Simply Kailawesome

Simply Kailawesome
Directed by MG Srinivas
Produced by SV Babu
Starring MG Srinivas
Chaya Singh
Narrated by Srinagar Kitty
Music by B.J. Bhart
Cinematography Shreesha Kuduvalli
Edited by Shri
Country India
Language Kannada

Simply Kailawesome is a Kannada short film directed by MG Srinivas. The film was made on playwright T. P. Kailasam and revolves around conversations between Kailasam and female protagonists from four of his plays. While MG Srinivas played T. P. Kailasam, Chaya Singh played all the four female characters: Paatu from Tollugatti, Eeke from Gandaskathri, Venkamma from Home Rule and Sule from the play Sule.[1] It is inspired by the classic play Typical Arathi, written by A S Murthy.[2] The film opened to rave reviews from critics and gained instant recognition when it was selected by the Jury of the Prestigious Platinum Remi Award at the 44th Annual WorldFest-Houston International Film Festival.[3]

Cast

Plot

Simply Kailawesome is an ode to yesteryear legendary playwright T.P. Kailasam. It has a quirky take on the characters created by Kailasam in the past and how they start complaining to him as soon as he lands in the present, trying to find their current status.

Combining an auto-biographical tone with a fusion of thoughts within Kailasam's mind, the story of the short film is more of a congregation of his most famous female protagonists than a series of events. It also involves the playwright's own perspective about his first stint in drama, the way he picked his characters, his views on Anglo-Kannada and the events that inspired him to move away from traditional mythologies which was persistently found in most plays of the time.

References

  1. "Looking at Simply Kailawesome - Rediff.com Movies". Movies.rediff.com. 2010-10-06. Retrieved 2013-09-11.
  2. http://newindianexpress.com/entertainment/kannada/article287557.ece
  3. "Karnataka / Bangalore News : Awesome act by 'Simply Kailawesome'". The Hindu. 2011-05-24. Retrieved 2013-09-11.


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