Sharapanjara (English: Cage of Arrows) is a 1971 Indian Kannada language film directed by Puttanna Kanagal, based on a novel by Triveni of the same name, and starring Kalpana and Gangadhar in lead roles. This film is considered one of the best Kannada movies ever made. Triveni's novel was richly visual and Puttanna not only stayed faithful to the novel on screen but also retained most of the novel's dialogues and credited Triveni for them.
Sharapanjara | |
---|---|
Directed by | Puttanna Kanagal |
Written by | Triveni |
Screenplay by | Puttanna Kanagal |
Based on | Sharapanjara by Triveni |
Produced by | C. S. Rajah |
Starring | Kalpana Gangadhar Leelavathi K. S. Ashwath |
Cinematography | D. V. Rajaram |
Edited by | V. P. Krishna |
Music by | Vijaya Bhaskar |
Production company | Vardhini Art Pictures |
Distributed by | Vardhini Art Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 172 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Kannada |
The film won the award for Best Feature Film in Kannada at the 20th National Film Awards in 1972.[1] It also won three awards at the 1970-71 Karnataka State Film Awards including the award for First Best Film.
The film was later remade in Telugu as Krishnaveni (1974) starring Vanisri.[2][3]
Plot
editThe film revolves around the societal perception of the mentally ill. Kaveri is an educated, sophisticated, and beautiful woman who hails from a loving middle class family. A chance meeting at a friend's wedding and the hero Satish (Gangadhar) falls in love with Kaveri. They get married with the blessings of their parents. They build their dream house, have a son, buy a car - they not only form a picture-perfect couple but are also generally prosperous. When Kaveri conceives for the second time, the doctor expresses concern over her health. Once the baby is born, Kaveri is tormented by memories of forcefully losing her virginity during her college days and develops symptoms of post-partum psychosis. She is admitted to an in-house mental healthcare facility for treatment.
After recovery, when Kaveri returns home, Satish treats her with callousness. Kaveri faces scorn of some sort or the other from her family, neighbours and society in general, as well, owing to the stigma around mental illness. Eventually when Kaveri discovers that her husband is having an extra-marital relationship with a female colleague, her post-partum psychosis symptoms relapse and he has to be readmitted to the mental healthcare facility.
The movie dwells on two major social issues. One, the social acceptability of mental illness. The general response Kaveri receives from her cook and servants, her family members and neighbours, depicts the lack of sensitivity that is so much needed for people like Kaveri, and the repercussions. Two, the male ego and entitlement - her husband spurns her because of her past incident and uses it as an alibi to be unfaithful to her. In addition, even her guilt and trauma stem from her friend from college forcing himself on her.
Cast
edit- Kalpana as Kaveri
- Gangadhar as Satish, Kaveri's husband
- Srinath as Sudheer, Satish's friend (cameo)
- Leelavathi as Vijaya, Sathish's sister
- K. S. Ashwath as Narayanappa, Kaveri's father
- Advani Lakshmi Devi as Vishali, Kaveri's mother
- Chindodi Leela as Vimala
- M. N. Lakshmi Devi as Maithili
- Shivaram as Bhatta
- Narasimharaju as Maithili's husband
- Loknath as a psychologist
- R. T. Rama
- Kala
- Jayamma
- G. V. Malathamma
- G. V. Swarnamma
- Jr. Jayanthi
- Bangalore Nagesh
- Ganapathi Bhat
- Sharapanjara Iyengar as Iyengar, Satish's colleague
- G. M. Nanjappa
- K. M. Cariappa as guest in wedding (uncredited)
- Puttanna Kanagal as guest in wedding (uncredited)
Soundtrack
editThe soundtrack composed by Vijaya Bhaskar was well received by the audience.
Title | Singers | Lyrics |
---|---|---|
"Bandhana Sharapanjaradali Bandhana" | Devadas | Vijaya Narasimha |
"Bandhana Sharapanjaradali Bandhana" | P. Susheela | Vijaya Narasimha |
"Biligiri Rangayya Neene Helayya" | P. Susheela | Kanagal Prabhakara Sastry |
"Hadinaalku Varsha Vanavasadindha" | P. Susheela | Vijaya Narasimha |
"Kodagina Kaaveri" | P. Susheela, P. B. Sreenivas | Kanagal Prabhakara Sastry |
"Sandesha Megha Sandesha" | P. Susheela | Vijaya Narasimha |
"Uttara Dhruvadim Dakshina Dhruvaku" | P. Susheela, P. B. Sreenivas | D. R. Bendre |
Reception
editThe film was a big hit and ran for one year in Karnataka in about three theatres. Kaveri portrayed by Kalpana is one of the most widely acclaimed characters in Kannada cinema. Kalpana's performance as a woman dealing with trauma was widely acclaimed by critics. The movie was the biggest milestone of Kalpana's illustrious career.
Awards
edit- The film won Filmfare Award for Best Film – Kannada (1971) [4]
- 1970–71 Karnataka State Film Awards
- First Best Film – C. S. Raja
- Best Actress – Kalpana
- Best Screenplay – Puttanna Kanagal
- Screened in Kannada cinema Retrospect section.
References
edit- ^ "20th National Film Awards (1972)" (PDF). International Film Festival of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
- ^ "Remembering Kannada cinema legend Puttanna Kanagal - The Hindu".
- ^ "Krishnaveni (1974)".
- ^ "Collections". 1991.
External links
edit- Sharapanjara at IMDb