dina"Ananya Bhat, Natana School Children (Mysore)
3"Nanna Preethiya Geleya"Rajesh Krishnan, Shreya Ghoshal
4"Nodi Swamy"Rajesh Mehar, Chaitra
gollark: If that happens we must destroy the Earth. It's the only way to be sure.
gollark: This probably works only because nobody has done or is likely to do anything which would particularly benefit from legally "owning" space things yet.
gollark: It's not as if original-me would *suffer* at all if they were instantly disintegrated, so I don't particularly care.
gollark: I think that as long as teleportation was shown to be safe the ethical/philosophical issues would be outweighed by practicality pretty fast. I personally don't care about the continuity thing, however that's meant to work.
gollark: Not really the philosophy side, more "you can duplicate people" and "you can duplicate *things*".

References


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