Chakravyuha (1983 film)

Chakravyuha (lit.'Labyrinth') is a 1983 Kannada-language political action thriller film directed by V. Somashekhar. The film stars Ambareesh and Ambika. This film marked the entry of popular actor Mukhyamantri Chandru into films.[1] Produced by N. Veeraswamy for Eshwari Productions, this film also starred his son V. Ravichandran in a small role. Actor Tiger Prabhakar also featured in an extended cameo role. The film obtained an 'A' certificate without cuts from the CBFC.

Chakravyuha
Poster
Directed byV. Somashekhar
Written byM. D. Sundar
Produced byN. Veeraswamy
V. Ravichandran
StarringAmbareesh
Ambika
Vajramuni
CinematographyR. Chittibabu
Edited byYadav Victor
Music byShankar–Ganesh
Production
company
Sri Eswari Productions
Release date
1983
Running time
146 min
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada

Upon release, It met with highly positive reviews and catapulted Ambareesh's career to greater heights and coined him with the title as "Rebel Star" for his angry-young man role.[2] The film's huge success inspired other language industries and was subsequently remade in Hindi as Inquilaab (1984)[3] and in Telugu as Mukhyamantri (1984) starring Krishna with Ambika reprising her role.

Plot

Amarnath aka Amar is an educated-young man, who has not received any qualified job as all positions force him to compromise his morals. A new politician, Shankarappa promises an end to corruption, but gets disrespected by the crowd, who pelts stones at him. Amar rescues him where Shankarappa is impressed and trains Amar to be a cop. Amar completes his IPS exam where he is posted as an ACP and serves the state honestly. Amar meets Asha, who is the only daughter of multi-millionaire businessman, Seetharam. The two fall for each other where their relationship is accepted by Seetharam, after Shankarappa's insistence. Amar discovers a crime network that includes Shankarappa as well as Seetharam and is made as a pawn in syndicate's crimes.

Amar is blackmailed into collaborating with them as they show him a pic where Amar had giving the briefcase to Seetharam's partner, where he reveals that the partner is actually an international smuggler named Koya-Koya Hatachi aka Richard Louis. Amar is assigned to retrieve diamonds from Richard Louis and also save him from police by Seetharam. With no choice, Amar does the job, but kills Richard Louis and gets immensely popular with the public. Inspector Pratap, who is Amar's colleague issues a warrant to search Amar's house by the orders from the commissioner Lakshman Rao. Prathap knows that Amar has retrieved the diamonds from Richard Louis, but he is unable to find the diamonds because Amar hides the diamonds inside the first-aid bandages.

Asha misunderstands Amar to be corrupt and leaves him, along with their new-born child. Heartbroken at the separation, Amar resigns from the police force. Amar files for a nomination in the elections at Shankarappa's insistence and becomes the CM with the network's support as they form the government with their syndicate members. During the cabinet meeting, Amar smuggles out a machine gun and reveals his intentions to massacre everyone for the country's welfare. Amar kills all of them, including Seetharam and Shankarappa. Asha learns about Seetharam's misdeeds and the blackmail where Asha reconciles with Amar. Amar surrenders to the police for his crimes and is arrested where the crowd walks back to the police vehicle, who demands that Amar should be released.

Cast

Soundtrack

The music was composed by Shankar–Ganesh, with lyrics by Chi. Udaya Shankar.[5] All the songs composed for the film were received extremely well, especially "Chali Chali" and the title song are considered as evergreen songs. The song "Nija Heluvenu Amma" was adapted from "Toothpaste Irukku", which was composed by the duo for the Tamil film Ranga.

All lyrics are written by Chi. Udaya Shankar

Track listing
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Chakravyuha Idu Chakravyuha"S. P. Balasubrahmanyam 
2."Chali Chali Thalenu"S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, S. Janaki 
3."Baa Bande"S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, S. Janaki 
4."Nija Heluvenu Amma"P. Susheela, S. Janaki 
5."Rita Rosy Julie"S. P. Balasubrahmanyam 

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.