Irugu Porugu
Irugu Porugu (transl. Neighbours) is a 1963 Indian Telugu-language comedy film directed by I. N. Murthy and produced by Chilamkurthi Vijaya Saradhi. The film stars N. T. Rama Rao and Krishna Kumari. A remake of the Bengali film Ami Baro Hobo (1957), it was released on 11 January 1963.
Irugu Porugu | |
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Directed by | I. N. Murthy |
Screenplay by | I. N. Murthy |
Story by | Sailajananda Mukherjee |
Based on | Ami Baro Hobo (1957) |
Produced by | Chilamkurthi Vijaya Saradhi |
Starring | N. T. Rama Rao Krishna Kumari |
Cinematography | Malli Irani |
Edited by | M. S. Mani |
Music by | Master Venu |
Production company | Kalaprapurna Theatres |
Release date |
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Running time | 133 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Telugu |
Plot
Vishwanatham, a poor writer, lives along with his two kids Johnny and Jikki. He is also addicted to horse races which he wins once when his friend misleads by taking him to a dancer Kanchanamala. Viswanatham looks at her as his daughter, she too gets impressed by his words and changes her lifestyle. In return, the drunken Vishwanatham meets with an accident and is hospitalized when his infants move in search of their father and get separated. After reaching home, Viswanatham also rushes to find the children, becomes mad and he has been sentenced for the crime of abducting children. Parallelly, Jikki is adopted by a couple of Paramdamayya and his wife Saraswathi and grows up as Chitra. Johnny is raised by a motor workshop owner Sundaram as Ramu. Years roll by, Vinod Babu, the house owner of Paramdamayya leads a happy family life with his wife Charulatha and son Ravi.
After some petty quarrels, Ravi and Chitra fall in love and Ramu loves Jayanthi, the daughter of Sundaram. Being aware of it, Sundaram necks out Ramu and fixes Jayanthi's alliance with his sister's son Dr. Prasad. Meanwhile, Viswanatham releases Kanchanamala who is running a drama company at present takes him and plans a drama under his direction. Ramu also joins their company and recognizes his father. Meanwhile, Vinod Babu senses the love affair of Ravi and Chitra and warns Paramdamayya when Saraswathi scolds Chitra for remembering herself as an orphan. Depressed, Chitra leaves the house and falls under the care of Ramu who gives her shelter and asks her to participate in their drama.
On the other side, Paramdamayya becomes furious about Saraswathi's deed, in that quarrel, unfortunately, she dies falling from the terrace. Due to this Paramdamayya becomes mad and goes on wandering. Eventually, Ravi learns the truth from his mother and makes his father realize his mistake. Simultaneously, Prasad also convinces Sundaram of the match between Ramu and Jayanthi. At the same time, Chitra recollects her father and brother in the drama. At last, everyone reunites in one place including Paramdamayya. Finally, the movie ends on a happy note with the marriages of Ravi with Chitra, and Ramu with Jayanthi.
Cast
- N. T. Rama Rao as Ravi
- Krishna Kumari as Chitra / Jikki
- Relangi as Vinod Babu
- Gummadi as Viswanatham
- V. Nagayya as Sundaram
- M. Balayya as Ramu / Johnny
- C. S. R. as Parandhamayya
- Mikkilineni
- Sobhan Babu as Prasad
- Allu Ramalingaiah
- Balakrishna as Anji
- Sowcar Janaki as Kanchala Mala
- Sandhya as Charulatha
- Girija as Jayanthi
- E. V. Saroja as Dancer
- L. Vijayalakshmi as Dancer
- Nirmalamma as Saraswathi
Music
The music was composed by Master Venu.[1]
Song Title | Lyrics | Singers | length |
---|---|---|---|
"Naa Manasantaa Teesuko" | Aarudhra | Jikki | 4:05 |
"Mundu Chupputho" | Kosaraju | L. R. Eswari | 4:21 |
"Jigi Jigelumani" | Aarudhra | P. B. Srinivas, S. Janaki | 3:13 |
"Mabbula Chaatuna" | Aarudhra | Jikki | 2:33 |
"Kavvinchevu Kavvinchevu" | Kosaraju | Madhavapeddi Satyam, Swarnalatha | 3:18 |
"Sannajaji Chelimi Kori" | Aarudhra | P. B. Srinivas, S. Janaki | 3:12 |
"Nrutya Rupakam" | Kosarju | P. B. Srinivas, S. Janaki | 5:37 |
"Yetu Choosina" | Aarudhra | Jikki | 3:33 |
Release and reception
Irugu Porugu premiered on 5 January 1963 at Vijaya Gardens, Madras for press and film industry people.[2] It was dedicated to Bellary Raghava, a legend of Telugu theatre.[3] The film was released on 11 January 1963.[4][3] D. K. M. of Andhra Patrika reviewed the film positively commending the writing, direction, music, and the performances of the cast especially C. S. R. Anjaneyulu.[3] Venkat Rao of Andhra Jyothi called Irugu Porugu an entertaining film and noted C. S. R. Anjaneyulu's performance as the highlight of the film and as his career best. He also praised the dialogues of Kondepudi and the direction of I. N. Murthy.[5]
References
- "Irugu Porugu (1963) - Song Booklet". Indiancine.ma. Archived from the original on 11 March 2023. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
- Saradha (11 January 1963). "చిత్రసమీక్ష ఇరుగు-పొరుగు" (PDF). Zamin Ryot (in Telugu). p. 9. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 March 2023. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
- "ఇరుగు-పొరుగు చిత్ర సమీక్ష". Andhra Patrika (in Telugu). 6 January 1963. p. 10. Archived from the original on 12 March 2023. Retrieved 12 March 2023 – via Indiancine.ma.
- Pradeep, Prasanna. "Irugu Porugu: అరవై ఏళ్ళ 'ఇరుగు-పొరుగు'". NTV (in Telugu). Archived from the original on 9 March 2023. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
- Rao, Venkat (8 January 1963). "వినోదాత్మక చిత్రం: ఇరుగు పొరుగు". Andhra Jyothi (in Telugu). p. 3. Archived from the original on 13 March 2023. Retrieved 13 March 2023 – via Indiancine.ma.
External links
- Irugu Porugu at IMDb