Sammohanam (1994 film)

Sammohanam (Enlightenment) is a 1994 Indian film in Malayalam directed by C. P. Padmakumar, starring Murali, Nedumudi Venu and Archana in the lead roles. The film received the Best of the Fest Award at the Edinburgh International Film Festival in 1995.[1] The film is based on Rithubhedangal, a story written by Balakrishnan Mangad.[2] The film being non-commercial and off-beat, was made on a controlled budget. Illayaraja did this film without charging fees as he was impressed with its storyline.[3]

Sammohanam
Directed byC. P. Padmakumar
Produced byC. P. Padmakumar
Written byBalakrishnan Mangad
StarringMurali
Nedumudi Venu
Archana
Music byIllayaraja
CinematographyM J Radhakrishnan
Edited byK.R. Bose
Production
company
Cinevalley Motion Pictures
Release date
  • 1994 (1994)
Running time
1 hour 44 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageMalayalam

Plot

Sammohanam tells the story of a mysteriously seductive girl, Pennu (Archana) in a quiet village to which she has temporarily relocated, in search of her missing grandfather, Karuvan Valyachan. She creates a strange chasm among male folks, breaking marriages and old friendships. Chandu (Murali), a wealthy farmer who owns paddy fields was the first to fall for her charms and even breaks up with his wife Jaanu (Bindu Panicker) and family. Later when Pennu started wooing Chindan (Balakrishnan), a jaggery mill owner and a close friend of Chandu, he cannot stand it and attacked Chindan with a sickle, chopping off his earlobe. Then comes Ummini (Nedumudi Venu), a travelling seller with his pair of horses. He is an old alley of Pennu's grandfather. Soon he too got enchanted and fell for Pennu's charm. Ambu (Sarath), a helper of Chandu also has a hidden passion for Pennu, even though he is much younger to Pennu. Chandu sees Ummini and Pennu together and becomes angry and fought Ummini with his sickle. Ambu tries to intervene and gets accidentally knifed to death by Chandu. Chandu out of guilt and grief commits suicide by jumping into a waterfall. Finally Pennu leaves the village alone, after torching her house, having fractured the village community with her sexuality.

Cast

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 26 May 2011. Retrieved 21 May 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. http://www.malayalasangeetham.info/m.php?1437
  3. "Sammohanam Report". Vellinakshatram. 6 March 1994.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.