Manusangada

Manusangada (English title:Cry Humanity) is an Indian Tamil-language indie drama film directed by Amshan Kumar.[1] The film is based on a true story about the signaling of the rise of Dalit struggles in contemporary India against long standing human rights violations. The title 'Manusangada' is from Inquilab's poem of the same name and literally means 'We are humans too.'

Manusangada
Tamilமனுசங்கடா
Directed byAmshan Kumar[1]
Produced by
  • S.Thara
  • Gana.Natkunan
Screenplay byAmshan Kumar
Starring
  • Rajeev Anand
  • Manimegalai
  • A.S.Sasikumar
  • Sheela Rajkumar
  • Vidhur Rajarajan
  • Sethu Darwin
  • Anand Sampath
Music byAravind–Shankar
CinematographyP.S. Dharan
Edited byDhanasekar
Production
company
A K FILMS
Release date
  • 13 October 2017 (2017-10-13) (Jio MAMI)
  • 12 October 2018 (2018-10-12)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

The film had its world priemere in Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival[2] and its International Premiere at the Cairo International Film Festival.[3][4] It was also selected in the Indian Panorama section of International Film Festival of India, Goa and was the only Tamil film to be selected that year.[5] The film has also won the Best Feature Film award from the Puducherry Government in its 35th Indian Panorama Festival.[6][7]

Synopsis

When Kolappan's father dies, he isn't allowed to carry his father's body through the common pathway because he's a Dalit. He seeks help from official powers only to find that they are equally casteist. Refusing to be cowed down, Kolappan begins a protest and finds his village standing by him. Based on an actual incident, Kolappan's story is a look at the deeply-embedded prejudice that Dalits have endured and against which they are rising.[8]

Cast

  • Rajeev Anand
  • Manimegalai
  • A.S.Sasikumar
  • Sheela Rajkumar
  • Vidhur Rajarajan
  • Sethu Darwin
  • Anand Sampath

Development and production

Amshan Kumar chanced upon a news clipping of the incident in 2016, he set aside a screenplay of a William Shakespeare adaptation that he had been working on.[1] Manusangada was shot with a handheld camera in a series of shots with the aesthetic that reflects the reality at hand. Kumar wanted to film it in a docu-drama style with a tragic narrative.[9] The filming was completed in 22 days and was shot on location.[1]

Film crew, IFFI (2017)

Awards & Film Festivals

  • Best Feature Film Award, Government of Puducherry, Indian Panorama [6][7]

The film was screened at the following Film festivals:

References

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