Mrityudand
Mrityudand | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Prakash Jha[1] |
Produced by | Prakash Jha |
Screenplay by | Prakash Jha |
Starring |
Madhuri Dixit Shabana Azmi Ayub Khan Mohan Agashe Om Puri Mohan Joshi |
Music by | Anand-Milind |
Cinematography |
Rajan Kinagi Rajan Kothari |
Edited by | Prakash Jha |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 152 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Box office | ₹5.25 crore (US$770,000)[2] |
Mrityudand (The Death Sentence) is an Indian Hindi drama film released in 1997. It was directed and produced by Prakash Jha and stars Madhuri Dixit, Shabana Azmi, Ayub Khan, Mohan Agashe and Om Puri.
The film is a commentary on social and gender injustice.[3] As in his other movies, filmmaker Prakash Jha has focussed on the social problems that plague his native state of Bihar, India, and like his other movies this one straddles the boundary between art film and commercial film. The film also boasted of some semi-classical music, tuned by Anand-Milind and Raghunath Seth and worded by Javed Akhtar.
Synopsis
It is set in the fictional village of Bilaspur, Bihar in 1996. The movie starts with the grisly portrayal of a mob killing of two defenceless women, orchestrated by vested interests, and how village power players later evade administrative inquiries into this atrocity. This incident sets the tone for much of the rest of the movie.
The central characters are a young couple, Vinay (Ayub Khan) and Ketki (Madhuri Dixit). They are quickly plunged into the midst of machinations by several powerful and unscrupulous villagers. Foremost among them is contractor Tirpat Singh (Mohan Joshi), a powerful, corrupt and ruthless man who oppresses poor people and especially women with impunity. Vinay too becomes influenced by Tirpat, and under this influence spirals down a dark road of domestic abuse, alcoholism, and selfishness that alienates his loving wife and tears apart the whole family, despite her best efforts to fight this.
The rest of the movie deals with their efforts to break out of this morass, both within their relationship as well as outside of it, and Vinay's and especially Ketki's long, hard, and bloody struggle to confront and defeat the forces of oppression and male domination in the village.[4]
Cast
- Madhuri Dixit as Ketki
- Shabana Azmi as Chandravati
- Ayub Khan as Vinay Singh
- Om Puri as Rambaran Mahto
- Shilpa Shirodkar as Kanti
- Mohan Joshi as Tirpat Singh
- Mohan Agashe as Abhay Singh
- Harish Patel as MLA Durga Pandey
- Brij Gopal
- Abha Dhulia
- Suhas Bhalekar
- Achyut Potdar as Ketki's father (Special Appearance)
- Mona Ambegaonkar in a Special Appearance
- Raj Kamal
- Surendra Sathi
- Sudhir Mishra
- Vinod Kumar
- Hemanth Gadkar
- Pinky Chinoy
- John Phanse
- Rohit Raj
- Vicky Ahuja
- Indu Shivraj
Soundtrack
- "Keh Do Ek Bar Sajana Itna Kyu Pyar Sajna" - Udit Narayan, Alka Yagnik
- "Raat Maheke To Yun Bhi Hota Hai Chand" - Sadhana Sargam, Hariharan
- "Itani Hai Mori Kahani Ke Raja Mai To Ho Gayi Tori Diwani" - Sadhana Sargam
- "Kab Se Main Hun Khadi Beech Dhare, Dur Nadiya Ke" - Sadhana Sargam
- "Tum Bin Man Ki Bat Adhuri, Din Hai Adhure" - Kumar Sanu, Sadhana Sargam
Awards
- Special Jury Award, Best Feature Film, Cinéma Tout Ecran, Geneva (1998)
- Audience Award, Best Feature Film, Bangkok Film Festival (1998)
- Best Actress, Madhuri Dixit, Screen Awards (1998)
- Best Supporting Actress, Shabana Azmi, Screen Awards (1998)
- Best Actor In A Negative Role, Mohan Joshi, Screen Awards (1998)
- Best Director, Prakash Jha, Zee Cine Awards (1998)
- Best Dialogue Writer, Prakash Jha, Zee Cine Awards (1998)
- Best Sound (Re-recording), Zee Cine Awards (1998)
- Best Feature Film (Critics’ Choice), Prakash Jha, Sansui Awards (1998)
- Best Actress, Madhuri Dixit, Sansui Awards (1998)
Acclaim
Mrityudand was invited for the gala premiere at BFI London Film Festival in 1997.[5]