Zapatlela 2

Zapatlela 2 (transl.Possessed 2) is a 2013 Indian Marathi-language Horror comedy film directed by Mahesh Kothare, a sequel to Zapatlela, released 20 years previously (in 1993).[3] It is produced and distributed by Viacom18 Motion Pictures. The film was theatrically released on 7 June 2013, It is marked to be first Marathi film shot entirely with a 3D camera.[4][5]

Zapatlela 2
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMahesh Kothare
Written byMahesh Kothare
Screenplay byAshok Patole
Mahesh Kothare
Story byMahesh Kothare
Based onChild's Play by Tom Holland[1]
Produced byMahesh Kothare
Adinath Kothare
Viacom 18 Motion Pictures
Starring
CinematographySuresh Deshmane
Edited byShashank Shah
Music byAvdhoot Gupte
Production
companies
Kothare and Kothare Vision
Viacom 18 Motion Pictures
Distributed byViacom 18 Motion Pictures
Moving Pictures
Release date
  • 7 June 2013 (2013-06-07)
Running time
175 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageMarathi
Budget4.5 crore (US$560,000)
Box office11 crore (US$1.4 million)[2]

Mahesh has stated that if the film did well, it would be dubbed into Hindi and a third movie in the series could be made.[6]

Plot

The film opens within the mansion of Baba Chamatkar (Raghvendra Kadkol). Kubdya Khavis has escaped from the prison and secured the doll containing the soul of gangster Tatya Vinchu (shown in the previous film, Zapatlela) and orders Baba Chamatkar to revive Tatya Vinchu again. He admits that the diamonds worth 5 crore which are now worth 50 crores were stolen by him and Tatya but only Tatya knows its location. He plans to sap all the information and kill Tatya again. He also offers Baba half of the cost of diamonds in return for reviving Tatya. However, Baba refuses to commit the same mistake again. Infuriated, Kubdya tries to kill him using a trishul (a weapon which looks like a trident). However, Baba uses the same weapon to kill him. A drop of Kubdya's blood is accidentally transferred towards the doll, which resuscitates Tatya Vinchu. Tatya confronts Baba Chamatkar and forces him to tell how to migrate to a human form. Baba resists in thee victim (Tatya) must make use of the Mrutyunjaya Mantra on the person to whom he has confessed his true name. But now that the person (Lakshya, portrayed by Laxmikant Berde in Zapatlela) is dead, the same mantra can be used on his son. Tatya vows to find Lakshya's son and migrate into his body.

Meanwhile, at Shrirangpur, a jatra (village fair) has been organized dedicated to the village deity. Aditya Bolke (Adinath Kothare) is a mechanical engineer without a job, and like his father, is thoroughly interested in ventriloquism. He lives with his grandmother (Madhu Kambikar). Aditya meets Megha (Sonalee Kulkarni), who is on a vacation and is a lavani dancer at her mother's (Vishakha Subhedar) theater within the fair. Aditya and Megha fall in love with each other. Meanwhile, Makarand/Makya (Makarand Anaspure) has set up his ventriloquist theater (puppet show) and wishes to make a healthy profit from this fair. He has created a doll which resembles Tatya Vinchu, after hearing the local legend, although he himself is skeptic about it.

Aditya frequently tries to meet Makarand and learn about ventriloquism, but is challenged by the theater's security guard (Deepak Shirke), and the chase often ends up funnily. Gauri Wagh (Sai Tamhankar) is a journalist and has arrived to Shrirangpur to cover a report on the fair. Meanwhile, Tatya arrives in the fair and identifies Aditya as the son of Lakshya. Gauri, in a small incident, discovers that the doll is, in fact, alive. Aditya accidentally gets hold of Tatya Vinchu, and after taking it home, discovers that the doll is alive. However, being an engineer, he thinks that the doll is battery powered.

Police Commissioner Mahesh Jadhav (Mahesh Kothare) investigates the death of Kubdya Khavis and is notified that Baba Chamatkar (who has passed into a coma after being confronted by Tatya), has revived. Baba tells Mahesh that Tatya has in fact been revived. Mahesh instructs the police at Shrirangpur to find the doll. He then travels to Shrirangpur and meets Inspector Sakharam (Vijay Chavan, who has been portrayed as Sakhya Havaldar in the prequel). Sakharam tells him that the doll has been located (which is in fact the replica created by Makarand). The police destroy the doll in a bonfire.

On the last day of the fair, Makarand is confronted by Tatya Vinchu, who threatens him at knifepoint and takes him to Aditya's house. He confronts his grandmother, who runs to Inspector Sakharam and tells him that Tatya is on his way to Aditya, who is at a religious procession at the fair. Tatya makes his way to Aditya, who travels up the Ferris wheel to save himself. However, the wheel gets stuck up. Tatya climbs up to him and tries to recite the mantra on Aditya. However, Mahesh (who has been communicated by Sakharam) reaches in time and shoots Tatya between his eyebrows. Tatya falls down, and is picked up by Mahesh. However, Tatya uses Mahesh's revolver gun and shoots him in his arm. Tatya goes back to climb up and reach Aditya. Aditya picks up a coconut knife and severs Tatya's head. Mahesh finds Tatya's headless body and orders the police that the case is not closed until the severed head is found. In the end scene, Tatya's head is shown to be resting (yet alive) under Mahesh's car.

Cast

Production

The puppet Tatya Vinchu which featured in the original film returned in Zapatlela 2. The ventriloquist and puppeteer Ramdas Padhye, creator and operator of the original Tatya Vinchu, created a more sophisticated puppet for the sequel.[7]

Around ₹1.7 crore was spent on 3D and visual effects.[8]

Reception

The film received mixed reviews from critics. The Times of India gave positive review rated 3.5 stars out of 5.[9] Saumitra Pote of Maharashtra Times rates 2.5 out of 5, He praised the entire cast for performances but criticized the director for paying too much attention to how the comedy would be done, which made some scenes childish.[10]

Soundtrack

Zapatlela 2
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedMay 2013
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length21:57
LabelViacom 18 Motion Pictures
Avdhoot Gupte chronology
Tukaram
(2012)
Zapatlela 2
(2013)
Rege
(2014)

The film's soundtrack was composed by Avdhoot Gupte, with lyrics penned by Guru Thakur. The film's title theme track was composed by Aniruddha Kale.

Track list

No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1"Kalajat Mukkam Kela"Vaishali Samant4:34
2"Madanike"Avadhoot Gupte, Jhanvi Prabhu Arora4:25
3"Gajmukha" (Version 1)Avadhoot Gupte, Vaishali Samant4:21
4"Gajmukha" (Version 2)Avadhoot Gupte, Vaishali Samant, Swapnil Bandodkar6:45
5"Zapatlela" ThemeAvadhoot Gupte2:32

References

  1. "Marathi films inspired by Hollywood". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 17 November 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  2. "Zapatlela 2 Box office collection". The Times of India.
  3. Dhole, Renu (26 May 2013). "Fun has three dimensions now". Sakal Times. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015.
  4. Phadke, Aparna (6 June 2013). "Don't blame the audience for poor run of Marathi films in Vidarbha: Mahesh Kothare". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 9 August 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2013.
  5. Kulkarni, Pooja (1 October 2012). "M-Town is ready to scare with 'Zapatlela 2'". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 6 December 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2013.
  6. Deshmukh, Gayatri (18 May 2013). "Rakeysh Omprakah Mehra to procure Zapatlela 2 remake rights?". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 9 August 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2013.
  7. Swami, Rohan (16 June 2013). "No Strings Attached". The Indian Express. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  8. "1.3 cr spent on Lokmanya's visual effects - Times of India". The Times of India.
  9. "Zapatlela 2 - 3D Movie Review". The Times of India. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  10. "Zapatlela 2 Marathi review - Google Search". www.google.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
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