Post by kuldeepadhana on Sept 30, 2006 22:54:31 GMT -5
Pathi, Pathni, Avalu
Kannada (Aparna)
Cast: Adarsh, Amritha, Ruchita Prasad, C R Simha, Ramesh Bhat, Shankar Bhat
Director: Vijay Gujjar, N Shivakumar
Can a person become100 per cent normal if doctors replace his damaged organs with someone other person’s organs? Is it possible? Anything can happen in cinema.
No science, no logic please, only the director’s science which is chalta hai in films.
Well, the title of the film may remind you of a Hindi film with a similar name, Pathi, Pathni aur Woh? If yes, then it is better to know that this flick is not a remake.
Next, you may think it could be the story of a woman who comes between a man and his wife. Here it is not just one woman, but two!
While one creates differences between husband and wife the other tries to take the wife’s place. Two brothers, Vishwas and Ullas, are happily married. Both are interested in car racing.
Vishwas dies in an accident during a race while Ullas becomes a handicap. The doctors attach Vishwas’ hands and legs to Ullas.
After the operation, Vishwas’ wife starts taking special care of Ullas for he was given her husband’s hands and legs.
This irritates his wife. Consequently, differences crop up between Ullas and his wife.
Meanwhile, in another accident, Ullas’ heart is damaged and he loses his eyes.
The doctors replace his damaged heart and eyes with that of a dead man.
The story takes a twist when the dead man’s wife Neelima comes to meet him.
The plot, which is tried and tested, is possible only in films.
Adarsh, as the husband caught between two women, and newcomer Amritha, as his faithful wife, play their roles well.
Ruchita Prasad easily fits to the role of the ‘other woman’. The music scored by Shyam Sundar and Ramesh Krishnan is average.
www.deccanherald.com/deccanherald/jun062004/mr4.asp
Kannada (Aparna)
Cast: Adarsh, Amritha, Ruchita Prasad, C R Simha, Ramesh Bhat, Shankar Bhat
Director: Vijay Gujjar, N Shivakumar
Can a person become100 per cent normal if doctors replace his damaged organs with someone other person’s organs? Is it possible? Anything can happen in cinema.
No science, no logic please, only the director’s science which is chalta hai in films.
Well, the title of the film may remind you of a Hindi film with a similar name, Pathi, Pathni aur Woh? If yes, then it is better to know that this flick is not a remake.
Next, you may think it could be the story of a woman who comes between a man and his wife. Here it is not just one woman, but two!
While one creates differences between husband and wife the other tries to take the wife’s place. Two brothers, Vishwas and Ullas, are happily married. Both are interested in car racing.
Vishwas dies in an accident during a race while Ullas becomes a handicap. The doctors attach Vishwas’ hands and legs to Ullas.
After the operation, Vishwas’ wife starts taking special care of Ullas for he was given her husband’s hands and legs.
This irritates his wife. Consequently, differences crop up between Ullas and his wife.
Meanwhile, in another accident, Ullas’ heart is damaged and he loses his eyes.
The doctors replace his damaged heart and eyes with that of a dead man.
The story takes a twist when the dead man’s wife Neelima comes to meet him.
The plot, which is tried and tested, is possible only in films.
Adarsh, as the husband caught between two women, and newcomer Amritha, as his faithful wife, play their roles well.
Ruchita Prasad easily fits to the role of the ‘other woman’. The music scored by Shyam Sundar and Ramesh Krishnan is average.
www.deccanherald.com/deccanherald/jun062004/mr4.asp