Bhootayyana Maga Ayyu

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Bhootayyna Maga Ayyu
File:Kannada film Bhootayyana Maga Ayyu poster.jpg
Film poster
Directed bySiddalingaiah
Produced byN. Veeraswamy
Chandulal Jain
S. P. Varadaraj
Siddalingaiah
Written byGorur Ramaswamy Iyengar
Screenplay bySiddalingaiah
Based onVayyaari
by Gorur Ramaswamy Iyengar
StarringVishnuvardhan
Lokesh
L. V. Sharada
M. P. Shankar
Rushyendramani
Bhavani
Music byG. K. Venkatesh
CinematographyD. V. Rajaram
Edited byP. Bhaktavatsalam
Production
company
Jain Combines
Distributed byEswari Pictures
Release date
2 February 1974 (1974-02-02)
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada
Budget12 lakhs
Box office45 lakhs

Bhootayyana Maga Ayyu (lit. 'Bhootayya's son Ayyu') is 1974 Indian Kannada language film, directed by Siddalingaiah, based on the story of the same name from the short stories collection, Vayyari, by Gorur Ramaswamy Iyengar,[1] starring Vishnuvardhan, Lokesh and M. P. Shankar in the lead roles. The film is deemed to be a landmark in Kannada cinema. Kamal Hassan felt that the film "was done on a scale that only big Hollywood directors would think of."[2]

Vishnuvardhan (Gulla), Lokesh (Ayyu), and M. P. Shankar (Bhootayya) play the main characters.[3] Lokesh won the State Award for this movie. The best actress award was won by Bhavani and the best supporting actress was won by the veteran artiste Rushyendramani. Incidentally, this is the only film in which the grandmother and granddaughter duo of Bhavani and Rushyendramani ever shared screen space in. The film was artistically directed by Siddalingaiah of Bangarada Manushya fame. D. V. Rajaram won accolades for the fantastic cinematography, which is considered one of his lifetime best. The cinematography and the acting skills of the lead characters remains the most positive point of the movie in addition to a strong and touching story line.

The music was scored by G. K. Venkatesh and the film also has some very good songs rendered by P. B. Sreenivas and S. Janaki. Malenada Henna Mai Banna is one of the evergreen songs in the history of Kannada films. Though M. P. Shankar appears in a short role in the movie, he is successful in making an ever-lasting impression on the audience.

This film was shot in Kalasapura village, near Chikmagalur town. Siddalingaiah had a particular attachment with this location. His other landmark movie Bangarada Manushya was also shot (partly) in the same village.

Kamal Haasan had lauded the movie while picking his 70 favourite Indian movies and had said - Though this was a commercial film, it was done on a scale that only big Hollywood directors would think of. So much hard work went into the film.[2]

Jayamala had revealed that she had played a small role in this movie.[4] One of the co-producers of the movie, S. P. Varadaraj was the younger brother of actor Rajkumar.This was the first movie of a Rajkumar family member in partnership with others. The title card of the movie revealed that this was the first Kannada Eastman colour movie to have been completely shot outdoor.[5] H.R. Bhargava was the associate director of this movie.

The film was remade in Tamil as Ellorum Nallavare (1975), starring Muthuraman, in Hindi as Ek Gaon Ki Kahani (1975), starring Rakesh Pandey and in Telugu as Andharoo Manchivaare (1976), starring Shoban Babu.

Plot[edit]

Bhootayya is a ruthless zamindar of a small village, who used to mercilessly occupy the land of the villagers to whom he had lent money, when they fail to repay their debts. He was very shrewd and talked the villagers into building a dam across the river in the outskirts of the village, which was prone to floods. He gets hold of the fertile land on the banks of the river and builds a house for his son Ayyu (Lokesh).

A few days later, Bhootayya falls ill and eventually dies. The villagers rejoice at the death of Bhootayya and they hold such a grudge against the zamindar that nobody comes to even see his dead body. His son Ayyu tries to get some people to him in completing the funeral rites and offers a huge sum but nobody relents and Ayyu cremates Bhootayya by carrying him to the cremation ground all alone.

The villagers remain wary of Ayyu, and the most rebellious among them was Gulla. He is very outspoken and tries to restrict Ayyu from being mean and merciless towards the villagers like Bhootayya. Gulla's father had way back given a surety to Bhootayya for somebody else's debt and was unable to repay the money. Ayyu promptly goes with his men to confiscate Gulla's house. In an ensuing argument, Gulla smacks Ayyu.

Ayyu takes it seriously and files a police complaint against Gulla, who is then arrested by the police. Unable to bear the consequences, Gulla's father dies. Thus begins a prolonged enmity between Gulla and Ayyu and both swear to kill each other. Gulla also hires a lawyer to teach Ayyu a lesson and starts spending all his property on the court case. When Gulla swears to kill Ayyu, Gulla's wife goes to Ayyu to warn him and also ask him to forgive her husband. But, Ayyu behaves ruthlessly with her and swears to kill Gulla.

Ayyu's wife reminds him about his father's attitude towards the villagers and their reaction when Bhootayya died. This makes Ayyu give a thought about his behaviour. Gulla's wife tries to kill herself by drowning herself in the river as she gets convinced that Ayyu will not spare her husband. Ayyu sees a woman drowning and being a distinguished swimmer saves her only to find that she is his enemy's wife. This incident has a lasting effect on Ayyu, who tries to end the feud. Ayyu clears all of Gulla's debts and he asks Gulla to work for him to pay off the debts. Gulla agrees and works sincerely to pay off the debts, but resents Ayyu's friendship.

During the village festival, the villagers plot to ransack Ayyu's house and the person who leads the pack is Gulla. They attack Ayyu's house at midnight, and set his house on fire. Ayyu, who is a changed person now, simply states this as an accident when the district police come to investigate the case. This incident begins to make an impact on the villagers to change their perceptions about Ayyu.

With his house burned down, Ayyu goes with his family to live in the house by the river. One day Ayyu goes to the town, leaving behind his family. The village is in flood and Ayyu's house is in danger. Ayyu's wife and kids try to come out of the house as the dam collapses and the water enters the house, flooding it completely. Gulla takes a raft and single-handedly sets out to rescue Ayyu's family. With much difficulty, he saves Ayyu's family and brings them to safety. Ayyu reaches the village and is shocked to see the plight of the village. But he is relieved to see that Gulla has rescued them.

Ayyu hugs Gulla and they end their years of hatred and enmity. The villagers help Ayyu to build a new house and the village continues to live in harmony. They all celebrate the festival.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

The twenty-minute climax was an adaptation of one paragraph from the novel. The climax was shot in Kalasapura, Madarayanakatte, and Shivanasamudra for nearly 20 days.[6] Initially a tank was constructed to allow water into the house but it broke as soon as the camera began to roll. Siddalingaiah got it reconstructed and shot the scene again. Similarly, ropes tied to the raft gave way and started drifting in the current. Expert divers immediately jumped in and got hold of it. The scene where villagers ransack Lokesh's house and set it on fire, Shivaiah had a fire engine stationed; wet gunny clothes were kept for exigencies, besides storing water in drums.[6] Famous actress Jayamala was one of the group artists in the film.[7]

Soundtrack[edit]

Bhootayyana Maga Ayyu
Soundtrack album by
Released
1974
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length13:09
LabelSaregama

G. K. Venkatesh composed the soundtrack, and lyrics were written by Chi. Udaya Shankar and R. N. Jayagopal. The album consists of four tracks.[8]

Tracklist
No. TitleSinger(s) Length
1. "Virasavemba Vishake"  G. K. Venkatesh 3:22
2. "Sobaana Sobaana"  Vani Jairam 3:24
3. "Malenaada Henna"  P. B. Sreenivas, S. Janaki 3:22
4. "Maariye Gathiyendu"  G. K. Venkatesh, P. B. Sreenivas 3:01
Total length:
13:09

References[edit]

  1. https://medium.com/applaudience/https-medium-com-harishgp-12-kannada-movies-of-1970s-that-everyone-should-watch-3cd6b9a0c9ba
  2. 2.0 2.1 https://www.hindustantimes.com/interactives/kamal-hassan-70-movies/
  3. "Bhootayyana Maga Ayyu Cast and Crew". Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  4. http://epaper.prajavani.net/Home/index?Edition=185&Date=MTEvMDYvMjAxNw==&Page=250535[permanent dead link]
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRJkkpOC12s
  6. 6.0 6.1 http://www.thehindu.com/features/friday-review/The-storm-that-hides-down-below/article16644600.ece
  7. [1]
  8. "Bhootayyana Maga Ayyu (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) - EP". iTunes. Retrieved 8 October 2014.

External links[edit]

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