Vaddante Dabbu

Vaddante Dabbu (transl.Endless Money)[1] is a 1954 Indian Telugu-language screwball comedy film, produced by Moola Narayana Swamy on Rohini Pictures banner and directed by Y. R. Swamy.[2] It is based on the English novel Brewster's Millions (1902). The film stars N. T. Rama Rao, Sowcar Janaki, Jamuna in the lead roles and has music composed by T. A. Kalyanam. Despite originally opening to a mixed response, it attained cult status in Telugu cinema, and was remade in the same language as Babayi-Abbayi (1985).

Vaddante Dabbu
Theatrical release poster
Directed byY. R. Swamy
Produced byMoola Narayana Swamy
H. M. Reddy (Presents)
Screenplay byVempati Sadasivabrahmam
Y. R. Swamy
Story byG. D. Mudugulkar
Based onBrewster's Millions
by George Barr McCutcheon
StarringN. T. Rama Rao
Sowcar Janaki
Jamuna
Music byT. A. Kalyanam
CinematographyD. L. Narayana
Edited byM. S. Parthasaradhi
Production
company
Rohini Pictures
Release date
  • 19 February 1954 (1954-02-19)
Running time
140 mins
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Plot

Shyam (N. T. Rama Rao) & Rama Rao (Peketi Sivaram) are close friends and starts living together, their lifestyle is to make debts for their survival and escape from lenders. Shyam is an artist, Saroja (Sowcar Janaki) daughter of a multimillionaire Rao Saheb Hemachalapathi (Rajanala) is an admirer of his paintings, she meets him to draw her portrait and both of them fall in love. Rao Saheb assigns a task for Shyam by giving a huge amount of ₹1 lakh and asks him to spend it within the timeline of 30 days and also keeps some conditions that he should not donate or destroy the money. Shyam starts the spending the money with the help of his Rama Rao ideas such as racing, gambling, making a drama, construction of house etc. But their income grows day by day and Shyam gets fed-up with this money. Finally, he gives all the money back to Rao Saheb, at that time Rao Saheb explains to him that he has kept this task to study Shyam's character and he should also understand how dangerous the money is and the movie ends on a happy note with the marriage of Shyam & Saroja.

Cast

Production

Vaddante Dabbu was adapted from George Barr McCutcheon's English-language novel Brewster's Millions (1902),[1] and was among the earliest screwball comedies of Telugu cinema.[3]

Soundtrack

Vaddante Dabbu
Film score by
T. A. Kalyanam
Released1954
GenreSoundtrack
ProducerT. A. Kalyanam

Music composed by Chakravarthy. Lyrics were written by Veturi Sundararama Murthy.

S. No.Song TitleLyricsSingerslength
1 "Naa Priya" Devulapalli Jikki 3:14
2 "Alladi Avatala" Vempati Sadasivabrahmam Jikki 3:05
3 "Chadavali" Vempati Sadasivabrahmam A. M. Rajah, P. Susheela
4 "Evaro Doshulu" Vempati Sadasivabrahmam Rohini
5 "Endukoyi" Devulapalli Raavu Balasaraswathi 2:49
6 "Thimtalangthom" Sri Sri Raavu Balasaraswathi, Rohini, V. Ramakrishna, S. P. Kodandapani, M. V. Raju
7 "Alakinchavoyi" Devulapalli Jikki 3:33
8 "Mansaemo Chalinchaneyo" Sri Sri Raavu Balasaraswathi 2:55

Release and reception

Vaddante Dabbu was released on 19 February 1954.[4] Despite originally opening to a mixed response, it attained cult status in Telugu cinema, and was remade in the same language as Babayi-Abbayi (1985).[3]

gollark: Perhaps we should have mining pools.
gollark: Calculators are stupid. Everyone has phones which are far more powerful but because you can't use them in exams and stuff you pay stupid amounts for a really expensive thing.
gollark: No.
gollark: *uses out of game editing because is not idiot*
gollark: *always hits ctrl-s after any change*

References

  1. Ramachandran, Naman (2012). Rajinikanth: The Definitive Biography. Penguin Books. pp. 170–171.
  2. Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (1998) [1994]. Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema (PDF). Oxford University Press. p. 654. ISBN 0-19-563579-5.
  3. Parankusam, Aditya (11 June 2017). "Chronicles of screwball comedy". The Hans India. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  4. "Vadhante Dabbu". indiancine.ma. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
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