Baala Bandana

(Redirected from Baala Bandhana)

Baala Bandhana (transl. Bonding of a life time) is a 1971 Indian Kannada language drama film, directed by Peketi Sivaram. The film stars Rajkumar and Jayanthi. The film was a remake of 1953 Bengali film Jog Biyog [1] which was based on the novel of same name by Ashapurna Devi.[2][3][4]

Baala Bandana
VCD cover
Directed byPeketi Sivaram
Screenplay byPeketi Sivaram
Based onJog Biyog
by Ashapurna Devi
Produced byA. L. Srinivasan
StarringRajkumar
Jayanthi
CinematographyV. Selvaraj
Edited byV. P. Krishnan, R. Shanmugham
Music byG. K. Venkatesh
Production
company
ALS Productions
Release date
  • 1971 (1971)
Running time
164 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada

Jog Biyog was earlier remade in Tamil as Padikkadha Medhai, in Telugu as Aatma Bandhuvu and in Hindi as Mehrban. Though the Kannada version was hit, it could not meet the success of the Tamil and Telugu remake versions of the same Bengali movie.[5]

Plot

edit

Orphaned as an infant, Ranga (played by Rajkumar) is brought up by his distant relative Chandrashekhar Rao Bahadur (Sampath) and his compassionate wife Parvathi (M Jayashree).

Chandrashekhar Rao heads a large family of three sons Ramnatha (Vajramuni),  Somanatha (Bengaluru Nagesh) and Vishwantha (Dwarakish), two daughters, the widowed Rajamma (Lakshmi Devi), their young children and Rajamma’ son. Parvathi promises her childhood friend Mayakka that she will take her daughter Lakshmi (Jayanthi) as her third daughter-in-law but ends up giving her in marriage to Ranga when her third son (he is in love with Lepakshi (B Jaya) refuses to marry her.

Life takes a cruel turn for Chandrashekhar Rao when he loses all his wealth in share market. His daughter's marriage is called off, his sons attitude change and he is forced to send Ranga and Lakshmi out. He dies heartbroken. Ranga with the help of Kotaiah (Balakrishna) finds a job in a factory owned by Rachappa (Mahadevappa) whose son is to have married Geetha. How Ranga sets right the turmoil in the family and reunites them forms rest of the story.

Cast

edit

Soundtrack

edit

The music of the film was composed by G. K. Venkatesh and lyrics for the soundtrack written by Ku.Ra.Sitaramashashtry and Vijaya Narasimha. All the songs were received very well. The duet "Chinnadanta Naadige" became hugely popular upon release.

Track list

edit
Title Singer(s)
"Chinnadanta Naadige" P. Susheela, P. B. Sreenivas
"Nijavanne Heluve Naanu" P. B. Sreenivas
"Baachi Baithale" P. B. Sreenivas
"Namma Mane" P. Susheela
"Kalikeye Jaana" P. Susheela
"Aapath Bandhava" K. J. Yesudas

References

edit
  1. ^ Vamanan (23 April 2018). "Tamil cinema's bong connection". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 28 February 2019. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
  2. ^ ரவிக்குமார், வா (5 August 2016). "திறந்த வெளி திரையரங்கத்தின் முன்னோடி!". The Hindu Tamil. Archived from the original on 14 August 2019. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  3. ^ "Mehrban". MySwar. Retrieved 20 August 2024.
  4. ^ Puttaswamy, K. (27 May 2023). "100 years of NTR". Deccan Herald. Retrieved 20 August 2024.
  5. ^ Saraswat, Sarthak (22 July 2016). "Blast from the PAST". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
edit