Illarikam

Illarikam (transl.Matrilocal residence) is a 1959 Indian Telugu-language comedy drama film directed by T. Prakash Rao. It stars Akkineni Nageswara Rao, Jamuna and music composed by T. Chalapathi Rao. It was produced by A. V. Subba Rao under the Prasad Art Pictures banner. The film had a Silver Jubilee run and was recorded as a Blockbuster at the box office.[1]

Illarikam
Theatrical release Poster
Directed byT. Prakash Rao
Written byArudra (dialogues)
Screenplay byT. Prakash Rao
Story byVempati Sadasivabrahmam
Produced byA. V. Subba Rao
StarringAkkineni Nageswara Rao
Jamuna
CinematographyA. Vincent
Edited byA. Sanjeevi
Music byT. Chalapathi Rao
Production
company
Distributed byNavayuga Films
Release date
  • 1 May 1959 (1959-05-01)
Running time
160 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Illarikam literally means a bridegroom going to the bride's family and living permanently with them (matrilocality); as against the custom of the bride going into the groom's family (patrilocality). This custom is observed in some rich families where the bride is the only child to their parents.

Illarikam was remade in four languages. L. V. Prasad produced the Hindi version titled Sasural (1961), which T. Prakash Rao directed. A. V. Subbarao himself remade it in Kannada as Mane Aliya (1964), in Malayalam as Kalithozhan (1966) and in Tamil as Maadi Veettu Mappilai (1967). All these versions were box office hits.[2]

Plot

Venu is an orphan brought up by his maternal uncle Dharmayya. He falls for Zamindar's daughter Radha and knitted with a condition that Venu should live in their house, called Illarikam. Due to status consciousness, Sundaramma, the wife of the Zamindar, looks down on Venu and insults him indirectly. Govindayya, the cousin of Sundaramma and manager of their mica factories creates a rupture between Venu & Radha because he plots to usurp the wealth. So, he brings his wayward son Seshagiri weaning him away from Kanakadurga, whom he had secretly espoused. Venu spots Kanakadurga, his presumed to be dead sister, while she was performing on stage. Not knowing they are siblings, Radha suspects Venu's fidelity. The villains try to cash in on their rift. When things are getting worse, Venu wears a Zorro-like guise, teaches Govindayya and his son a lesson, and paves the way for a happy family reunion.

Cast

Production

After releasing the dubbed version of the Tamil film Uthamaputhiran in Telugu, A. V. Subbarao announced his next project Illarikam, with Nageswara Rao, based on the story of Vemapti Sadasivabrahmam. Jamuna was selected to pair with ANR. The pair had earlier collaborated in Nirupedalu (1954). Nageswara Rao suggested to remove the song "Niluvave Vaalu Kanuladaana" as he felt the audience may not like the teasing song, as by then the heroine had realised the truth, but the producer and the director felt otherwise. After its release, seeing the audience response to that song, Nageswara Rao conceded that he was wrong. T. Rama Rao started his career as an assistant director with Illarikam.[2]

Music

Music was composed by T. Chalapathi Rao.[3]

S. No.Song TitleLyricsSingerslength
1 "Adigindaaniki Cheppi" Kosaraju Ghantasala, P. Susheela 5:24
2 "Ekkadi Dongalu Akkadane Gapchup" Sri Sri Ghantasala, P. Susheela 3:35
3 "Niluvave Vaalu Kanuladhana" Kosaraju Ghantasala, P. Susheela 3:13
4 "Chetulu Kalasina Chappatlu" Arudra Ghantasala, P. Susheela, Madhavapeddi Satyam 4:05
5 "Nedu Srivariki Memante" Arudra Ghantasala, P. Susheela 3:17
6 "Madhu Patram" Arudra Jikki 3:35
7 "Bhale Chancele" Kosaraju Madhavapeddi Satyam 3:03

Remakes

Illarikam was remade in four languages. L. V. Prasad produced the Hindi version titled Sasural (1961), which T. Prakash Rao directed. A. V. Subbarao himself remade it in Kannada as Mane Aliya (1964), in Malayalam as Kalithozhan (1966) and in Tamil as Maadi Veettu Mappilai (1967). All these versions were box office hits.[2]

References

  1. Sri (2 May 2009). "Retrospect : Illarikam completes 50 years". Telugucinema.com. Archived from the original on 5 May 2009. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  2. Narasimham, M. L. (24 September 2015). "Blast from the past: Illarikam (1959)". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 9 December 2016. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  3. "ILLarikam (1959)-Song_Booklet". Indiancine.ma. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
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