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Arundhati
Directed byKodi Ramakrishna
Produced byM Shyam Prasad Reddy
Written byChintapalli Ramana
StarringAnushka Shetty
Sonu Sood
Arjan Bajwa
Sayaji Shinde
Music byKoti
CinematographyK. K. Senthil Kumar
Edited byMarthand K Venkatesh
Production
company
Release date
Running time
131 minutes
192 minutes (director’s cut)
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Arundhati is a 2009 Indian Telugudark fantasyhorror film directed by Kodi Ramakrishna with creative direction of Rahul Nambiar and written by Chintapalli Ramana, starring Anushka Shetty, Sonu Sood, Arjan Bajwa and Sayaji Shinde. The film was released on 16 January 2009 to positive reviews and emerged as a commercial success,thereby becoming a Blockbuster also became second highest grossing Telugu film of all-time.[1] . It is remade in Bengali as Arundhati starring Koel Mallick.

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  • 3Production
  • 7Reception

Plot[edit]

Arundhati (Anushka Shetty) is a beautiful princess and courageous heavenly, great-great-granddaughter of the Raja of Gadwal, Mahasamsthan. Arrangements are being made for her marriage. Arundhati is the first female to be born since her great grandmother and is especially revered in the family. She then goes to Gadwal, where her grandfather resides to visit him. Her grandfather, the head of the family, talks to her with respect as if she were older than him. She receives a misleading phone call in her fiance Rahul's (Arjan Bajwa) voice asking her to come to the fort of Gadwall, where she faces a horrible revelation. Learning the story from an aged servant maid, Chandramma (Manorama), Arundhati comes to know that she is a look alike of her great-grandmother Arundhati/Jejjamma.

Jejjama is an expert in painting, dancing and martial arts. Her elder sister is married to her cousin Pasupathi (Sonu Sood). Pasupathi, a womanizer, rapes the women he likes and kills those who object. While Jejjama was still a young girl, he raped and killed her blind dance teacher while a horrified Jejjama watched through the peephole. Jejjama, furious, demands that he be killed but the King tells her that this would ruin her sister's life. Hearing this, Jejjamma's sister commits suicide to save her family reputation. The people of Gadwal furiously thrash Pasupathi and tie him to his horse. Though Gadwal celebrates his death, he is saved by Aghoras (saints who practice the dark arts). Pasupathi masters the Tantric arts and returns to Gadwal many years later to exact his revenge.

He unleashes carnage as he uses his powers to torture innocent people—something the Aghoras don't do.

Meanwhile, Jejjama has grown up to be a gorgeous and brave woman and is set to be married. Pasupathi arrives on Jejjama's marriage day and magically starts removing her clothes but Jejjama seduces him and performs a special dance imbued with martial arts to lull Pasupathi. She then cuts off his tongue (thus ending the incantations) and pins his hands, allowing a chandelier to fall on his body. She spares him from being killed to prevent him from becoming a 'pretatma' (a demonic poltergeist). Pasupathi is buried alive in a tomb and powerful 'yantras' (defensive spells) are put on it to prevent him from coming out. Though pasupathi's corpse is buried , his soul moves out all around Gadwal destroying peoples' lives by causing famine and diseases. Jejjamma then visits many temples and sages for solution, but no one is able to solve the problem. She finally meets some Agories who tell her that she can only destroy Pasupathi's vengeful spirit on her next birth. Hence to initiate her re-incarnation, she agrees to give up her life. They instruct her to bid goodbye to everyone before the sacrifice and before leaving she tells everyone that the first girl who will be born in their race will be a replica of her, having born with her face and they all ought to respect the child as they would respect her. She then returns to the aghoras asking for a painful death that will magnify her revenge on Pasupathi. She then undergoes a painful death by having coconuts broken open on her skull. The queen then dies and her skeletal remains are fashioned into a dagger – the one weapon that could destroy Pasupathi forever.

A mad person unknowingly breaks the tomb and releases Pasusathi's spirit - 'pretatma'. Anwar (Sayaji Shinde) who treats patients through sorcery asks her to fight Pasupathi. Arundhati comes to know that her great-grandmother had prepared a 'weapon' with her own bones and had kept it with the sages. During their attempts to procure the weapon their family are threatened and she loses Chandramma. Later the spirit apparently kills Anwar by throwing him off a cliff.

Arundhati, believing that Anwar is dead, returns to the fort to surrender herself to Pasupathi to prevent the death of her family members. But Anwar, who had survived the fall, hands the weapon to Arundhati. The weapon has to be soaked in Arundhathi's blood before it can be used. Before Anwar can tell her this, Pasupathi kills him. As a last resort to save herself, Arundhati tries to kill herself with the same weapon. The dagger glows from her blood showing that Jejjamma had come. She kills Pasupathi and the building sets fire and blasts. Then Arundhati is shown walking out of the place as Jejjamma.

Cast[edit]

  • Anushka Shetty as Arundhathi and Jejamma (dual role)
  • Sonu Sood as Pasupathi (Main Antagonist)
  • Arjan Bajwa as Rahul
  • Sayaji Shinde as Anwar
  • Manorama as Chandramma
  • Kaikala Satyanarayana as Bhupathi Raja
  • Subhashini as Pasupathi's Mother
  • Bhanu Chander as Arundhati's Father
  • BHEL Prasad as Nilendra Varma (Satyanarayana's brother)
  • Divya Nagesh as Young Arundhati
  • Leena siddu as Dance teacher

Production[edit]

Development[edit]

Shyam Prasad Reddy revealed that he got the idea of Arundhati while receiving National Awards for the film Anji (2004).[2] Being inspired from films like Chandramukhi and Exorcist, he made it a female oriented story 'for a bigger appeal so that entire family can watch it. I added classical dance to it. I wanted to mount the film on a grandeur scale.[sic] I wanted to play the film on 'fear of the evil spirit'. Arundhati is about good fighting evil. Hence I had to make sure that both the characters of Arundhati and Pasupati equally powerful [sic]'.[2][3]

Casting[edit]

Shyam wanted somebody with 5 feet and 10 inches height and 'should look royal because she the queen, she rides on horses and elephants'. Gemini Kiran suggested Shyam to choose Anushka for the role. After conducting her photoshoot, Shyam explained the story and Arundhati's characterisation.[2] Sowmya Sharma had dubbed for the character of modern day Arundhati and Shilpa for Jejjama. Shyam wanted Tamil actor Pasupathy to enact the role of antagonist of same name but since the character has 'a royal side to the character where he has to look princely', he had chosen Sonu Sood for the role after seeing his performance in Ashok (2006).[2] Dubbing voice for Sonu Sood was provided by P. Ravishankar. Ravishankar completed the dubbing within 14 days and found it to be 'most challenging work' and his voice 'has gone sore for 5 times during this process'.[4]

For the characterisation of Fakira who helps Anushka's character in present era, Shyam drew inspiration from the priest character in 1976 American horror film The Omen.[3] Shyam considered Nasiruddin Shah, Nana Patekar and Atul Kulkarni for the role however none of their dates were available. Sayaji Shinde was finally chosen for the character.[2]


Creative Direction & Visual Effects[edit]

One glance at the poster designs and trailers of Arundhati, one would notice the name of Rahul Nambiar prominently displayed along with Shyam Prasad Reddy and Kodi Rama Krishna’s names. He is not only the visual effects supervisor, but also the creative director of the film. In fact, he directed 60% of Arundhati film.[5] Rahul says 'We realized that the movie would bomb if we release it like that. Shyam Prasad Reddy appointed me as the creative director for the film in November 2007 and asked me to do whatever it takes. We rewrote scenes. I shot 60% of the final film that is playing in theaters now. I also got involved in editing, sequencing and music departments. It was great to work with Anushka shetty, M Venkatesh garu, koti garu and best of team of industry, learned a lot working with them. But best was working with shyam, he is very very talented producer and a great human being. We had dates problem of Anushka, Sonu Sood and Sayaji Shinde as they became very busy by then. We added the jejemma song, entire aghora episode, sleek action sequences and process of making the weapon in the second version' adds Rahul Nambiar, who was Creative Director and Visual Effects Supervisor of the film.[6][7]


Apart from Creative Director of the film, Rahul played another role as Visual Effects supervisor, he adds 'Almost every sequence was hell. Some of the challenging ones were: the palace collapse at the end; Villain comes out breaking through the wall; and creating the fort and the villain. But the greatest and best part of the visual effects was to communicate the villain effectively and through many things like palace, mayhem, sound, voice etc. A lot of technical equipment was used. A motion capture camera from Australia was bought in along with a person who mans it (the person had used it in The Lord of the Rings, King Kong). I have never done such pre-production work before in any film like what I did for Arundhati. We created all the action in computer dolls, animated all of them and added all the film cameras and made it like a film. We saw it as a rough edit and then we shot it. There was lot of meticulous work. The pre-production itself took about seven months' added Rahul.[8] 'It is great feeling when your efforts pays off' adds Rahul. His work was well appreciated by the audience, many titled as main plus point for the film to work.[9]

Music[edit]

The music and background music of this film is composed by Koti. The soundtrack was critically acclaimed well. Especially the tracks 'Jejamma', 'Chandamama', 'Bhu Bhu' were huge hits. The album featured eminent singers like K.S.Chithra, Kailash Kher, N. C. Karunya. Koti while speaking told that this film helped him to prove himself & in his career of 30 years this was his personal best. The track 'Jejamma', required a majestic and ambient grandeur, so Koti selected Kailash Kher. the track 'Bhu Bhu' took many days for Koti to compose & he felt it should be sung by an amazing singer who could aptly give the ferocious feel & hence went with Chithra. Lyrics are penned by Veturi Sundararama Murthy 'Bhu Bhu Bhujangam', Anant Sriram 'Chandamama' , C. Narayana Reddy 'Jejamma'. This album features 4 songs and 3 instrumentals.

Telugu Track Listing
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1.'Chandamama Nuvve Nuvve'Sandeep, Sai Krishna, Murali, Naga Sahiti , Renukha & Chorus.5:35
2.'Bhu Bhu Bhujangam'K.S.Chithra5:25
3.'Kammu Konna Cheekatlona'Kailash Kher7:48
4.'Harivillulona Prananiposi'N. C. Karunya5:15
5.'Soul Of Arundathi (Arundathi's Music)'Instrumental2:19
6.'Agony Of Evil (Pasupathi's Music)'Instrumental2:35
7.'The Beliver (Pakheer's's Music)'Instrumental1:19
Tamil Track Listing
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1.'Kannipenmai Pove Pove'Sandeep, Sai Krishna, Murali, Naga Sahiti , Renukha & Chorus.5:35
2.'Bhoomi Kodhikum'K.S.Chithra5:25
3.'Kummiruttil Kudamkilithu kundril ezhulum'Kailash Kher7:48
4.'Enna Viratham Ettrai Neyamma'Kailash Kher5:15


Awards[edit]

Nandi Awards

Though this film was released in 2009, it was registered for 2008 films for Nandi Awards, and took the lion's share.Nandi Awards won by the film are[10]

  • Best Villain – Sonu Sood
  • Best Child Actress – Divya Nagesh
  • Best Editor – Marthand K Venkatesh
  • Best Art Director – Ashok
  • Best Audiographer – Radhakrishna & Madhusudhan Reddy
  • Best Costume Designer – Deepa Chandar
  • Best Makeup Artist – Ramesh Mahanti
  • Best Male Dubbing Artist – P. Ravi Shankar
  • Nandi Award for Best Special Effects – Rahul Nambiar
  • Special Jury Award – Anushka Shetty
Filmfare Awards South
  • Filmfare Best Actress Award (Telugu) – Anushka Shetty (2009)
  • Filmfare Best Supporting Actor Award (Telugu) – Sonu Sood (2009)
Santosham Film Awards
  • Best Director - Kodi Ramakrishna
  • Best Producer - Shyam Prasad Reddy
  • Best Actress - Anushka Shetty
  • Best villain - Sonu Sood
  • Best Dubbing Artist Male - Ravi Shankar
  • Best Cameraman - K. K. Senthil Kumar

Reception[edit]

Critical reception[edit]

Rediff gave it three stars out of five and said 'The main plus points of the film are screenplay (creative director Rahul Nambiar and the Mallemalla Unit), art direction (Ashok), cinematography (Senthil Kumar), editing (Marthand K. Venkatesh), special effects and the performances of Anushka [Images], Sonu Sood and Sayaji Shinde. On the whole, Arundhati is a watchable film provided you don't have a weak heart and don't get into discussing logic, science and rationality. Just watch what unfolds on the screen – for that's visual grandeur'.[11]Sify gave verdict as 'Worth a watch' with four stars noted 'The film has come across with some really mind blowing graphics and presentation, even the performances were top notch that helped. While the drums scene is a take from the Chinese movie 'House of Flying Daggers' it was well taken and presented. The shock points are high and one can say that the film is definitely not for the weak hearted. There are enough chilling moments to shake the audience off their chair. The film is one of the best made ever in the history of Telugu cinema in terms of technical values so it deserves to be a good hit'.[12]

Download Arundhati Movie In Hindi

Box office[edit]

The film grossed 350 million domestically[13] at the box office and 30 million from overseas markets.[14] The satellite rights of the movie were sold to Gemini TV for 70 million.[15]

Legacy[edit]

Arundhati's success turned Anushka into one of the most sought-after actresses in Telugu cinema and catapulted her into the foray of leading Telugu actresses.[16] Sonu Sood attained stardom with this film and went on to work in several South Indian films as an antagonist. After the release of Arundhati, people began recognising him as Pasupathi. P. Ravishankar who dubbed for him also became popular and was referred to as 'Bommali Ravi Shankar' by the media there after.[17]

According to writer Gopimohan, Arundhati made audience to 'welcome creative content' and Magadheera started a trend of experimentation with period, socio-fantasy and spiritual themes that was continued in films like Panchakshari (2010), Nagavalli (2010), Anaganaga O Dheerudu (2011), Mangala (2011), Sri Rama Rajyam (2011) and Uu Kodathara? Ulikki Padathara? (2012).[18]Tammareddy Bharadwaja said 'Ever since Arundhati and Magadheera did well at the box office, the rest of the industry started following their footsteps. Also, since there is an irrational craze to make high budget films right now, producers are turning towards mythological films. It is the only genre where you can boast of spending crores for creating the sets and the look of the film. But what they don't realize is that if these films flop, the blow to the producer will be severe.' Films like Anaganaga O Dheerudu (2011) and Shakti (2011) were commercial failures and Badrinath (2012) was an average grosser; all being fantasy films in which the protagonist is a warrior.[19][20]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Telugu Box Office: Arundhati is a blockbuster'. Sify. Retrieved 28 January 2009.
  2. ^ abcdeArundhati – Post mortem – Telugu cinema – M Shyam Prasad Reddy. Idlebrain.com. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  3. ^ abArundhati – Post mortem – Telugu cinema – M Shyam Prasad Reddy. Idlebrain.com (18 February 2009). Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  4. ^'P Ravishankar interview - Telugu cinema interview'. Idlebrain. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  5. ^'Rahul Nambiar interview - Telugu Cinema interview - Telugu film visual effects supervisor'. www.idlebrain.com. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  6. ^'rediff.com: Creatively designing Arundhati'. specials.rediff.com. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  7. ^'Rahul Nambiar interview - Telugu Cinema interview - Telugu film visual effects supervisor'. www.idlebrain.com. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  8. ^'rediff.com: Creatively designing Arundhati'. specials.rediff.com. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  9. ^'Review: Arundhati'. www.rediff.com. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  10. ^Nandi awards 2008 announced – Telugu cinema news. Idlebrain.com (24 October 2008). Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  11. ^'Arundhati is haunting and thrilling'. Rediff. Archived from the original on 22 January 2009. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
  12. ^'Movie Review :Arundhati'. Sify.
  13. ^Magadheera: First Week Gross 20 Cr. Greatandhra.com (5 August 2009). Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  14. ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 4 July 2010.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^'Arundhathi' Satellite rights for Rs 7 Crores. Lazydesis (19 February 2009). Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  16. ^'Top Telugu actresses of 2009 - Rediff.com Movies'. movies.rediff.com. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  17. ^'His Master's Voice'. The Hindu. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  18. ^'Old genres, new packaging!'. The New Indian Express. 5 September 2011. Archived from the original on 14 November 2014. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  19. ^Bhat, Prashanth (10 May 2011). 'Mythological characters, a hit in T-town'. The Times of India. Archived from the original on 19 December 2014. Retrieved 19 December 2014.
  20. ^'Badrinath completes 50days in 187 theatres'. The Times of India. 3 August 2011. Archived from the original on 19 December 2014. Retrieved 19 December 2014.

External links[edit]

  • Arundhati on IMDb

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