Misplaced Pages

Kathapurushan

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Kathapurushan" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

1995 Indian film
Kathapurushan
A screenshot from the film
Directed byAdoor Gopalakrishnan
Written byAdoor Gopalakrishnan
Produced byAdoor Gopalakrishnan
NHK (co-producer)
StarringVishwanathan
Mini Nair
Aranmula Ponnamma
Narendra Prasad
Urmila Unni
Babu Namboothiri
CinematographyMankada Ravi Varma
Edited byM. Mani
Music byVijaya Bhaskar
Production
companies
Adoor Gopalakrishnan Productions
NHK
Release date
  • 1995 (1995)
Running time107 minutes
CountriesIndia
Japan
LanguageMalayalam

Kathapurushan (English: The Man of the Story) is a 1995 Indo-Japanese Malayalam-language period drama film written and directed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan. It was produced by Gopalakrishnan himself and co-produced by NHK. The film stars Vishwanathan, Mini Nair, Aranmula Ponnamma, Narendra Prasad and Urmila Unni.

Kathapurushan is a journey exploring the history of that time in the state of Kerala in India.

The film won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film at the National Film Awards in 1996.

Plot

Kunjunni's parents separate soon after his birth, and he is left to be cared by his mother, lacking paternal care and affection. His mother has the help of his grandmother, an estate manager, and his friend Meenakshi, daughter of a maid servant in Kunjunni's house.

Inspired by his uncle, initially a Gandhian and later a Marxist, Kunjunni is drawn to left-wing ideologies at college, believing that communism is the answer to social hardships and inequalities. Eventually he joins an extremist Marxist group. After an attack on a police station, Kunjunni is arrested and charged, but is later acquitted.

Kunjunni matures with experience, yet feels lonely and disillusioned. He tries to turn his life around; on a quest to find his childhood friend, Meenakshi, he does so and marries her. He sells his properties to a newly wealthy man, whose father was once a servant in Kunjuni's house and moves to an ordinary house, trying to live a normal family life with his wife and son.

One day, a college classmate, a journalist, seeks to interview him, which Kunjunni declines. Later, Kujunni, with the help of his journalist friend, publishes his first story, "Karaksharangal". However, due to its subversive content, the government banned it. When Kunjunni reads this in the newspaper, he began to laugh, with his family, at this corrupt world.

Awards

The film has won the following awards since its release:

1996 National Film Awards (India)

1997 Bombay International Film Festival (India)

References

External links

Feature films directed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan
National Film Award for Best Feature Film
1953–1960
1961–1980
1981–2000
2001–2020
2021–present
Kerala Film Critics Association Award for Best Film
1977 – 2000
2001 – 2021


Stub icon

This article about a Malayalam film of the 1990s is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: