Om (1995 film)
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Om | |
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![]() Theatrical re-release poster
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Directed by | Upendra |
Produced by | Parvathamma Rajkumar |
Screenplay by | Upendra |
Story by | Upendra |
Starring | Shivarajkumar Prema |
Music by | Hamsalekha |
Cinematography | B. C. Gowrishankar |
Edited by | Shashikumar |
Production
company |
Poornima Enterprises
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Distributed by | Sri Vajreshwari Combines |
Release dates
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19 May 1995 |
Running time
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150 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Kannada |
Om (Kannada: ಓಂ), stylized as ॐ, is an 1995 Indian Kannada crime drama film written and directed by Upendra. The film was produced by Parvathamma Rajkumar under the production company Sri Vajreshwari Combines. The film stars Shivarajkumar and Prema in lead roles with Srishanthi, G. V. Shivanand, Sadhu Kokila and along with real life gangsters Bekkina Kannu Rajendra, Tanveer, Korangu Krishna, Jedaralli Krishnappa portraying supporting roles.
The film was notable for its exposure of Bengaluru's criminal underworld. The film's plot revolves around Satya, son of a priest who becomes a gangster after his lover framed him in a murder. Rest of the film is about Satya leaving the rowdyism. The soundtrack was composed by Hamsalekha who also written the lyrics for all songs. B. C. Gowrishankar and Shashikumar handled cinematography and editing respectively.
Om was remade in Telugu as Omkaram (1997) starring Dr.Rajshekar and Prema which was also directed by Upendra. Bollywood's 1998 blockbuster Satya shares many similarities with Om, including the fact that both deal with criminal underworlds and each protagonist's name is the same: Satya. The film became a successful venture at box office. It remains a cult following among audience owing to its re-release every year and the film re-released more than 600 times.
Contents
Plot
The movie begins with a reporter writing articles about underworld dons and the reasons why people enter the underworld and practice rowdyism. The movie revolves around the main character Satya (Shivarajkumar), a son of a priest who turns into a rowdy for love. But the same love brings him back into being a civilized person. But there are twists involved in the movie as to why he is provoked to turn into a rowdy, how he is rejected by his family and relatives and also the girl for whom he had to became a rowdy in the first place and many other events which are the key scenes to watch for in the movie.
Cast
- Shivarajkumar as Satyamurthy
- Prema as Madhuri
- Srishanthi as Shashi
- G. V. Shivanand as Dheena
- Upasane Seetharam
- Honnavalli Krishna
- Sadhu Kokila as Shankar
- V. Manohar as Chennakeshava, Editor-in-chief of Krantiveera
- Bekkina Kannu Rajendra as himself
- Tanveer as himself
- Korangu Krishna as himself
- Jedaralli Krishnappa as himself
- Srirampura Kitty as himself
- Koli Baya as himself
- Vanishree as Satyamurthy's sister
Production
Development
Speaking on a talk show, Weekend with Ramesh in 2014, on how he developed the story for Om, Upendra said he wrote a part of the story during his days in college in the late-1980s. Purushottam, a friend of Upendra, brought to him a letter written by someone that caught his attention. Drawing inspiration from it, he drafted the first part of the story, that he subsequently developed, although incompletely. He also revealed that had always wanted make a film on organized crime and mafia, based on real-life incidents.[1] He said he was "disappointed" on learning that the screenplay of 1989 film Siva had a similar storyline to what he had written. He began working as a dialogue writer and songwriter in Kannada cinema during the time, and the first half of the 1990s saw him direct two films, Tharle Nan Maga (1992) and Shhh! (1993). Alongside, he developed the storyline and wrote a screenplay with the plot taking a sequences of flashback, which he said "took another form" at the end of completion.[1]
Casting
Having given the film a working title as Satya, Upendra initially decided to cast Kumar Govind as the eponymous lead, who he had previously collaborated with, in Shhh!.[2] However, later, eager to cast Shiva Rajkumar in the role, Upendra approached actor Honnavalli Krishna in 1994, and persuaded him to speak the matter over to Shiva's father and actor, Rajkumar. Krishna spoke to S. P. Varadappa, Rajkumar's brother, who invited Upendra and him over to their house in Bangalore. Impressed by the story narrated by Upendra in a span of ten minutes using newspaper cuttings of oil mafia to elaborate on the subject, Rajkumar gave the go-ahead and Shiva was signed as the male lead. Rajkumar also agreed to produce the film and handed an amount of ₹50,000 over to Upendra the same day.[1] Shiva had till then portrayed roles predominantly of a romantic hero in his then career of 8 years. Speaking on casting him, Upendra said he was drawn by Shiva's "powerful brownish-shaded eyes" and wanted to "make full use of it".[1] Many actresses had been speculated to play the role of the female lead Madhuri, in the film, including then popular Hindi film actress Juhi Chawla. Finally, on Rajkumar's approval, Prema, a newcomer then, who was already filming with Shiva in Savyasachi, was cast in the role.[3] Real-life gangsters Bekkinakannu Rajendra, Korangu Krishna, Tanveer Ahmad and Jedarahalli Krishna made cameo appearances in the film.[4]
Filming
The principal photography took place on 7 December 1994 in Bangalore. On the day, Rajkumar wrote the spiritual icon "ॐ" on the film's screenplay material using kumkuma, which was later made the title design for the film.[5] B. C. Gowrishankar who handled cinematography used a warm, yellow tone and employed filters throughout the film.[6][7]
Soundtrack
Om | |
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Soundtrack album by Hamsalekha | |
Genre | Feature film soundtrack |
Length | 24:28 |
Label | Magnasound |
Hamsalekha composed the film score and the film's soundtrack, also writing its lyrics.[8] In September 2015, the rights for the soundtrack album was acquired by Sony Music Entertainment, and was released digitally.[9] All the songs including "Hey Dinakara" and "O Gulabiye" were well received and became chartbusters.
Tracklist | ||||
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No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
1. | "Hey Dinakara" | Hamsalekha | Rajkumar | 5:08 |
2. | "College Kumaru" | Hamsalekha | Mano | 5:07 |
3. | "Mehabooba" | Hamsalekha | Mano | 4:58 |
4. | "O Gulaabiye" | Hamsalekha | Rajkumar | 4:58 |
5. | "Amruthavanthe Premada" | Hamsalekha | Mano | 4:17 |
Total length:
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24:28 |
Release
Re release
As of March 2015, Om had been re-released over 632 times and in over 400 theatres across Karnataka.[10] On 12 March 2015, the film was re-released with Digital intermediate and DTS for the first time in over 100 theatres.[11] It was distributed by Kishore Films.[12][13]
Home Media
Even though the film was released in 1995, its satellite and TV rights was sold to Udaya TV in 2015 for a sum of 10 crores, including the TV rights of Vinay Rajkumar starrer Siddhartha (2015) (which is not officially confirmed by Raghavendra Rajkumar or Poornima enterprises who owned the rights). It was telecast on 15th August 2015. [14] The amount is the highest for any kannada film considering that the film is already 20 years old and has been released hundreds of times.[15] Video rights was sold to Sri Ganesh Video.[16][17]
Awards
- 1995–96 Karnataka State Film Awards
- Best Actor — Shiva Rajkumar
- Best Actress — Prema
- Best Screenplay — Upendra
- Best Cinematographer — B. C. Gowrishankar
Legacy
Om attained cult status in Kannada cinema. It became a trendsetter in the genre of films based on gangsters.[18] Shivarajkumar went on to be typecasted portraying similar roles in later films.[6]
References
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External links
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- Pages with reference errors
- Use Indian English from June 2015
- All Wikipedia articles written in Indian English
- Use dmy dates from June 2015
- Kannada-language films
- Articles containing Kannada-language text
- Music infoboxes with deprecated parameters
- 1995 films
- Films set in Bangalore
- Films about organised crime in India
- Indian films
- Film scores by Hamsalekha
- Kannada films remade in other languages
- Gangster films
- Fictional Indian people
- Indian crime films
- 1990s Kannada-language films
- Films directed by Upendra