Vikram Yoganand

Vikram Yoganand is an Indian film director, editor, writer, cinematographer and commercial ad maker predominantly working in the Kannada film industry.

Vikram Yoganand
Born
NationalityIndian
OccupationDirector, Editor, Cinematographer, Producer
Years active2009 to present
Spouse(s)Shwetha Yoganand (m.2015)

After graduating, Vikram started making short films and music videos. Miley Somehow was his earliest work shot in and around Bangalore, completed in 2013. After a few successful projects with Chandan Shetty, he directed the feature film Heegondhu Dina, starring Sindhu Loknath under his company Smart Screen Productions.[1]

After the critically acclaimed Heegondhu Dina, Vikram Yoganand is all set for his second feature film, and this time, he is directing a crime comedy called Kushka. Vikram says that what is unique about this multi-starrer, is the film's colour palette.[2]

Filmography

Si No. Year Film Language Director Cinematographer Editor Producer Cast
12013Miley SomehowHindiYesYesYesMehdi Ali Khan, Amisha Ambekar
22016Sri ChakramKannadaYesYes
32017BB5KannadaYesPoornachandra Mysore,

Radhika Chetan

42018Heegondhu Dina[3]KannadaYesYesYesSindhu Loknath, Guruprasad, Praveen Tej
52018Dr Pal[4]KannadaYesYesYesKailash Pal
62018I am 30[5]KannadaYesSindhu Loknath
72020Kushka[6]KannadaYesYesYesYesGuruprasad
82020Honeymoon[7]KannadaYesNagabhushana , Sanjana Anand
gollark: 1. Is that seriously how you read what I was saying? I was saying: fix our minds' weird ingroup/outgroup division.2. That is very vague and does not sound like it could actually work.
gollark: I'm pretty sure we *have* done the ingroup/outgroup thing for... forever. And... probably the solutions are something like transhumanist mind editing, or some bizarre exotic social thing I can't figure out yet.
gollark: I mean that humans are bad in that we randomly divide ourselves into groups then fiercely define ourselves by them, exhibit a crazy amount of exciting different types of flawed reasoning for no good reason, get caught up in complex social signalling games, come up with conclusions then rationalize our way to a vaguely sensible-looking justification, sometimes seemingly refuse to be capable of abstract thought when it's politically convenient, that sort of thing.
gollark: No, I think there are significant improvements possible. But different ones.
gollark: I'm not talking about humans being bad in that sense, myself.

References


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