Viswa Mohini

Viswa Mohini (English: The World of Entertainment) is a 1940 Telugu romantic thriller film in the backdrop of Indian motion picture world, directed by Y. V. Rao.[1] The ensemble cast starring V. Nagaiah was written by Balijepalli Lakshmikanta Kavi, and was screened at the Venice Film Festival.[1][2] The production design was handled by T. V. S. Sarma, and cinematography was handled by Pandurang Naik.[3][4]

Viswa Mohini
Directed byY. V. Rao
Produced byY. V. Rao
Screenplay byBalijepalli Lakshmikanta Kavi
Story byY. V. Rao
StarringV. Nagaiah
Y. V. Rao
Pushpavalli
Gohar Mamajiwala
Lalitha
Music byOgirala Ramachandra Rao
CinematographyPandurang Naik
Chandulal Shah
Edited byY. V. Rao
Production
company
Newton Studios
Lakshmi Studios
Distributed bySri Jagadesh Films
Release date
November 9, 1940
Running time
195 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Plot

Mohan Rao (Y. V. Rao), who works for a Law firm in Madras, cheats his Manager Padmanabham (Rangaswamy), and becomes the owner of the company through illegal means. Mohan Rao is the son of Padmanabham's business rival Purushothama Rao (Doraiswamy). He plans his son Mohan Rao's marriage with Hemalatha (Bezawada Rajarathnam), the daughter of a rich and wealthy widow Visalakshi (Cocanada Rajarathnam) who happens to be Puroshothama Rao's neighbour. But Mohan Rao's is not interested in this alliance.

Pasupathi (Chittor Nagaiah), a renowned film maker and friend of Mohan Rao, lures him to popular actress Viswamohini (Lalitha Devi) on the sets of a film shooting. Viswamohini is the daughter of Padmanabham who is cheated by Mohan Rao. Mohan Rao develops a secret affair with Viswamohini, and expresses his wish to marry her. Padmanabham, is unaware of the fact that Mohan Rao is the son of his arch rival Purushotham.

Meanwhile, Pasupathi lures the wealthy Visalakshi into film production and distribution. Visalakshi loses all her wealth in the process. In a twist of fate, Padmanabham is shocked to know through Hemalatha that Mohan Rao is the son of his rival Purushotham. How Padmanabham deals with the situation, and how he becomes aware of Mohan Rao's criminal deeds, and Pasupathi's ulterior motive forms the rest of the plot.

Cast

  • V. Nagaiah
  • Y. V. Rao
  • Pushpavalli
  • Gohar Mamajiwala
  • Lalitha
  • Bezawada Rajarathnam
  • T. Suryanarayana
  • Doraiswamy
  • Cocanada Rajarathnam
  • P. Ganga Rathnam
  • Rangaswamy
  • Sampurna

Soundtrack

The lyrics for the soundtrack were written by Balijepalli Lakshmikantha Kavi, the songs were choreographed by Srinivasa Kulakarni.[2][5]

  • "Melavimpagade Cheliya Veena"
  • "Bhale Face Beautiful Nee Pose"
  • "Yee Poo Podarinta"

Release and reception

The film had an unprecedented release in 1940 at 11 centers in Madras Presidency, and turned out to be a mediocre success.[2][1]

gollark: Z expressions or whatever allow for only indent-based handling, actually.
gollark: haskell haskell (haskell) haskell (haskell $ haskell)
gollark: Might there not be a later, longer one?
gollark: How do you know?
gollark: "We should just have free speech" - osmarks

References

  1. Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (10 July 2014). "Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema". Routledge via Google Books.
  2. narasimham, m.l. "Viswamohini (1940)".
  3. pioneer, Y. V. Rao (21 August 2003). "A revolutionary filmmaker". p. 04 via The Hindu (old).
  4. entertaianment.oneindia.in/celebs/lakshmi/biography.html
  5. "Viswamohini review Indian express". hindi-films-songs.com.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.