Chauranga

Chauranga

Theatrical Release Poster
Directed by Bikas Ranjan Mishra
Produced by Onir
Sanjay Suri
Mohan Mulani
Written by Bikas Ranjan Mishra
Starring Sanjay Suri
Tannishtha Chatterjee
Soham Maitra
Cinematography Ramanuj Dutta
Production
company
Anticlock Films
Distributed by Anticlock Films
Release dates
  • 21 October 2014 (2014-10-21) (Mumbai Film Festival)
  • 8 January 2016 (2016-01-08) (India)
Country India
Language Hindi
Budget approx. 8 crore (US$1.2 million)

Chauranga (Hindi चौरंगा) is a 2016 Hindi film. It is the debut feature film of Indian writer-director Bikas Ranjan Mishra, produced by Onir and Sanjay Suri.[1] The film was developed at the Screenwriters' Lab organized by National Film Development Corporation of India in collaboration with Locarno Film Festival and the ScriptStation of Berlinale Talent Campus, a part of Berlin International Film Festival.[2] The Film won Golden Gateway of India Award for Best Film (India Gold 2014) at the 16th Mumbai Film Festival.[3]

The film is set to have a worldwide release on 8 January 2016.[4]

Plot

A fourteen-year-old Dalit boy (Soham Maitra) is growing up in an unnamed corner of India. His dream is to go to a town school like his elder brother (Riddhi Sen) and his reality is to look after the pig that his family owns. His only escape is to sit atop a Jamun tree and adore his beloved (Ena Saha) passing by on her scooter. His unspoken love is as true as his mother’s helplessness who cleans the cowsheds of the local strongman’s mansion, with whom she also has a secret liaison. When the boy’s elder brother comes on a vacation to the village, he soon finds out about his younger brother’s infatuation. The learned elder brother makes him realize the need to express his love and helps him write a love letter.

Cast

Development

Bikas Mishra's script was selected by the National Film Development Corporation in 2010 for its Screenwriters' Lab organized at Locarno Film Festival. The script was later selected by Berlinale Talent Campus' ScriptStation program. Marten Rabarts,[5] the artistic director of Amsterdam based Binger FilmLab consulted Bikas on the script at both the labs.

Awards

References

External links

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