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Manasaare
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| Manasaare | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Directed by | Yograj Bhat |
| Screenplay by | Pawan Kumar |
| Story by | Yogaraj Bhat |
| Produced by | Rockline Venkatesh |
| Starring | Diganth Andrita Ray |
| Cinematography | Satya Hegde |
| Edited by | Joni Harsha |
| Music by | Mano Murthy |
Production company | Rockline Productions |
Release date |
|
| Country | India |
| Language | Kannada |
Manasaare is a 2009 Indian Kannada-language romantic psychological film directed by Yogaraj Bhat. It stars Diganth and Aindrita Ray in the lead roles. The film soundtrack and score was composed by Mano Murthy with lyrics by Yogaraj Bhat and veteran lyricist Jayant Kaikini.
Plot
[edit]This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (August 2022) |
Manohar "Manu" (Diganth) is an orphaned, unemployed young man, who is often looked down on upon by his family. However, his uncle (Achyuth Kumar) is the only exception. His friend Satish (Sathish Ninasam) is a neighbour and cable operator, whose love for one of their neighhour - Bhamini, is unrequited. Bhamini marries a software engineer, and at the wedding reception, tells Manu that she loves him, but couldn't live with him (given his status). She also asks him to do something with his life, and not throw it away by spending his time criticizing the people around him. Meanwhile, Satish takes note of the "gulf" between Bhamini's new husband and himself, and decides to prove himself that he is indeed more worthy than she thinks of him. To that end, Manohar and Satish get together and invent a "electricity producing machine" which harnesses its power from vehicles that drive on roads (the fact that this isn't free energy, and that it would cost motorists who drive over it some extra fuel is not mentioned in the movie). His demonstration goes off well, but a police car chasing a criminal on a motorbike suddenly drives onto the machine, which causes the car to flip over, and in fact nearly kills the constables inside.
Manu and Satish are arrested and reprimanded for their foolishness, but they are soon released. Manu's aunt decides to marry him into a wealthy family, to get rid of him and an attempt to temper his behaviour. While they are visiting the intended's family, a baby next to Manu begins urinating. Manu takes a nearby tea-cup to catch the urine and prevent getting wet. Everyone sees this and his prior behavior as confirmation that he is mentally unstable. Manohar and Satish, both drunk, stop at an isolated hill top and tell one another their opinions about life; they get into a row. Satish drives off leaving behind Manohar.
Manohar walks back home and sees a van coming from a distance. The van is transporting about a dozen patients bound for an asylum. The inmates cause a commotion in the van, the guards loose order of the inmates' paperwork and photographs but the inmates are subdued by the guards. The van stops so that the guards can relieve themselves, and the patient Mahendra G. escapes. Manu was near the van when the guards went after the escapee. The guards notice him and take him as the escapee. Manohar is forcibly taken to the Kaamanabillu asylum.
At the asylum, Manohar demonstratively attempts to explain the mix-up but he is not believed. Soon, his family find out and go to remove him from the asylum. An altercation between Manohar and another inmate cause the family to rethink their decision to take him away because they believe he insane. So, they decide to leave him there. Manu's life is thrown out of gear, as he realizes that he has no choice but to live the life of a lunatic, although he is not. He settles down and starts bonding with the patients: Dollar (played by Pawan Kumar), who is a brilliant engineer, but considered a lunatic when one of his inventions, - a baby ass washing machine - injures a baby. He also bonds with Raju Thalikote, who is a self declared veteran of the asylum. Manu soon discloses his story to Shankrappa, who advises him to talk to Dollar, who in turn has always had an uncanny knack to escape from the asylum.
Soon, Manu manages to slip out, but during his escape, which takes him through the female wing of the asylum, he catches a glimpse of Devika (played by Aindrita Ray) and is smitten by her. Although he escapes, he changes his mind and returns to the asylum to pursue a relationship with her. As they are not allowed to mingle by the asylum staff, the inmates (under Shankrappa's leadership) hatch and execute a plan to allow Manu to meet Devika. Shankrappa is well aware of the doctors' tendency to perform the exact opposite to what he request them to do - since they perceive him to be insane - and he uses this to get them all sent for electro-shock therapy (since the EST room is within the women's wing). Dollar has manufactured a non-conducting gel which they then switch with the EST gel, so that they're not really affected by the shock. They fake syncope, and when the staff leave for a prayer assembly, they sneak out to meet Devika. It turns out that Devika is sleeping (having been given an illegal pill, by a doctor who, unbeknownst to everyone engages in (implied) sexual abuse of female inmates, using the pill). Nonetheless, Manu - with Shankrappa's assistance, carries Devika to an ambulance, and drives it out of the asylum.
Devika is a dental student who is in the asylum as she has cultivated intense misandry, after a lecturer misbehaved with her. This manifests itself as aggressive behaviour from time to time, where she stabs any man she deems dangerous. When she awakens the morning after being spirited away by Manu, she attacks him. However, Manu manages to subdue her and professes his love to her. Devika and Manu decide to return to the asylum. On the way, at Devika's insistence, they take a temporary detour to her childhood home, where Devika has a flashback - of her uncaring father (who drove her mother to suicide). They then proceed to the asylum, but stop for the night. Manu spouts a monologue of his love for her, once she sleeps - and this is recorded by a CCTV camera that was activated accidentally by Devika, when they had hit a bump in the road earlier. The next morning, she discovers this, but while waking up Manu, unintentionally scares and nearly kills him when he falls down a railway overbridge. Manu is angry, and is about to leave her to her own devices, when she laughs at his rant, and he is smitten again. As they continue on foot (the van having run out of fuel), even as Manu pleads with her to go back (and not to the hospital). She doesn't respond right up until they go to the hospital, and convinces Manu to re-enter it.
As their relationship reaches serious levels, Devika asks Manu point blank whether he is capable of cheating her, to which the latter replies in the negative. However, once the escaped inmate (Mahendra) is caught, and brought to the asylum by the police (Mahendra is a murderer), the staff realise their mix-up. However, in front of everyone, they accuse Manu of being complicit in the charade, so that he could enjoy a free ride at the hospital. Devika construes this as Manu's betrayal, and of the disingenuousness of his love, and spurns him. A shattered Manu is thrown out of the asylum, bidding a tearful farewell to his fellow inmates with whom he had developed a bond. As he leaves, he encounters Dollar (who had managed to finally escape) returning to the asylum, claiming that there was nothing in the world worth living for outside the asylum.
When he arrives at his uncle's place however, he is once again exposed to the ridicule of people.
The movie ends with Devika encountering him near his house. It is shown that she is cured of her dementia when she remembered Manu, who helped her to let go of her painful past, and move on; when she fought back the abusive doctor, and having watched the tape again, Devika is convinced that his love for her was real. The doctors have also concluded that Manu was responsible for "curing" Devika, and she says that is why she has returned to him; but Manu says that he himself is deemed to be uncured, and insane - being laughed at by society. Devika asks him, rather nonchalantly, as to how could that be his problem, and Manu comes around - with both of them pitying society, and walking away. The final scene closes with a voice-over, of a line that Shankrappa had delivered to Manu when the latter first arrived at the asylum - "Those in this world that come to an asylum, are those who can be cured. The ones who cannot be cured at all, remain outside. There's a chance that you'll be cured of madness, which is something that others outside don't have. Whoever comes here is only temporarily mad, but the ones on the outside are permanently so."
The movie has shades of "One flew over the Cuckoo's Nest", the conundrum illustrated in "Catch-22" and also shows the 'institutionalisation' depicted in "The Shawshank Redemption". The main thrust of the movie is to show the hypocrisy of a society which classifies behaviours, and, by extension, people into 'normal' and 'abnormal'.
Cast
[edit]- Diganth as Mahendra / Manohar
- Aindrita Ray as Devika
- Neethu as Bhamini
- Achyuth Kumar as Manohar's uncle
- Raju Talikote as Shankarappa
- Balaji Manohar as psychiatrist
- Pawan Kumar as Dollar
- Manjunath Hegde as police inspector
- Sathish Ninasam as Cable operator Satish
- Ashok Rao as Kaamanabillu asylum superintendent
- Mithra as Indarjeet
Soundtrack
[edit]| Manasaare | |
|---|---|
| Soundtrack album by | |
| Genre | Film soundtrack |
| Length | 26:18 |
| Label | Aditya Music |
The soundtrack was composed by Mano Murthy.
| No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Ondu Kanasu" | Jayanth Kaikini | Kunal Ganjawala, Ananya Bhagat, Jayanth Kaikini | 3:08 |
| 2. | "Kanna Haniyondige" | Yogaraj Bhat | KK, Shreya Ghoshal | 5:09 |
| 3. | "Naa Naguva Modalene" | Yogaraj Bhat | Shreya Ghoshal | 4:32 |
| 4. | "Ello Maleyaagidenu" | Jayanth Kaikini | Sonu Nigam | 4:09 |
| 5. | "Naanu Manasare" | Yogaraj Bhat | Vikas Vasistha, Lakshmi Nagaraj | 2:41 |
| 6. | "Sahanavavathu" | Vijay Prakash | 2:55 | |
| 7. | "Onde Ninna" | Jayanth Kaikini | Sonu Nigam | 3:44 |
Reception
[edit]Critical response
[edit]R G Vijayasarathy of Rediff.com scored the film at 3.5 out of 5 stars and says "Sathya Hegde, the cameraman and Mano Murthy, the music composer. Hegde goes to the deep, inaccessible corners of Madikeri, Karwar and other places to add lot of visual strength to the movie. Hats off to Mano Murthy for his superb music. Manasaare is a must-watch for all Kannada film viewers who are tired of watching a series of remakes and eagerly waiting for original stories".[1] A critic from Deccan Herald wrote "The director takes care that this doesn’t happen but cannot pump up the film’s pace, held down by a couple of songs and scenes. The film has a sudden end and does not touch the viewer. Then again, ‘Manasaare’ may not be everybody's cup of tea".[2] A critic from Bangalore Mirror wrote "The best things in the film are the dialogues, camera work (Sathya Hegde), lyrics by Jayanth Kaikini (even though it is still about rain) and music by Mano Murthy (that still sounds like the rain and showers you have heard before). Bhat’s inspirations come from various old sources, but that is not enough to beef up this film".[3] A critic from The New Indian Express scored the film at three-and-a-half out of five stars and wrote "The editing and art work add strength to the movie. "Ello Maleyaagidhe Endhu", "Kanna Haniyondhige Kenne Maathaadidhe" and "Naa Naguva Modalene" are superb compositions. The fantastic visuals, melodious music and Yogaraj Bhat's dialogues are the high points of Manasaare".[4]
Box office
[edit]The movie was the one of biggest hit of the year 2009.[5]
Awards
[edit]- Filmfare Award for Best Lyricist - Kannada - Jayant Kaikini - "Yello Maleyaagide"
- South Scope Awards
- Best Film
- Best Director
- Best Actress
- Best Lyricist
References
[edit]- ^ "Yogaraj Bhat strikes again with Manasaare". Rediff.com. 25 September 2009. Archived from the original on 21 December 2022. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
- ^ "Manasaare". Deccan Herald. 25 September 2009. Archived from the original on 28 August 2022. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
- ^ "Manasaare : It's Bhat, but..." Bangalore Mirror. 25 September 2009. Archived from the original on 28 August 2022. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
- ^ "Manasaare". The New Indian Express. 27 September 2009.
- ^ "'Manasaare is an honest attempt'".
External links
[edit]Manasaare
View on GrokipediaSynopsis
Plot summary
Manasaare centers on Manohar, an orphan raised by his uncle who leads a carefree yet unproductive life marked by repeated failures and dependency on his family. Following heartbreak from his girlfriend leaving him for a more affluent suitor and mistreatment by his uncle's household, Manohar heads out with friends for a gathering, leading to a mistaken identity that results in his admission to the Kamanabillu mental asylum.[3][4] Confined in the asylum, Manohar encounters Devika, a patient afflicted with a mental disorder, and the pair develop a romantic bond. He forms alliances with fellow patients, including Shankerappa and an unstable software engineer, facilitating initial escape attempts. Their relationship intensifies, prompting Manohar to disguise himself as an ambulance driver to elope with Devika, initiating a fleeting external adventure filled with shared experiences amid looming threats of institutional intervention like shock therapy.[4][5] The storyline unfolds with psychological developments blurring lines between perceived and actual insanity, as Manohar reintegrates into society only to face ridicule that exacerbates his mental state. In the climax, Devika's acceptance provides resolution to his turmoil, and the two depart together, uncertain of their destination. The film, a romantic psychological drama, runs 130 minutes and premiered on September 25, 2009.[6][4][3][1]Production
Development and writing
Yogaraj Bhat conceived the story for Manasaare as a romantic psychological narrative set in a mental asylum, aiming to probe the boundaries between madness and sanity through a light-hearted love story that critiques societal conformity. Drawing inspiration from Michel Foucault's theories on how reason-dominated civilizations marginalize intuitive or irrational minds by institutionalizing them, Bhat envisioned the asylum as a metaphor for enforced normalcy, contrasting the competitive external world with the creative freedom of its inhabitants.[7] The director sought to question the assumptions of psychiatry while affirming its practical role, incorporating elements reminiscent of Adoor Gopalakrishnan's Mathilukal in scenes depicting emotional healing through interpersonal bonds.[7] Bhat developed the screenplay in collaboration with B. P. Pawan Kumar, who adapted the director's original story into a structured script emphasizing witty, thought-provoking dialogues alongside quirky plotting.[8] [9] The project fell under Rockline Productions, led by producer Rockline Venkatesh, marking Bhat's follow-up to his blockbuster Mungaru Male and reflecting a deliberate shift toward introspective themes in Kannada cinema.[9] Conceptualizing the asylum environment posed challenges for a Kannada audience accustomed to conventional romance tropes, as Bhat intentionally deviated from sensationalized depictions of mental illness to prioritize causal realism in portraying trauma recovery and relational dynamics.[10] This approach required balancing intellectual depth with accessibility, avoiding overt didacticism to maintain narrative engagement without compromising the film's exploration of psychological nuance.[8]Casting and crew assembly
Diganth was cast in the lead role of the eccentric Manohar after resolving scheduling conflicts, as he was not director Yogaraj Bhat's initial choice but committed once available.[11] Bhat selected him based on prior collaboration in Galipata (2006), where Diganth demonstrated capability for mature characterizations suitable for the film's psychological elements.[12] Aindrita Ray was chosen for the female lead as Devika, the love interest portrayed as a mentally challenged character, following Bhat's observation of her lively performance in Junglee (2009), emphasizing her fit for nuanced emotional depth over established stardom.[11][12] The supporting cast included relatively fresh faces like Sathish Neenasam and Neethu Shetty (credited as Neethu) for roles requiring authentic portrayals of interpersonal dynamics in a mental health context, aligning with Bhat's preference for performers capable of subtle, non-sensationalized depictions rather than high-profile actors.[13] Neethu Shetty appeared in a cameo, drawing from her earlier work in Bhat's Galipata.[11] The ensemble prioritized acting range for the film's exploration of eccentricity and vulnerability, with most artists being newcomers except for select returning collaborators.[12] Key technical crew assembly focused on personnel suited to the psychological narrative's visual and pacing demands. Cinematographer Sathya Hegde was brought on after the original choice, Krishna from Bhat's Mungaru Male (2006), faced availability issues; Hegde's expertise in handheld techniques supported intimate, realistic shots of emotional states.[11] Editor Jo Ni Harsha handled post-production trimming to maintain narrative tension without exaggeration.[3] Pre-production, spanning late 2008 into early 2009, emphasized these selections to bridge the script's mental health themes with grounded execution, avoiding reliance on commercial star power.[14]Principal photography and post-production
Principal photography for Manasaare occurred primarily in Madikeri, Mysore, and Bangalore, with a custom hospital set constructed inside the Madikeri Jail to depict key asylum sequences.[12] By mid-July 2009, filming had concluded for most sequences, pending completion of a single song featuring leads Diganth and Aindrita Ray.[12] Post-production, including editing to integrate thriller pacing and psychological elements, was actively underway at that stage, aligning with the film's September 25, 2009 release.[12][15]Cast
Lead and supporting roles
Diganth Manchale starred in the lead role as Manohar (also referred to as Mahendra or Manohara in credits), portraying a carefree, jobless young man who is mistakenly committed to a mental asylum.[13][16][5] Aindrita Ray played the female lead as Devika, Manohar's romantic counterpart and a patient in the same asylum suffering from mental health issues.[13][17][16] Supporting roles included Neethu Shetty as Bhamini, a character connected to Manohar's personal life; Achyuth Kumar as Manohar's uncle; and Raju Talikote as Shankarappa.[13][16] Balaji Manohar portrayed the psychiatrist, characterized as a menacing and villainous doctor within the asylum setting.[18][16] Additional supporting performers featured Sathish Neenasam as Sathish, the cable operator; Pawan Kumar as the lunatic engineer (also credited as Dollar); and others such as Mithra and Manjunath Hegde in asylum staff and family roles.[13][16][9]Soundtrack
Composition and track details
The soundtrack of Manasaare was composed by Mano Murthy, encompassing both the original songs and background score, which amplify the film's depiction of romantic longing intertwined with psychological strain.[19][20] Lyrics were penned mainly by Yogaraj Bhat and Jayanth Kaikini, with themes revolving around dreams, unrequited desire, and emotional disquietude that echo the narrative's focus on love's obsessive edges.[21] Murthy's melodic arrangements, blending melodic folk influences with subtle tension-building orchestration, contribute to the atmospheric depth without overt dramatic flourishes.[22] Released on August 6, 2009, ahead of the film's September 25 theatrical debut, the album adhered to standard Indian cinema practices by building anticipation through radio airplay and early digital availability on platforms like Apple Music.[19][1] This seven-track collection, totaling approximately 26 minutes, featured vocalists including Kunal Ganjawala, Shreya Ghoshal, KK, and Sonu Nigam, fostering promotional buzz in Kannada-speaking regions.[23] It garnered notice for its melodic appeal, ranking among notable Kannada releases of the year and maintaining playback value in regional compilations.[24]| Track Title | Singers | Duration | Lyrical Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ondu Kanasu | Kunal Ganjawala, Ananya Bhagat, Jayanth Kaikini | 3:08 | Dreamy romantic yearning |
| Kanna Haniyondigey | KK, Shreya Ghoshal | 5:08 | Playful yet intense attraction |
| Naa Naguva Odaleny | Shreya Ghoshal | ~4:00 | Melancholic longing and sway |
| Ello Maleyaagidenu | Sonu Nigam | ~4:30 | Turmoil of perceived reality |
| Onde Ninna Nota Saaku | Sonu Nigam | ~4:00 | Nostalgic plea for connection |
| Om Sahana Vavatu | Vijay Prakash (sloka) | ~1:00 | Invocatory calm amid chaos |
| Naanu Manasare | Ensemble/chorus | ~4:30 | Core motif of heartfelt madness |

