Kokila (film)

Kokila s

Poster of the film
Directed by Balu Mahendra
Produced by T. Mocham Fernando
Written by Balu Mahendra
Starring
Music by Salil Chaudhary
Cinematography Balu Mahendra
Edited by Umesh Kulkarni
Distributed by G.N. Films
Release dates
7 October 1977
Running time
140 minutes
Country India
Language Kannada

Kokila is a 1977 Kannada-language film starring Kamal Haasan, Shoba playing the title character along with Roja Ramani and Mohan in other prominent roles. The film marked the directional debut of Balu Mahendra, who was a cinematographer working predominantly in South Indian films then. The film was successful upon release in Karnataka and its neighbouring states, becoming the first Kannada film to be screened for 100 days in Madras (now Chennai). Kokila was remade into Malayalam as Oomakkuyil and in Hindi as Aur Ek Prem Kahani both by Mahendra himself in 1983 and 1996. Balu Mahendra won the National Film Award for Best Cinematography and Karnataka State Film Award for Best Screenplay.

Plot

Kokila (Shoba), a medical college student lives with her father, an engineer and her mother in a home in Madras. A house maid (Roja Ramani) who is very close to the family also lives with them. As Kokila's father travels a lot and his wife suffering from health problems, they decide to keep a paying guest. Vijayakumar (Kamal Haasan), a bank executive comes and lives in the household as a paying guest. Kokila and Vijayakumar fall in love and plan to get married with the consent of her parents. In the meanwhile, suddenly one night Vijayakumar and the house maid are alone in the home. They both end up making love, and Kokila after her return remains unaware about this incident, though the maid is well aware of Kokila's affair with Vijay. Vijay, however, forgets the maid and continues to live with his normal love for Kokila. Suddenly, one day while Kokila is away on a college tour, Vijay gets to know that the maid is pregnant. Sathya suggests the maid that the child be aborted. The dejected maid leaves the house. When Kokila returns from the tour realise both Vijay and the maid missing. She is informed by her mother that Vijay has vacated the room, and makes several uhnsuccessful attempts to find the whereabouts of Vijay. After a few days, Kokila meets Vijay accidentally, in a village where she is posted as a doctor. At the point in time, she gets to know that Vijay and her maid got married and have a child named "Kokila".

Cast

Production

The film was the directional debut of Balu Mahendra,[1] who was one of the leading cinematographers in South Indian cinema at the time.[2] The film also marked the debut of Mohan, who would go on to establish himself as a successful actor in the Tamil film industry. People from five different industries worked in the film; Kamal Haasan and Balu Mahendra (Tamil), Roja Ramani (Telugu), Mohan (Kannada), Shoba (Malayalam) and Salil Choudhry (Bengali). However, none of them except Mohan knew the Kannada language.[3] Kamal, the lead actor did not know Kannada at that time but dubbed in his own voice. Debutant Mohan was a student of "Benaka", a drama troupe run by Kannada director B. V. Karanth. Mohan was acting in a play named Sidhathe alongside G. V. Iyer and Girish Karnad and he was asked to send his photograph to Mahendra who was in search of new actors for his directional venture. Subsequently, Mohan was offered a role in the film where he played Kamal's friend.[4]

Reception

The film was screened at the International Film Festival of India then known as "Filmotsav78" in Madras (now Chennai).[5] Kokila was not only a box-office success in Karnataka but also in the neighbouring state of Tamil Nadu. In 1980, it became the first Kannada film to have a 100-day run in Chennai.[5] The film was released in its original language without being dubbed to Tamil, three years after the release, and ran for more than 140 days in Chennai, a record for a Kannada film in Tamil Nadu.[5]

Accolades

References

  1. Jayaraman, Gayatri (30 September 2011). "Silk Route". Mint. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  2. Warrier, Shobha (4 March 2003). "Julie Ganapathy was a big risk". Rediff.com. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  3. "வரலாற்றுச்சுவடுகள் – திரைப்பட வரலாறு 1002 – கமலுடன் 4 மொழிகளில் நடித்த ரோஜாரமணி". Daily Thanthi (in Tamil). 4 September 2008.
  4. S. R., Ashok Kumar (28 December 2007). "Mr. Simple is back". The Hindu. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 "வரலாற்றுச்சுவடுகள் – திரைப்பட வரலாறு 1022 – கமல்ஹாசனுக்கு நடிகர் ராஜ்குமார் புகழாரம்". Daily Thanthi. 2 October 2008.
  6. "25th National Film Awards" (PDF). Directorate of Film Festivals. Retrieved 13 May 2013.

External links

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