Bhagavan (2009 film)

Bhagavan (transl.God) is a 2009 Indian Malayalam-language medical drama film written and directed by Prasanth Mambully, starring Mohanlal and Lakshmi Gopalaswamy. The story is about Dr. Balagopal who fights a terrorist group who attack a hospital. The entire film was shot in 19 hours aiming the Guinness World Records, but citing technical issues it did not received the record.[1] The film was shot simultaneously at six different locations. Seven cameras were used for filming. The film was originally planned to be shot within 12 hours, but unexpected rain delayed the shooting.[2]

Bhagavan
Directed byPrasanth Mambully
Produced byVijeesh Mani
Written byPrasanth Mambully
StarringMohanlal
Lakshmi Gopalaswamy
Music byMohan Sithara
Joji Johns
Murali Krishna
Nasaruddeen Kalipp
Rajeev Alunkal (lyrics)
CinematographyLoganathan Srinivasan
Edited byRanjan Abraham
Production
company
Golden Valley Talkies
Distributed byAnaswara Cinemas Release
Release date
  • 1 May 2009 (2009-05-01)
CountryIndia
LanguageMalayalam

Bhagavan was released on 1 May 2009. Even though it under-performed at the box office, the film recovered its cost and made some profit as it was made on a low cost and filmed on a single day.

Plot

Months after the dreaded 2008 Mumbai attacks, a terrorist group led by Saifudeen (Daniel Balaji) planned bomb blasts at five locations in Cochin. At the same time, Zachariah Thomas, the Home Minister of Kerala, arrived at the hospital for his wife's delivery. Meanwhile, the terrorist group was planning to kidnap the Home Minister and his newborn baby. Saifudeen kidnapped three neonates and Dr. Balagopal (Mohanlal) came looking for them. Meanwhile, the Home Minister is kidnapped by Saifudeen's men. In the end, Balagopal kills Saifudeen and saves the Home Minister and the infants.

Cast

Filming

Bhagavan was made targeting the Guinness World Records for a feature film shot in the quickest time, but did not received the record due to technical issues. The entire film was shot in 19 hours. Filming took place on 8 December 2008 at a hospital in Guruvayur-Kunnamkulam road. The shoot was originally intended to complete in 12 hours but poor weather effected the plan. Film contains a total of 64 scenes. It was a record in the Indian film industry at that time.[3][4][5][6]

References

  1. "Mohanlal's Bhagavan sets new record". Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  2. "Mohanlal's Bhagavan on May 15!". Sify. 15 May 2009.
  3. Raghavan, Nikhil (12 February 2011). "Itsy-bitsy". The Hindu.
  4. "Bid for real-time film record". The Telegraph.
  5. "Hero for the day". The Hindu. 30 January 2009. Retrieved 28 July 2018.
  6. "Shooting a Mohanlal film in a day". Rediff.com.
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