The Desire (2010 film)

The Desire: A Journey of a Woman is a 2010 Indo-Chinese feature film, directed by R. Sarath. Starring Shilpa Shetty in the lead role, the film also stars Chinese actor Xia Yu along with Indian actors and actresses Jaya Prada, Anupam Kher, Sheetal Menon and Sachin Khedekar. The film began shooting in January 2009 and was expected for a public release in mid-2009 but was not released due to production problems,[3] including the original producer leaving midway through shooting, only to be replaced by Shetty's mother, Sunanda.[1] It was subsequently screened at film festivals worldwide and set for release in India and China in August 2012,[2] but was still listed as forthcoming as late as September 2012.[4] The movie was shot in Kerala, Ahmedabad, Nasik, Mumbai, Hyderabad and Malaysia.[5]

The Desire: A Journey of a Woman
Theatrical release poster
Directed byR. Sarath
Produced bySunanda Shetty[1]
Written byR. Sarath
Dialogue:
Amitabh Varma
StarringShilpa Shetty
Xia Yu
Jaya Prada
Anupam Kher
Sheetal Menon
Nakul Vaid
Sachin Khedekar
Music byShankar-Ehsaan-Loy
Vishwa Mohan Bhatt Priyanka Pripri
CinematographySajjan Kalathil
Edited byBeena Paul
Distributed byC-9 Motion Pictures
Indish Creations
Release date
2010 (film festivals)
2012[2]
Running time
96 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageEnglish
Hindi
Cantonese

The Desire is a film about "dance, music, art, culture and emotions". It tells the journey of an Indian classical dancer, Goutami, and the love story between her and a Chinese artist, Jai Leang, whom she meets during a travel assignment.

Cast

Crew

  • Producer: Sunanda Shetty
  • Director: R. Sarath
  • Screenplay: R. Sarath
  • Story: R. Sarath
  • Dialogue: Amitabh Varma
  • Cinematography: Sajjan Kalathil
  • Music: Vishwa Mohan Bhatt (background score), Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy (soundtrack), Priyanka Pripri (Songs)
  • Head of production: Shashi Dubey
  • Costume designer: Neeta Lulla[6]

Music

A. R. Rahman was approached to compose the music for the film but he declined, citing a busy schedule.[7] The soundtrack was then scored by the acclaimed composer trio Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy, whilst the background score was composed by Vishwa Mohan Bhatt.[8] To give an Odissi touch to the film, a devotional song of Lord Jagannath, an integral part of the dance form, was included during the dance. The film has two classical songs, a Sanskrit sloka by eminent Poet Pdt. Manmohan Acharya and an Odia song taken from Padyaballi, written by Gopalkrushna Patnaik. Two more tracks were added by international new age singer-songwriter and composer Priyanka Pripri from Sydney, Australia to add a fusion of Indian and Chinese music.[9]

Honours

  • Best Narrative Feature Film at the 2011 Geneva International Film Festival[5]

References

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