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Thursday 9 April 2020

Bhaktha

Bhakta - English to Kannada Dictionary: ಭಕ್ತ

Definition of 'bhakta'

Hinduism
a devotee of God

Meaning for ಭಕ್ತ (Bhakta) - ಉಪಾಸಕ, ಕಟ್ಟಾಸಮರ್ಥಕ

शुद्ध-भकत


Śuddha-bhakata (in Hindi)

शुद्ध-भकत-चरण-रेणु, भजन-अनुकूल
भकत-सेवा, परम-सिद्धि, प्रेम-लतिकार मूल

माधव-तिथि, भक्ति-जननी, जतने पालन कोरि
कृष्ण-बसति, बसति बोलि’ परम आदरे बोरि

गौर् आमार, जे-सब स्थाने, कोरलो भ्रमण रंगे
से-सब स्थानॆ, हेरिबो आमि, प्राणमि-भकत-संगे

मृदंग-वाद्य, शुनिते मन, अबसर सदा जाचे
गौर-बिहित, कीर्तन शुनि ‘, आनंदे हृदोय नाचे

जुगल-मूर्ति, देखिया मोर, परम-आनंद होय,
प्रसाद सेबा कोरिते होय सकल प्रपंच जय

जे-दिन गृहे, भजन देखि, गृहेते गोलोक भाय
चरण-सीधु, देखिया गंगा, सुख सा सीमा पाय

तुलसी देखि ‘, जुडाय प्राण, माधव-तोषने जानि’
गौर-प्रिय, शाक-सेवने, जीवन सार्थक मानि

भकतिविनोद कृष्ण भजने, अनुकूल पाय जाहा
प्रति-दिवसे परम-सुखे स्वीकार कोरोये ताहा

bhaktha gnanadeva kannada movie (1982)

 
Kannada movie 1982

Dnyaneshwar, a young boy, lives in abject poverty along with his siblings due to persecution by the religious elite. He grows up to be one of the most revered saints of the Varkari sect.

Bhaktha Gnanadeva – ಭಕ್ತ ಜ್ಞಾನದೇವ (1982/೧೯೮೨)

Casting Stars:

Baby Rekha, Master Rajesh, Baby Lakshmi, Master Sanjay (HP), Baby Hemamalini (HP), Jayanthi, Ramakrishna, Srinivasamurthy, Vishwanath, Kumari Shyam (HP), Karunakara (HP), Thoogudeepa Srinivas, Sundar Krishna Urs, Rajanand, Seetharam, Thyagaraj Urs, Brahmavar, Gode Lakshminarayan, Jr Narasimharaju, Thimmappa, Lakshman, Shobha, Prashanthi Nayak, Lalithashree, Ashwath Narayan, Comedian Guggu, Shashkiran, Gopal Bhat, Kunigal Ramanath, Karunakar, Nagaraju, Sampath Kumar, Swapna, Pramila, Manjula, Soubhagya, Sharada, Saraswathi, Uma, Sharadamma

Direction:
Director     Hunsur Krishnamurthy
Co-Director     Kallesh
Associate Director     Sampath Kumar, Jayakumar

Production:
Banner     Rajkamal Arts
Producer     K C N Chandrashekar
Production Manager     T S Raju

Writers:
Story   
Screenplay     Hunsur Krishnamurthy
Dialogue     Hunsur Krishnamurthy
Lyrics     Hunsur Krishnamurthy, R N Jayagopal, Chi Udayashankar

Other Crews:
Music     G K Venkatesh
Cinematography     N R K Murthy
Operative Camaraman     C Gopal Rao
Editor     R Rajan, R Rajashekar
Choreography     Udupi B Jayaram, Devi
Art     B Nagaraj Rao
Costume     K Subba Rao
Makeup     M S Keshava, Bosubabu
PRO     D V Sudheendra
Publicity Designs     Gangadhar
Stills     Pragathi Studios

Sound Recording:
Re-Recording     V Shivaram

Censor Details:
CBFC     U
Dated     22-04-1982
Length     4151.38 Mts
Reels     16
Color     Color

Audio & Video:
Audio On   
Video On     Sri Video Tronics
Runtime     141 min

Song and Singer  :
Ondu Eradu Mooru Nalku : S P Shailaja   
Preethi Banada Hoovugale: P Susheela   
Ninnolagiruva Paramathmananu : S Janaki   
Aalisiri Paalisiri : SPB ( S P Balasubramaniam)
Gange Yamuneyara : SPB, S Janaki

bhaktha gnanadeva kannada mp3 song

bhaktha siriyala

Storyline

Watch the full movie, Bhaktha Siriyala. Bhaktha Siriyala is a 1980 Indian Kannada film, directed by Hunsur Krishnamurthy and produced by Chandulal Jain, Deepchand Jain, Naveen Chandra Shaw and A Krishnamurthy . The film stars K. S. Ashwath, Aarathi and Lokesh in lead roles. The film had musical score by T. G. Lingappa.

Genres: Biography | Drama | Musical

Country: India

Language: Kannada | Hindi

Release Date: 14 February 1980 (India)

Also Known As: Shiv Bhakt Siriyala

bhaktha prahlada kannada

Bhakta Prahalada is a Kannada mythological drama, starring Dr Rajkumar, Master Lohith, Anant Nag, Saritha and Ambika and directed by Vijay. Little Prahalada is an ardent Vishnu devotee. His father, the King, wants him to worship him instead of Lord Vishnu. The young Prahlada refuses and now, his faith will be tested.

Bhakta Prahlada is a Kannada Movie Directed by Vijay, Starring Dr. Rajkumar, Saritha, Ananth Naag, Master Lohith, Ambika

bhakta kumbara

Bhaktha Kumbara (ಭಕ್ತ ಕುಂಬಾರ) - 1974 | Dr. Rajkumar,Leelavathi| Kannada Old Movies. 

Bhaktha Kumbara is a 1974 Indian Kannada film, directed by Hunsur Krishnamurthy and produced by N R Anuradha Devi. The film stars Rajkumar, Leelavati and Balkrishna in lead roles. The film had musical score by G.K. Venkatesh.

bhaktha prahalada

Bhaktha Prahlada- ಭಕ್ತ ಪ್ರಹ್ಲಾದ | Dr.Rajkumar Kannada Full Movies | Puneeth RajKumar | Mythological

Holika, at her arrogant brother's request, unsuccessfully tries to burn Prahlada in a fire but meets her fate before executing her plan. She becomes a symbol celebrated to remember the death of evil.

Release date: 12 January 1967 (India)

Director: Chitrapu Narayana Rao

Music director: S. Rajeswara Rao

Producers: A. V. Meiyappan, M. Saravanan

Language‎: ‎Kannada

bhaktha prahlada telugu movie hd download

bhaktha prahlada movie narada character

Singer M. Balamuralikrishna was cast as the sage Narada, making his acting debut in film.

bhakti gana deva kannada film

pouranika -

पौराणिक /paurāṇika/ legendary adjective. If you describe someone or something as legendary, you mean that they are very famous and that many stories are told about them.

25 Greatest Acting Performances of Indian Cinema

A pick of the most memorable acting performances

 { Hindi }

Balraj Sahni

in Garam Hawa (Scorching Winds), 1974

Films about partition are usually angry in their tone. Garam Hawa is downbeat and elegiac. Sahni is the head of a Muslim family that is coming apart after the Partition of India. He fills his character with dignity, grief and is never maudlin. Sahni was a natural actor and that’s what helps his character.

Utpal Dutt

in Bhuvan Shome, 1969

An ageing and strict government employee takes a vacation in the wilderness. He comes back a changed man. He is kinder, gentler and more connected with himself than before. Dutt conducts a masterclass in acting where he goes from being a martinet to being confused and clumsy and finally, a liberated soul.

Amitabh Bachchan

in Deewar, 1975

Bachchan’s breakthrough was Zanjeer, but the Vijay of that film was angry and sullen; his acting largely focussed around only one emotion: Anger. In Deewar, he assembles the entire orchestra of rage. Deewar’s Vijay was defiant, cool, cocky, unreasonable and full of pathos.

Amjad Khan

in Sholay, 1975

The rasping voice, the arrogant swagger, the evil laugh, that malevolent eye—Amjad Khan’s bravura performance of a dacoit from the badlands of Chambal has few parallels in Indian cinema. Khan put the venom back in villainy in a performance that hasn’t ever been matched.

Sanjeev Kumar

in Angoor, 1982

Normally great acting performances are associated with tragedy, or the character exhibiting a panoply of emotions. It is not often that a comic role gets this status. The one exception is Sanjeev Kumar’s double role in Angoor (based on Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors) where he makes you joyful with effortless acting and amazing comic timing.

Dilip Kumar

in Devdas, 1955

Drunkard, loser and a coward. Who wants to see a character like that? It was left to Dilip Kumar and his intensity to make you feel for the pathetic fellow. Devdas was an extreme performance; on the deep end of the tragedy ocean. Only an expert of the emotion, which Dilip Kumar is, could have taken the viewer there.

Naseeruddin Shah

in Sparsh (Touch), 1980

The film explores a complex relationship between a visually impaired principal (Naseeruddin Shah) of a school for such children and a teacher (Shabana Azmi). Azmi is terrific but it is Shah whose controlled performance has the right mix of rage, loneliness and, at the same time, extreme vulnerability.

Nutan

in Bandini, 1963

Nutan’s masterful performance of a jilted young woman who murders her lover’s wife in Bimal Roy’s classic is arguably the best acting by a lead actress in Indian cinema. Nutan’s genius lay in portraying a whole range of emotions without resorting to over-the-top histrionics. The pièce de résistance is the scene in which her face conveys conflicting sentiments as she is about to commit the murder.

Smita Patil

in Mirch Masala, 1987

Patil was a great actress. Many of her great performances are laser-like in focus on a few things. So Arth for instance was about vulnerability and desire. Jait Re Jait was about resilience and belief. Mirch Masala covers the entire oeuvre of her acting chops. From the low key of the early frames to the full blast upper registers in the closing stages of the film: The transformation is awesome.

Rekha

in Umrao Jaan, 1981

This is a journey back in time to the Lucknow of 1840 and your guide to the journey is Rekha’s matchless Umrao Jaan. Played with supreme poise, Rekha constructs a character that is unforgettable and heartbreaking. One wonders if the role can be ever be attempted by anyone again.

25 Greatest Acting Performances of Indian Cinema

JV SOMAYAJULU in Sankarabharanam

{ Telugu }

JV Somayajulu

in Sankarabharanam (The Ornament of Shankara), 1980

JV Somayajulu, an IAS officer in his 50s, plays a Carnatic musician, misunderstood for supporting the daughter of a prostitute, ignored by a society where classical music is in decline, and is being overtaken by pop music. It was a surprise hit. It opened to empty seats, gathered speed and, today, enjoys a cult status. Somayajulu played his part with such dignity and intensity that you can’t listen to any of its hugely popular songs without imagining him performing them as his sadhana.

 

{ Kannada }

Dr Rajkumarin Bangaaradha Manushya (The Golden Man), 1972

A living god for all Kannadigas, Dr Rajkumar (1954-2005) plays the brother of a woman just widowed. Their older brother abandons the family, and Rajkumar is left to help rebuild it from its remains. He sends his sister’s sons to the city for higher studies and takes care of the entire household. When circumstances improve and Rajkumar himself has a family, his wife dies, and one of his sister’s sons questions his loyalty to the family. Rajkumar then leaves, without a trace. “He’s the only actor, who has done all type of roles, comedy, sentimental, historical, mythological. Whatever Rajkumar would say, people did,” says KM Veeresh, founder, chitraloka.com, a Kannada film portal. This film is considered a milestone in Rajkumar’s career, and although it did not start well, it ran for an entire year, and got some city youngsters to leave their plush jobs to take up agriculture in their villages.

{ Malayalam }

Mammootty

in Mathilukal (Walls), 1989

In 1989, there were 11 other films with Mammootty in the lead. In 1986, there were 36 films. The sheer volume never came in the way of Mammootty getting into the skin of his characters. In Mathilukal, he plays a prisoner in love with a fellow woman prisoner, who is on the other side of a wall. Directed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan, the film is based on a 1965 autobiographical novel by Vaikom Muhammad Basheer.

Mohanlal

in Bharatham, 1991

In Bharatham, Mohanlal plays a talented singer who adores his increasingly alcoholic elder brother, who also happens to be his guru. As Mohanlal’s fame rises, the elder brother first grows jealous and then becomes respectful of his talent. However, he dies on a pilgrimage, leaving Mohanlal to take care of the family, especially their younger sister who is about to get married. One of the best examples of his talent to simply live the role.

{ Tamil }

Sivaji Ganesan

in Parasakthi (Supreme Energy/Goddess), 1952

In his cinematic debut, Sivaji Ganesan (1928-2001) plays a man from Burma who visits his hometown in India to attend his sister’s wedding, only to become a victim of frauds and crooks, losing everything except his sense of justice. This plays out in a court scene towards the climax. The scene is a heady mix of sober photography, hard hitting dialogues (written by M Karunanidhi, Tamil Nadu’s former chief minister), and a passionate performance by Sivaji. His acting evolved over the years, but the core elements that defined him—he could speak a thousand words with a mere gesture, and could mesmerise audiences, like Morgan Freeman, by reading out a telephone directory—were all there.

Thengai Sreenivasan in Kaliyuga Kannan

Thengai Sreenivasan / Rajinikanth

in Thillu Mullu (Hodgepodge), 1981

Rajinikanth, the superstar, is mostly known for his charisma, punch dialogues and mindboggling stunts. It’s a shame, because he is among the best comedians in Tamil cinema. There’s a bit of self-effacing comedy in almost all his roles, but nothing can match his act in Thillu Mullu, a remake of Hrishikesh Mukherjee’s Gol Maal. Even so, many believe the real hero of the film is Thengai Srinivasan (1937-1998), whose potrayal of a strict boss and a father has influenced generations of comedians.

Revathi

in Mouna Ragam (Silent Melody), 1986

Mani Ratnam explores arranged marriages, and the process of a girl settling down with a virtual stranger. The girl, a bit of rebel, moves to Delhi, where her husband works, away from Chennai, away from her conservative parents and doting sisters; she takes with her memories of a dead man from her college days. The mood shifts from the tension of an intensity that only married people can identify with, to the light-hearted comfort of the familiar joys of discovery, mostly shaped by the effortless performance of the talented actress.

Kamal Haasan

in Mahanadi (The Great River), 1994

It’s not often that Kamal Haasan lets the story and screenplay overtake his performance. But when he lets it happen, it can haunt the audience for years. In Mahanadi, Haasan plays an innocent widower, a small-time businessman with a loving family whose chance meeting with a devious crook takes him down a tragic road, landing him in jail, his son with gypsies, and his daughter in a brothel in Kolkata. When his jail term is over, he goes in search of his daughter, and their meeting is one of the most poignant moments in Tamil cinema. See it once, and it haunts you forever, in a way that is both uplifting and scary.

{ Bengali }

Supriya Choudhury

in Meghe Dhaka Tara (Cloud-Capped Stars), 1960

Nita, portrayed by Choudhury, is the sole breadwinner of a refugee family from East Bengal, living in the suburbs of 1950s Calcutta. Her family exploits her, while caring little for her own personal dreams, hardships and losses. Broken by circumstances and tuberculosis, her anguished cry ‘Dada ami banchte chai’ (Brother, I want to live) is one of the most well-recognised moments of Bengali cinema.

Soumitra Chatterjee

in Jhinder Bandi, 1961

Chatterjee is a creation of Satyajit Ray, but ironically his best performance happens to be in a non-Ray film. He’s the charming anti-hero in this adaptation of The Prisoner of Zenda, pitted against his biggest contemporary Uttam Kumar. Swordplay, wordplay and myriad emotions later, he wins this fascinating battle of superlative performances.

Chhabi Biswas

in Jalsaghar (The Music Room), 1958

Biswas plays a feudal lord unable to come to terms with his lost zamindari. He goes about inflicting self-harm in almost King Lear-esque fashion. In the closing sequence, a flawless Biswas—soaked in vanity and part insanity—is jubilant after cutting his nouveau-riche neighbour (a paradox to his own privileged class) to size during the last of his grand jalsa. That moment seals his fate and the performance.

Uttam Kumar

in Nayak (The Hero), 1966

Arindam is a hugely successful and arrogant film star who reluctantly takes a train to Delhi to receive a prestigious award. During the journey, he inadvertently pours out details of his life—a brittle, insecure existence behind the glamorous public image—to a sensitive and intelligent journalist (Sharmila Tagore). The niggling question is: Did Kumar, the biggest matinee idol of Bengali cinema, simply play himself?

Ananya Chatterjee

in Abohomaan, 2010

She plays three different selves and her effortless transitions from one to the other testify her versatility and acting prowess. In a memorable scene, she lies unceasingly to the most eminent filmmaker in town who’s called her for an audition. She leaves everyone speechless and you know she’s arrived, both on screen and off it.

{ Marathi }

Upendra Limaye

in Jogwa (The Awakening), 2009

The national award winner features Limaye who is given away by his parents to the service of goddess Yellamma. He plays a Jogta, a person who begs in the name of the goddess, is treated as a sex slave, taken advantage of by the ruling classes. A Jogta has to stop feeling like a man, wear a sari and live a life without desires. Limaye goes through a range of emotions from being subdued to extreme anger. He is able to convey the searing emotional conflict of a man forced to live like a woman by falling in love with a woman.

Nilu Phule

in Samna, 1975

Phule plays Hindurao Dhonde Patil, a zamindar who treats the village like his personal fiefdom. He represents the old, feudal system of the co-operative and sugar lobby. One day, he meets a beggar (Shreeram Lagoo) and is impressed by his straight talking and his ability to stand up to him. He takes care of the drunkard but is not able to answer all the questions raised by him. Phule’s cruelty is subtle: He does not commit acts of gruesome violence or delivers crass dialogues; his presence is enough to fill you with revulsion.


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