Chaitra (2002 film)

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Chaitra is a short film by Kranti Kanade based on author G.A. Kulkarni's story of the same name. Kranti selected this story for his thesis short film towards completion of his degree in Direction from Film and Television Institute of India. The film went on to win three National Film Awards in 2002.

Chaitra: In The Month Of March
Directed byKranti Kanade
Written byKranti Kanade
Based onChaitra
by G. A. Kulkarni
Produced byFilm and Television Institute of India
StarringSonali Kulkarni
Lalan Sarang
Abhishek Bhave
CinematographyMahesh Muthuswami
Edited byKranti Kanade
Music byBhaskar Chandavarkar
Release date
  • 20 August 2002 (2002-08-20) (Mumbai International Film Festival)
Running time
25 min
CountryIndia
LanguageMarathi

Plot edit

The story of a proud woman, her poetic vindication of unfair social insult, and her inevitable sad destiny. A very culture-specific film dipped in a local festival of rural women.

Cast edit

  • Sonali Kulkarni as Mother
  • Abhishek Bhave as Madhu
  • Lalan Sarang as Naik Kaku
  • Vandana Vakhnis as Naik baai
  • Dhiresh Joshi as Father
  • Bhakti Pathare as Rakhma
  • Uttara Kulkarni as Shanta
  • Shripad Amte as Mama

Production edit

The film was shot in Alandi village near Pune and the post-production done at FTII. Being a student film, director did not have enough budget but Sonali Kulkarni and Lalan Sarang agreed to do the film without remuneration. Music director Bhaskar Chandavarkar not only composed music for the film without taking any remuneration but he also paid for the musicians himself. Cinematographer Mahesh Muthuswami contributed an amount towards the production and so did the sound designer Subir Das.[citation needed]

Awards and recognition edit

Chaitra won three National Film Awards in 2002.[1]

At the Mumbai International Film Festival 2002 it won National Critics’ Award and Best Short - Silver. That year, it was India's official entry to the Student Academy Awards.

The film was also included in a DVD titled "Master Strokes", a compilation of works of twenty renowned FTII students.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "Chaitra National Awards". Retrieved 24 May 2009.
  2. ^ Manjiri Damle (22 June 2006). "Jaya Bachchan to unveil 'Master Strokes'". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 27 December 2011.