|
|
Other
Topics : Art
Culture - Fashion
- Tourism
Latest
& Hot Tollywood Film News : * hourly
updation
Back to
Telugu movies
Section
| Tollywood
News - Telugu Cinema Reviews - Previews - Music Chart -
Interviews : |
Award winning Telugu film 'Vanaja' opens US run Aug 31
By Arun Kumar
Washington, July 12 "Vanaja", the acclaimed Telugu film
about the coming-of-age of a teenage girl in rural South India,
will be released in the US Aug 31 after winning 15 awards at
over 60 international film festivals.
Opening its US run in New York City at Cinema Village, the film
that has won more film festival awards than any other Indian
film in 2007, moves to Los Angeles Sep 14 and will debut in
Boston, Detroit, and Austin Sep 21.
Advertisement
"Vanaja" will continue to expand across the country with
openings in San Francisco, Seattle, San Diego, Washington D.C.,
Philadelphia, Atlanta, and other cities.
Winner of the Best Feature Debut award at this year's Berlin
International Film Festival, "Vanaja" has won over audiences and
critics alike during its highly successful festival tour that
took it to countries such as Australia, Chile, China, Egypt,
France, Norway, South Africa and Thailand.
Directed by Rajnesh Domalpalli, the film set in rural South
India, a place where social barriers are built stronger than
fort walls, explores the chasm that divides classes as a young
girl struggles to come of age.
Vanaja (Mamatha Bhukya) is the 14-year-old daughter of a poor,
low caste fisherman, struggling with dwindling catches and
mounting debt. When a sooth-sayer predicts that she will be a
great dancer one day, she goes to work in the house of the local
landlady, Rama Devi (Urmila Dammannagari), in hopes of learning
Kuchipudi dance while earning a keep.
She is hired as a farmhand, and her vivacious ways and spunk
soon catch the landlady's eye: when she is entrusted with
tending the chicken, she's caught, instead, chasing them into a
general pandemonium, and lying unabashedly to conceal her
pranks.
To keep her out of trouble, Rama Devi promotes her to a kitchen
underhand, where she comes up against the old, crusty and
extremely loyal Radhamma (Krishnamma Gundimalla) - Rama Devi's
cook.
It isn't long before Vanaja gets herself invited to play a game
of 'ashta chamma' against Rama Devi. Seeing that losing isn't
the mistress's forte, Vanaja deliberately gives up her game - a
fact that doesn't go unnoticed - and which eventually secures
her the landlady's mentorship - first in music, and then in
dance.
Vanaja excels at the art, and seems to be on a steadily
ascending path when Shekhar (Karan Singh), Rama Devi's
23-year-old son - handsome, muscular and rather insecure,
returns from the US to run for local political elections.
Sexual chemistry is ignited between Shekhar and Vanaja (still a
minor at 15), as flirtation and innuendo bloom. But, the
situation suddenly turns ugly when Vanaja's superior intellect
pits her against Shekhar in a public incident that ultimately
humiliates him in front of his mother.
Matters escalate, spiralling downwards and she is pitched into a
tale of class, family and animus from which there is only one
escape.
IANS..
|