Manchi Manasuku Manchi Rojulu

Manchi Manasuku Manchi Rojulu (transl. Good Days for Good People) is 1958 Indian Telugu-language drama film, produced by Sundarlal Nahatha, T. Ashwadanarayana under the Sri Productions banner and directed by C. S. Rao. The film stars N. T. Rama Rao, Rajasulochana with music composed by Ghantasala. It is a remake of the Tamil film Thai Pirandhal Vazhi Pirakkum (1958).[1]

Manchi Manasuku Manchi Rojulu
Theatrical release poster
Directed byC. S. Rao
Written bySamudrala Jr (dialogues)
Screenplay byC. S. Rao
Story byA. K. Velan
Produced bySundarlal Nahatha
T. Ashwadanarayana
StarringN. T. Rama Rao
Rajasulochana
CinematographyKamal Ghosh
Edited byA. K. Gopal
C. Hari Rao
Music byGhantasala
Production
company
Sri Productions
Release date
  • 15 August 1958 (1958-08-15)
Running time
168 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Plot

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The film begins in a village where Raju, a peasant, dotes & rears his sibling Janaki. Zamindar Venkatappa, a tyrant, tramples the farmers whom Raju consistently antagonizes. Dr. Raghu, the benevolent son of Venkatappa, supports & serves the needy. From childhood, Venkatappa's niece, Advocate Rani, loves Raghu, and elders want to knit them. Anyhow, Raghu denies it, yet uppity Rani pledges to possess him. Meanwhile, Raju fixes Janaki's alliance when Venkatappa ruses by confiscating his property to pay off his debts. Thus, it calls off the wedding and penalizes Raju for a deceitful cover-up. Janaki, left alone, encounters consequences, and destiny tosses her towards Raghu, who shelters and nuptials her. Though the Venkatappa couple is hostile, Janaki gains their affection with her virtue, and she conceives. Currently, Raju is out. One night, in Raghu's absence, he seeks vengeance on Venkatappa. Nevertheless, Raju views Janaki, via whom he is aware of the status quo, and silently backs. Venkatappa couple spots it and expels her, suspecting her chastity. Exploiting it, Rani bruits her elopement, which collapses Raghu. After facing many hardships, Janaki delivers a baby boy. Since she is helpless, she endorses him to the childless, wealthy Venkataramaiah couple. Rani tries to get hold of Raghu, who is upset for Janaki, who gains humiliation instead. Fortuitously, Raju rescues Janaki from suicide and retrieves her baby, too. Now enraged, Rani wants revenge and publishes a paper advertisement for the groom. Raju comes across and approaches her in disguise. At this, she proclaims to him that the only way to splice her is to slaughter Raghu. Here, Raju makes a play by divulging actuality to Raghu, counterfeiting his death, and hiding-uniting him with Janaki. At last, the Venkatappa couple & Rani beg forgiveness from Raju & Janaki. Finally, the movie ends happily with the marriage of Raju & Rani.

Cast

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Soundtrack

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Music composed by Ghantasala.[2]

S. No. Song Title Lyrics Singers length
1 "Manchi Manasu" Kosaraju Madhavapeddi Satyam, P. Susheela 5:58
2 "Vinavamma Vinavamma" Samudrala Jr Ghantasala, P. Susheela 2:48
3 "Kalavari Swardham" Kosaraju Ghantasala, P. Susheela 3:09
4 "Raave Naa Chelaya" Samudrala Jr. Ghantasala, P. Susheela 3:50
5 "Bharatha Naari" Samudrala Jr Ghantasala 3:13
6 "Hailo Hailessa" Samudrala Jr. Ghantasala 2:36
7 "Dharaniki Giri Bharama" Samudrala Jr. R. Balasaraswathi Devi 2:54
8 "O Chinni Bala" Samudrala Jr. Jikki 3:43
9 "Anukunnadokkati" Kosaraju Ghantasala 3:35

Reception

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The film has celebrated Silver Jubilee and ran for 152 days in Vijayawada.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Narasimham, M. L. (9 July 2015). "Manchi manasuku manchi rojulu (1958)". The Hindu. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Manchi Manasuku Manchi Rojulu (1958)-Song_Booklet". Indiancine.ma. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  3. ^ "Silver Jubilee Films Of NTR". CineGoer. 9 January 2007. Archived from the original on 16 June 2012. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
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