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A (1998 Kannada film)

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A
DVD cover
Directed byUpendra
Written byUpendra
Produced by
  • B. Jagannath
  • B. G. Manjunath
Starring
CinematographyH. C. Venugopal
Edited byT. Shashikumar
Music byGurukiran
Production
company
Uppi Entertainers
Distributed byYash Raj
Release date
  • 12 February 1998 (1998-02-12)
Running time
148 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada
Budget₹1.25 crore[1]
Box office₹12-₹20 crore[2] [1]

A is a 1998 Indian Kannada-language romantic psychological thriller film written and directed by Upendra. It stars Upendra and Chandini Sasha (in the acting debut of both).[3] The film revolves around a love story between a film director and an actress which is narrated through multiple flashbacks within flashbacks and reverse screenplay. It also explores about the dark truths like casting couch in the film industry. The soundtrack and background score were handled by Gurukiran in his debut film.[4]

The opening sequence of the film where a misanthropic man who is exhilarated by the sense of power he receives by carrying a revolver while walking on the streets was reported to be based on Jean-Paul Sartre's short story Erostratus [5] found in his 1939 collection of short stories The Wall.[6]

A was released on 12 February 1998 and received praise for Upendra and Chandini's performances, soundtrack, cinematography and reverse screenplay, which made the audience to watch it multiple times in order to understand the story. The film collected more than 20 crore at the box office and gained a cult following.[1] The film was dubbed into Telugu under the same title and was released in Andhra Pradesh. It was remade in Tamil as Adavadi.[7] Upendra won the Udaya Film Award for Best Male Actor (1998) and Gurukiran won the Udaya Film Award for Best Music Director (1998).

Plot

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Marina, a foreigner, wants to distribute the unreleased controversial film A written and directed by Soorya. However, the CBFC permits only 20 random minutes to be screened, and the climax is censored to such an extent that it no longer made any sense. She suggests its producers to re-shoot the film. However, Surya is not able to participate in the film's shoot as he became a drunkard after actress Chandini, who debuted with his film, rejected his love. Surya's family is unable to meet their ends after he stops directing films. Lost in her thoughts, he wanders near her house every night drunk, only to be expelled by her henchmen.

Unable to bear Surya's torture, Chandini asks him to jump from a building to prove his love. Surya jumps without hesitation. While he survived the fall, he is badly wounded and admitted to the hospital by Marina and the team. One of Surya's former assistant directors explains Surya's past to Marina. Surya was a successful director who had no feelings, especially for a woman's love. After his current female lead fails to act properly, he cast Chandini after a chain of events. Initially, Surya rejects Chandini's love, but after frequent run-ins and days of pursuit, Surya falls in love with her madly. Surya later meets a rich and busy Chandini, who lives in a big bungalow and as the mistress of a wealthy married businessman.

Chandini defends herself, saying that Surya's views on the materialistic world influenced her to prioritize money over everything else after her father's death. He tries to explain to her that she is wrong, but is expelled. Due to this, Surya gave up everything and became an alcoholic, wandering near her house every day, hoping that she would accept him. Surya escapes from the hospital and is confronted by Marina, to whom Surya explains his love for Chandini. He then saves a novice actress named Archana from a group of henchmen who are revealed to be Chandini. Archana reveals Chandini was used as bait by the politicians to trap Surya and stop his A from release.

In turn, Chandini exploited the weakness of those politicians by way of the casting couch. She proves this to Surya, who, along with his father and Archana, are arrested on charges of prostitution. The police were bribed by Chandini, who abducts Archana while Soorya and his father are arrested. Surya and his father are released on bail by Marina, and his family's plight makes Surya swear revenge. He restarts the shoot of A and turns out to be a superstar due to the films' success starring him. The climax shoot is pending, and Surya wants to shoot it realistically, which is the death of Chandini in a burning house.

The camera rolls and Surya kidnaps Chandini from her hen house where women are prostituted to influential politicians and people in business, where she kills the businessman she was engaged to. He brings her to the location and sets it on fire after rolling the camera. She knocks him out, who falls unconscious after hitting a rock. Archana, Marina, and the producers come to the spot to save him. Archana shows him the film footage that was shot after revealing that Chandini is a good woman who wanted to bring Surya back to normal by acting as a ruthless criminal who is destroying many actresses' lives like Archana. The footage shows a naked Chandini dying and revealing the truth.

Chandini says that the businessman was a friend of few corrupt politicians who wanted to have sex with her. They killed her father and sexually assaulted her and her minor sister. The businessman blackmails Chandini with a tape that captured the brutal assault. As per their directions, she had to cheat Surya. However, Chandini brings Surya back to normal with the help of Archana and gives A a perfect ending. Surya tries to save her by entering the house, but she dies, asking him to live long and make films that expose the demons that haunt society.

Cast

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  • Upendra as Surya
  • Chandini as Chandini
  • Archana as herself
  • Marina as Marina
  • Kote Prabhakar as film producer
  • Biradar
  • Malathi
  • Suchitra as Surya's sister
  • Saroja Srishailan as Surya's mother
  • Michael Madhu as Michael
  • Mandapanda Aiyappa as Teja, a businessman
  • Tumkur Mohan
  • Suresh Babu
  • Gurukiran as Actor
  • Shankar Bhat
  • Sriraj Kothari
  • Balu Murugaraj
  • M. V. Joshi
  • Raghunath
  • Roopa Iyer
  • Bhushan Geechi
  • Narendra Babu
  • R. G. Vijayasarathy
  • Damu
  • Puttaraju

Production

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Development

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Upendra along with B. G. Manjunath, B. Jagannath, and B. V. Ramakrishna — founded the film production company, Uppi Entertainers, in October 1996, with the equal partnership. After Kannada film distributors refused to purchase the distribution rights for A following the producers themselves not being confident of the film doing well, it was purchased by a newcomer, Yash Raj.[8] Speaking about the film's title prior to a theatrical re-release in 2024, Upendra said: "The title A just came to me. It was my first film as a hero, and the content led us to choose the title. We thought the film would be certified 'A' by the censor board, which would mean that the film is for adults. But to me, A was for a mature audience. We also came up with the tagline 'Only for intelligent people'."[9]

Casting

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The film marked the acting debut of Chandni Sasha in Kannada cinema. According to Chandni, she was living in New York and competed in a beauty pageant which won her the title of Miss Photogenic. The pictures taken from the contest somehow found their way into the hands of one of Upendra’s managers. Upendra was a director who was about to make his acting debut and was looking for heroine for the same. Upendra saw those photographs and insisted on casting her for the film.[10] The film became blockbuster and she went on to act in several films in Indian languages most notably in AK47 alongside Shiva Rajkumar.[11][12]

Soundtrack

[edit]
A
Soundtrack album by
Released3 February 1998
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length24:01
LabelLahiri Music
Gurukiran chronology
A
(1998)
Upendra
(1999)

Gurukiran composed the music for the film and the soundtracks which marked his debut. The album has five soundtracks.[13] The daughter-in-law of Kannada poet G.P. Rajarathnam alleged that a song by the late poet, "Helkollakondooru thalemyagondhsooru," for which she held the copyright, had been used by Upendra in the film without her consent.[14] Deva, the music director of the Tamil version, retained two songs from this movie - "Idhu One Day" was retained as "Idhu One Day" and "Sum Sumne" was retained as "En Anbea".

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Sum Sumne"UpendraRajesh Krishnan4:54
2."Chandini"Murali MohanL. N. Shastry, Prathima Rao5:03
3."Helkollakonduru"G. P. RajarathnamL. N. Shastry5:08
4."Idhu One Day Match"Murali MohanL. N. Shastry, Upendra6:34
5."Maari Kannu"UpendraS. P. Balasubrahmanyam4:22
Total length:24:01

Release

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The film was given an U (Universal) certification from CBFC.

Box-office response

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A was made at 1.25 crore and collected more than 20 crore at the box office.[1] The film ran for 25 weeks in Karnataka and its Telugu version ran for 100 days in Andhra Pradesh.[15][16]

Critical reception

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It was described by a reviewer as "loud and disjointed, like the ramblings of a delirious mind, but made a lot of sense".[17] Its design received some praise.[18] The dialogues provoked controversy, due to their misogynistic and philosological nature.[17] They also contained autobiographical elements.[14]

Influences

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In an interview given to the Times of India on 24 May 2020, Malayalam director Lijo Jose Pellissery who is famous for nonlinear storylines and aestheticization of violence picked this movie as one of the five Indian movies which have managed to influence him at different levels.[19]

Awards

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d A sequel to A – Kannada Movie News. Indiaglitz.com (19 July 2010). Retrieved on 2015-08-18.
  2. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20000824054620/http://www.chitraloka.com/english/stock_shots/upendra.html
  3. ^ Article about the plot of A, and an interview with Chandni, the heroine. Rediff.com (11 December 1999). Retrieved on 2015-08-18.
  4. ^ Kannada composer Gurukiran wants to do more reality shows. The Hindu. 12 January 2008
  5. ^ [1]
  6. ^ "Film Review: Uppi2".
  7. ^ Adavadi – Review. Entertainment.oneindia.in. Retrieved on 18 August 2015.
  8. ^ Prasad S., Shyam (6 September 2016). "Why is A haunting Upendra 20 years later?". The Times of India. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  9. ^ "Upendra: I'm curious to see how today's generation will receive a film like A". Cinema Express. 14 May 2024. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  10. ^ "Chandini Ssasha, the runaway star". The Times of India. 7 January 2015. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
  11. ^ Service, Express News (15 April 2015). "Chandini Is Back With a Bang". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
  12. ^ "I can't believe the fan frenzy that our film A has received even after 25 years: Chandini Saasha". The Times of India. 29 May 2024. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
  13. ^ "A (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) – EP". iTunes. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  14. ^ a b Subramanya, K.V. (24 July 2006) Triggering off a controversy once again, The Hindu
  15. ^ "175 days or 25 weeks shield of A".
  16. ^ "The year gone by 'Twas good for some and bad for most". Andhra Online. Archived from the original on 28 April 1999.
  17. ^ a b Kumar, S. Shiva (11 November 2005) Uppi's hardly uppity, The Hindu
  18. ^ Bhushan Geechi to direct. Entertainment.oneindia.in. Retrieved on 18 August 2015.
  19. ^ "Times of India".
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