Bhakta Kannappa
Bhakta Kannappa (transl. Devotee Kannappa) is a 1976 Indian Telugu directed by Bapu. The film is a remake of 1954 Kannada movie Bedara Kannappa starring Rajkumar which was based on the life of Shaiva devotee, Kannappa Nayanar.[1]
Bhakta Kannappa | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Bapu |
Produced by | U. Suryanarayana Raju |
Written by | Mullapudi Venkata Ramana |
Starring | Krishnam Raju Vanisree M. Balaiah Rao Gopal Rao Sarathi Allu Ramalingaiah Sreedhar Surapaneni Mukkamala M. Prabhakar Reddy |
Music by | Chellapilla Satyam |
Cinematography | V. S. R. Swamy M. V. Raghu |
Edited by | Mandapati Ramachandraiah |
Release date | 1976 |
Country | India |
Language | Telugu |
Credits
Cast
- Krishnam Raju as Arjuna / Kannappa / Thinnadu
- Vanisri as Neela
- M. Balaiah as Lord Shiva
- Rao Gopal Rao as Kailasanatha Shastri
- Sarathi as Kashinatha Shastri
- Allu Ramalingaiah
- Sreedhar as Mallanna
- Prabhakar Reddy as Neela's father
- Mukkamala as Jara Rashtrika (Vedic form of Peddavema Reddy)
- P. R. Varalakshmi as Goddess Parvati
- Jhansi
- Baby Varalakshmi
- Baby Rohini
- Jaya Malini as Ranjana
Crew
- Director: Bapu
- Writer: Mullapudi Venkata Ramana
- Producer: U. Suryanarayana Raju
- Production executive: Jayakrishna
- Production Company: Gopi Krishna Combines
- Original Music: Chellapilla Satyam
- Cinematography: V. S. R. Swamy
- Film Editing: Mandapati Ramachandraiah
- Art Direction: Vaali and V. Bhaskara Raju
- Camera Operator: S. Gopal Reddy
- Assistant Cameramen: M. V. Raghu and Sharath
- Playback singers: S. Janaki, S. P. Balasubramaniam, P. Susheela and V. Ramakrishna
Production
Krishnam Raju was inspired by Ben-Hur (1959) and wanted to produce a film just like it. As such, this film was influenced by the film Ben-Hur. For songs recording, the unit went to tribal areas and composed their tunes and rhythms as songs for the film. In fact, the song Enniyallo was based on the research they had done.[2]
Soundtrack
- "Aakasham Dinchala Nelavanka Tunchala" (Lyrics: Veturi; Singers: V. Ramakrishna and P. Susheela; Cast: Krishnam Raju and Vanisree)
- "Kanda Gelichindi Kanne Dorikindi" (Lyrics: C. Narayana Reddy; Singers: V. Ramakrishna and P. Susheela; Cast: Krishnam Raju, Vanisree and Others)
- "Om Namassivaya Srikantalokesha" (Lyrics: Veturi; Singer: V. Ramakrishna; Cast: Krishnam Raju and M. Balayya)
- "Paravasamuna Sivudu" (Kiratarjuneeyam) (Lyrics: Veturi; Singer: S. P. Balasubrahmanyam; Cast: Krishnam Raju and M. Balayya)
- "Siva Siva Ananelara" (Lyrics: C. Narayana Reddy; Singer: S. Janaki)
- "Siva Siva Sankara Bhaktava Sankara" (Lyrics: Veturi; Singer: V. Ramakrishna; Cast: Krishnam Raju)
- "Thalli Thandri" - (Singer: P. Susheela)
- "Thinavayya" -
- "Thakita Thakita" - (Singer: S. P. Balasubrahmanyam)
- "Yenniyallo Yenniyallo Chandamama" - (Lyrics: Arudra; Singers: V. Ramakrishna and P. Susheela; Cast: Krishnam Raju and Vanisree)
Box-office
The film is a blockbuster and ran for 1 year.[2]
Awards
- National Film Award for Best Audiography - S. P. Ramanathan
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.