Subscribe us Like us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter He. It’s an auspicious day to us; it was on this date that my father rose to stardom with Pathala Bhairavi (1951), founded TDP in 1982, and oversaw the release of classics like Lava Kusa. Balakrishna starrer Legend, directed by Boyapati Srinu, has set a new record in Telugu cinema. It has become, the first Telugu film to be screened for 400 days (four shows) in a single theatre.
The National Film Archive of India has added 23 Telugu classics to its collection. The films include LV Prasad’s Shavukaru (1950), Pelli Chesi Choodu (1952) and Missamma (1955) as well as Vijaya Vauhini Studios productions Pathala Bhairavi (1951), Maya Bazar (1957) and Satya Harishchandra (1965).
An official announcement about the project was made yesterday. Telugu360 collected some exclusive information about the project. The film is said to be a periodic film tipped with a folk backdrop. Nag Ashwin is said to have been inspired by yesteryear classics like ‘Pathala Bhairavi’ and penned an interesting script. There are many memorable flicks in Telugu Cinema over the past eight decades. Movie making has gone through many changes but the core storytelling principals have remained the same. As we have provided you with some best movie lists previously, in this part we will mention the best movies from.
In a press note, NFAI director Prakash Magdum said, “On the occasion of the World Day for Audiovisual Heritage, I appeal to film lovers to come forward and donate any rare and old film footage and non-filmic items like wall posters, still photographs and song booklets, so that it can be preserved for future generations”.
The Telugu films follow the recent acquisition of Bilwamangal. Made in 1919, Bilwamangal is the second oldest title in the NFAI’s vault after DG Phalke’s silent movie Raja Harishchandra (1917). Apart from fragmented bits of silent films such as Raja Harishchandra and Kaliya Mardan (1919), the archive in Pune also boasts of the complete version of The Light of Asia (1925) and Shiraz (1929).
Among the Telugu titles is Kadiri Venkata Reddy’s Pathala Bhairavi (1951), starring Telugu superstar NT Rama Rao. The fantasy adventure features kings and queens, the hunt for a wish-fulfilling statue, sorcery, and a soundtrack by renowned music composer Ghantasala.
LV Prasad’s family drama Shavukaru stars NTR and Sowcar Janaki as star-crossed lovers who unite after overcoming familial opposition.
Rao’s Chandraharam (1954), starring NTR and Sriranjani, is a fantasy adventure about a king’s efforts to find the woman of his dreams.
Kamalakara Kameswara Rao’s Gundamma Katha (1962) is an adaptation of William Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew and stars NTR and Akkineni Nageswara Rao, Savitri and Jamuna.
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