Manmadhudu
Manmadhudu (transl. Cupid) is a 2002 Indian Telugu-language romantic comedy film directed by K. Vijaya Bhaskar from a story written by Trivikram Srinivas. Produced by Nagarjuna Akkineni on Annapurna Studios, the film stars Nagarjuna Akkineni, Sonali Bendre, Anshu with the music composed by Devi Sri Prasad. Released on 20 December 2002, the film was commercially successful.[1] The film received Nandi Award for Best Feature Film for that year.[2]
Manmadhudu | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | K. Vijaya Bhaskar |
Produced by | Nagarjuna Akkineni |
Written by | Trivikram Srinivas (story / dialogues) |
Screenplay by | K. Vijaya Bhaskar |
Starring | Nagarjuna Akkineni Sonali Bendre Anshu |
Music by | Devi Sri Prasad |
Cinematography | Sameer Reddy |
Edited by | A. Sreekar Prasad |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 142 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Telugu |
Plot
Abhiram is a manager in an ad agency owned by his paternal uncle Prasad. He despises women and expresses his hatred every minute of the day. However, his workplace is populated by women and he has to deal with it. Prasad, the chairman of the company, appoints Harika as the new assistant manager and Abhiram hates that yet another female employee has joined his office. He places a bug under her desk and uses it to steal her idea for a lipstick ad. He later accuses her of plagiarism, belittling her and questioning her originality. Eventually Harika gets fed up of Abhi’s verbal abuse and goes to Prasad to submit her resignation. Prasad asks her to think about it and tells her about Abhiram's past and why he despises women.
Abhi lost his parents when he was only two years old and his grandfather raises him. Abhi is the only heir to their family business and he enjoys life in his own carefree way. He meets and falls in love with Maheswari, who is the niece of an employee in Abhi's grandfather's company. Alarmed that Abhi is just playing around with his niece, Maheshwari's uncle takes her away to his hometown and arranges her engagement with another man. Abhi goes to where Maheswari is and attempts to assure her uncle that he is going to marry her and that he's serious about their relationship. But on the way to his grandfather's home, they meet with a serious accident, resulting in Abhi's loss of consciousness. When Abhi wakes up, his grandfather tells him that Maheswari has married another person, showing him the invitation card. Abhi feels cheated and starts to hate all women, thinking that they are all superficial and treacherous.
After listening to this, Harika feels sympathy towards Abhi's pain and his child-like mind. She decides to stay with the company and Prasad promotes her as manager and demotes Abhi to being assistant manager for some time. Though infuriated, Abhi has no choice travel with Harika to Paris on a business trip. There they become close and Harika helps him with his phobia of water. Abhi starts to fall for Harika but is disappointed and distances himself from her when she reveals that she is engaged to be married.
After they come back to India, Abhi behaves in a childish manner to get over his disappointment. Harika reciprocates his feelings but is confused about getting married as Abhi won't express his feelings to her. Meanwhile, Abhi's aunt reveals that Maheswari actually died in the accident they were in and they hid that information fearing that Abhi might not be able to recover from the shock of hearing such horrific news. Abhi realizes it was foolish of him to hate women but is too shocked to express his feelings to Harika. At last, Harika tells Abhi that her future marriage was her parents’ choice not hers, indirectly indicating that she is ready to come to him if he asks. Prasad comes to know that Abhi and Harika have feelings for each other and encourages Abhi to go and confess his feelings. But Abhi says that it is Harika who should say it and not him because previously as he did everything as he wanted, he lost Maheshwari. Finally, Harika confesses her feelings over a phone call but due to network disturbance, Abhi isn't able to reply. Thinking that Abhi rejected her, she continues to go for her marriage. But in the end, Abhi reaches her and asks her to marry him and she breaks her previous engagement and marries him.
Cast
- Nagarjuna Akkineni as Abhiram, a quintessential man who hates women
- Sonali Bendre as Harika
- Anshu as Maheswari
- Chandra Mohan as Maheswari's uncle
- Tanikella Bharani as Prasad, Abhiram's uncle
- Sudha as Lakshmi, Abhiram's aunt
- Brahmanandam as Lavangam
- Dharmavarapu Subramanyam as Balasubramaniam
- Sunil as Bunk Seenu
- M. Balaiah as Abhiram's Grandfather
- Ranganath as Harika's father
- Tanish as Harika's younger brother
- Jaya Prakash Reddy as Seenu's father
- Melkote as Sundaram
- Ananth Babu as Subba Rao
- Rekha Vedavyas as Shiva's wife (cameo) in the song "Don't Marry"
- Keerthi Chawla as Malligadu's wife (cameo) in the song "Don't Marry"
- Swapna Madhuri as Swapna
- Anitha Chowdary as TV anchor
- Siva Parvathi
- Swetha
- Sumalatha
- Deepika
- Devisri
- Kausha Rach as an item number
- Ruthika
Soundtrack
Manmadhudu | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 2002 | |||
Recorded | 2002 | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Length | 27:04 | |||
Label | Sohan Music Aditya Music | |||
Producer | Devi Sri Prasad | |||
Devi Sri Prasad chronology | ||||
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The music for this movie was composed by Devi Sri Prasad. The audio was released on 6 December 2002. An audio release function was held at an open dais erected outside glass house in Annapurna Studios. Telugu singer Sunitha anchored the event, the music director of the film Devi Sri Prasad performed some of the songs from the movie. The guests who attended the event include Nagarjuna, director K. Vijaya Bhaskar, lyricist Seetharama Sastry, actors Brahmanandam and Tanikella Bharani.[3]
Addressing the fans, Nagarjuna said "I saw the complete movie yesterday and it came out really well. I can assure you that 'Manmadhudu' would become a super duper hit."[3]
All songs are composed by Devi Sri Prasad. Five out of six songs had lyrics by Sirivennela Sitaramasastri. Music released was on SOHAN Music Company.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Don`t Marry" | Sirivennela Sitarama Sastry | S. P. Balu | 5:41 |
2. | "Gundello Emundho" | Sirivennela Sitarama Sastry | Venu, Sumangali | 4:40 |
3. | "Nenu Nenuga Lene" | Sirivennela Sitarama Sastry | S. P. B. Charan | 3:56 |
4. | "Na Manasune" | Sirivennela Sitarama Sastry | S. P. Balu, Chitra | 4:09 |
5. | "Cheliya Cheliya" | Sirivennela Sitarama Sastry | Shaan | 4:16 |
6. | "Andhamaina Bhamalu" | Bhuvanachandra | Devi Sri Prasad | 4:20 |
Total length: | 27:04 |
Reception
Idlebrain rated 4.5 out of 5 stating "When director and hero have latest hits behind their back, the comparison is inevitable. This film is definitely better than Santosham (Nagarjuna's earlier film). Manmadhudu is as good as Nuvvu Naaku Nachav (Vijaya Bhaskar's earlier film). First half of the film is extremely entertaining (total comedy + flashback romance). And second half (comedy + story) is even better than first half. 95% of the scenes in the film are comedy dialogues. There are few sentiment scenes. But these very few sentiment scenes are bound to leave impact on you. Nagarjuna dominated the show and won accolades from audiences. It's a must recommended hilarious film for all Telugu film lovers."[4] Sify gave an extremely positive review and wrote "Though the story is wafer thin, the director has been able to package the film well with an innovative presentation. Nagarjuna and Sonali are excellent and have played their roles with conviction. The music of Devi Sri Prasad is hummable. The film is out to wallop some fun ‘n’ frolic.", giving a verdict that it is a "Rip-Roaring Entertainer".[5] Fullhyd.com gave a positive review stating "Nagarjuna lends significantly to the character of Abhiram in one of his slickest cinematic performances ever. He perfectly captures the liveliness, complexity and frustration of Abhiram. Unquestionably, Manmathudu proves to be an enthralling vehicle for his crowd-pleasing comeback. Sonali gives a commendable performance as a young and struggling art director who is in love with Abhiram. Devi Sri Prasad's romantic and sometimes ominous musical score nicely complements the images on screen. The dialogues, penned by Trivikram, are chronically mind-boggling. Manmathudu gratifies on many levels. The direction maintains pace and intrigue, the performances are spot on, and the locations are simply sumptuous, be it Smokey Alps or a clean Hyderabad road. All things considered, if you can stomach the thirty minutes of echoing flashback, Manmathudu makes for one intense and rousing entertainment, and if you're on its quirky wavelength, it might just strike you as one of the funniest movies you've ever seen!"[6]
Other versions
The film was later remade as Aishwarya in Kannada, marking the debut of Deepika Padukone and also remade in Bengali as Priyotoma.[7] An unrelated film with the title Manmadhudu 2, also starring Nagarjuna was released in 2019.[8]
References
- "Is Nagarjuna miffed with Trivikram Srinivas because of Akhil Akkineni?". India Today. 8 August 2019. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
- "Nandi Film Awards G.O and Results 2002". APSFTVTDC.
- Telugu Cinema Etc. Idlebrain.com (6 December 2002). Retrieved on 2016-04-12.
- Telugu Cinema – Review – Manmadhudu – Nagarjuna, Sonali Bendre, Anshu – K Vijaya Bhaskar. Idlebrain.com (20 December 2002). Retrieved on 2016-04-12.
- Sify Movies – Review listing. Sify.com (2 December 2012). Retrieved on 2016-04-12.
- Manmadhudu review: Manmadhudu (Telugu) Movie Review – fullhyd.com. Movies.fullhyderabad.com. Retrieved on 12 April 2016.
- "Bengali Film's Are Remaking from South Indian Films". Filmz24.com. 16 December 2012. Archived from the original on 18 March 2014. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- "'Manmadhudu 2' review: A bumpy ride that fails to take off". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
External links
- Manmadhudu at IMDb