Muddula Mavayya
- 7 April 1989 (1989-04-07)
Muddula Mavayya is a 1989 Indian Telugu-language drama film produced by S. Gopal Reddy under the Bhargav Art Productions banner and directed by Kodi Ramakrishna. It stars Nandamuri Balakrishna, Vijayashanti and musical score by K. V. Mahadevan.[2][3] The film was a remake of the Tamil film En Thangachi Padichava[4] which was also remade in Hindi as Aaj Ka Arjun starring Amitabh Bachchan; in Kannada as Ravimama starring V. Ravichandran.
Plot
The film begins in a village where Zamindar Ranga Rao is a vandal who plots to seize it for the construction of his liquor factory. An inspector is new to the place, receives hush from the public, and precedes Ranga Rao, whom he debases. Accordingly, he priors a case of criminal Raja, who is under a penalty on murder convict. Aside from that, Ranga Rao hounds the villagers to nullify while Raja backs and finger-wages Ranga Rao with valor. Next, the Inspector questions Raja, and then he reels the rearward. Raja is wholehearted in his life for his sibling Lakshmi. The two are left alone in childhood, and for their life support, Raja befits as the pickpocket. Furthermore, he crushes a beauty, Vidya.
Meanwhile, Lakshmi arrives and observes the oppression of Ranga Rao on villagers, which she defies. After a warning from Raja, she goes back to college. To pay back, Ranga Rao works with his son Chinna, the mate of Lakshmi, who artifices love with her. He silently knits her with the blessing of Raja and flees. Afflicted Lakshmi conceives; over time, she finds Chinna's presence at his residence. Pronto, Lakshmi rushes when she is aware of Ranga Rao's malice. Unfortunately, they detect and stab her, and when outraged, Raja kills Chinna. Lakshmi passes away, giving birth to the child, and before dying, she takes a word from Raja to free the slave-driven villagers from Ranga Rao. Listening to it, the Inspector promises to support Raja's fight against tyranny. Initially, Raja gleefully embraces his nephew growing up under Vidya's guardianship. In the next step, Raja takes possession of testaments written by villagers for that Ranga Rao abduct the child. Whereat, the Inspector, sacrifices his life while guarding him. At last, Raja hiatus his rues and ceases him. Finally, the movie ends with Raja making the boy conduct the funeral rites of Ranga Rao.
Cast
- Nandamuri Balakrishna as Raja
- Vijayashanti as Vidya
- Seetha as Lakshmi
- Gollapudi Maruthi Rao as Vidya's grandfather
- Raja Krishnamoorthy as Ranga Rao
- Anandaraj as Gaja
- Subhalekha Sudhakar as Raja's friend
- Ahuti Prasad as New Inspector
- Brahmaji as Drunkard
- Hema[5]
- Eeswar Rao as Subba Rao Master
- Balaji as Villager
- Ravi Kiran as Chinna
- KK Sarma as Constable
- Telephone Satyanarayana as Old Inspector
- Chidatala Appa Rao as Butler Bajana Sundaram
- Kallu Chidambaram as Panthulu
- Juttu Narasimham as Butler Gajakarna
- Brahmanandam
- Anitha as Raja's mother
- Chandrika as Servant
- Master Amith as Raja's son-in-law
Soundtrack
Muddula Mavayya | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Film score by | ||||
Released | 1989 | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Length | 26:42 | |||
Label | LEO Audio | |||
Producer | K. V. Mahadevan | |||
K. V. Mahadevan chronology | ||||
|
Music composed by K. V. Mahadevan. Music released on LEO Audio Company.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Hey Raja" | Vennelakanti | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam | 4:27 |
2. | "Changu Changu" | C. Narayana Reddy | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, S. Janaki | 4:09 |
3. | "Mavayya Anna Pilupu" | Vennelakanti | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, P. Susheela, S. P. Sailaja | 4:46 |
4. | "Aaku Chatuna" | C. Narayana Reddy | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, S. Janaki | 4:06 |
5. | "Chukkesukochanammo Choodu" | C. Narayana Reddy | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, S. P. Sailaja | 3:58 |
6. | "Om Shanti" | Vennelakanti | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, P. Susheela | 5:07 |
Total length: | 26:42 |
References
- ^ "Titles". Chithr.com.
- ^ "Heading-2". Filmi Beat.
- ^ "Heading-3". Nth Wall. Archived from the original on 30 January 2015. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- ^ "The Hindu : Metro Plus Tiruchirapalli : In the right direction". www.hindu.com. Archived from the original on 28 December 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
- ^ "Muddula Mavayya Cast & Crew, Muddula Mavayya Telugu Movie Cast, Actor, Actress, Director".
External links
- Muddula Mavayya at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- Intlo Ramayya Veedhilo Krishnayya (1982)
- Tarangini (1982)
- Aalaya Sikharam (1983)
- Simhapuri Simham (1983)
- Poratam (1983)
- Gudachari No.1 (1983)
- Adigo Alladigo (1984)
- Adarsavanthudu (1984)
- Mangammagari Manavadu (1984)
- Maa Pallelo Gopaludu (1985)
- Muddula Krishnayya (1986)
- Muvva Gopaludu (1987)
- Talambralu (1987)
- Srinivasa Kalyanam (1987)
- Murali Krishnudu (1988)
- Station Master (1988)
- Aahuthi (1988)
- Chuttalabbayi (1988)
- Bharatamlo Bala Chandrudu (1988)
- Goonda Rajyam (1989)
- Muddula Mavayya (1989)
- Bala Gopaludu (1989)
- Gudachari 117 (1989)
- Atha Mechina Alludu (1989)
- Bhale Dampathulu (1989)
- Muddula Menalludu (1990)
- Ankusam (1990)
- 20va Sathabdam (1990)
- Rao Gari Intlo Rowdy (1990)
- Sathruvu (1991)
- Bharat Bandh (1991)
- Madhura Nagarilo (1991)
- Allari Pilla (1992)
- Pellam Chebite Vinali (1992)
- Rajadhani (1993)
- Police Lockup (1993)
- Captain (1994)
- Maa Voori Maaraju (1994)
- Aavesam (1994)
- Aasthi Mooredu Aasa Baaredu (1995)
- Ammoru (1995)
- Rikshavodu (1995)
- Chilakapachcha Kaapuram (1995)
- Godfather (1995)
- Railway Coolie (1996)
- Maa Aavida Collector (1996)
- Mama Bagunnava (1997)
- Dongaata (1997)
- Pelli (1997)
- Pelli Pandiri (1997)
- Panjaram (1997)
- Pelli Kanuka (1998)
- Daddy Daddy (1998)
- Devi (1999)
- Panchadara Chilaka (1999)
- Maa Balaji (1999)
- Aavide Syamala (1999)
- Bharata Ratna (1999)
- Devullu (2000)
- Devi Putrudu (2001)
- Navvuthu Bathakalira (2001)
- Kalisi Naduddam (2001)
- Jenda (2002)
- Pilisthe Palukutha (2002)
- Trinetram (2002)
- Puttintiki Ra Chelli (2004)
- Anji (2004)
- Ayodhya
- Nayakudu (2005)
- Keelu Gurram (2005)
- Dongodi Pelli (2006)
- Ek Police (2008)
- Arundhati (2009)
- Avatharam (2014)
- Nagarahavu (2016)