Snehaloka

1999 Indian film
  • 24 December 1999 (1999-12-24)
Running time
147 minutesCountryIndiaLanguageKannada

Snehaloka (transl. World of friendship) is a 1999 Indian Kannada-language romantic drama film directed by S. Mahendar and produced by N. Bharathi Devi. The film has an ensemble cast comprising Ramesh Aravind, Ramkumar, Shashikumar, Vinod Raj and Anu Prabhakar.

This film is the Kannada remake of Tamil blockbuster film Kannedhirey Thondrinal (1998). The film was also made in Malayalam as Dhosth (2001).

The film released on 24 December 1999 to generally positive reviews from critics who lauded the lead actors performance and the musical score by Hamsalekha.

Plot

Ram meets Priya in Bangalore Airport, immediately falls for her. In the college, after some ragging, fight, Ramesh, his friends Abhi, Sharan, Africa and Ram become friends. In Ramesh's house, there is resentment to him bringing his friends. Ram does not know that Priya is Ramesh's sister while Priya is unaware that Ram is her brother's friend. After constant persuasion, Priya reciprocates Ram's feelings.

Ram gets to know that Ramesh had a friend Vinod. His sister Hema and Vinod had eloped on her marriage day leading to Ramesh and his mother's humiliation. Due to this Ramesh's mother didn't allow any of his friends in the house. As his story is parallel to Vinod and Hema's, Ram decides to sacrifice his love and begins avoiding Priya and be a good friend to Ramesh. When it is clear that Ram has chosen his brother's friendship over her love and there is no way going back, Priya tries to commit suicide.

In the hospital, Ram's friend Shashi reveals to Ramesh that Priya and Ram have sacrificed their love for his friendship with Ram. Ramesh cries understands this and accepts Ram and Priya's love. After knowing that Vinod was the one who got Priya admitted to the hospital and saved her life, Ramesh forgives Vinod and Hema.

The film ends with all the friends snapping: a symbolic representation of their friendship.

Cast

  • Ramesh Aravind as Ramesh
  • Ramkumar as Ramkumar
  • Shashikumar as Shashi
  • Vinod Raj as Vinod
  • Anu Prabhakar as Priya
  • Vanishree as Hema
  • B. V. Radha as Ramesh's mother
  • Manju Malini
  • Sharan as Sharan
  • Abhishek as Abhi
  • Michael Madhu as "Africa"
  • Shobaraj as police officer
  • Lohithaswa as Manohar
  • Karibasavaiah as Muthanna "Muthu"
  • Shankanada Anjanappa as Sannappa

Soundtrack

Snehaloka
Soundtrack album by
Released16 August 1999 (1999-08-16)
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length40:27
LabelAnand Audio

This film music was composed and written by Hamsalekha.[1] A breathless song "Onde Usiranthe" was recorded in the voices of Rajesh Krishnan and K. S. Chitra which was widely appreciated. Sonu Nigam also sang his second number in Kannada whose soundtrack was "inspired" by Celine Dion's "My Heart Will Go On" from the soundtrack of the film Titanic (1997). The album consists of seven tracks.[1]

All tracks are written by Hamsalekha

No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Titanic Heroine"Sonu Nigam, Hemanth Kumar5:40
2."Ooty Ooty Beauty"Suresh Peters, Rajesh Krishnan6:37
3."Onde Usiranthe"Rajesh Krishnan, K. S. Chithra6:04
4."Loka Snehaloka"Rajesh Krishnan5:23
5."Yaarige Yaaroo Ilri"Rajesh Krishnan5:05
6."Thamta Thakita"Rajesh Krishnan, Ramesh Chandra, Manjula Gururaj, Latha Hamsalekha[2]5:50
7."Don't Worry Thamma"Suresh Peters, Latha Hamsalekha5:48
Total length:40:27

Reception

Srikanth Srinivasa of Deccan Herald called the film a "tear-jerker mould with a light and clean social entertainer." Of the acting performances, he wrote, "Ramesh fits the bill perfectly especially after shedding oodles of adipose. Ramesh has added another dimension to his acting capability. Ramkumar has definitely matured as an actor. Anu Prabhakar is a sweet delight to watch. Sharan seems to have a natural flair for comedy and his dialogues are timed well and so does Michael. Vinod Raj impresses in his brief sojourn. Shashi Kumar looks out of place but has a role to play in the end."[3]

References

  1. ^ a b "Snehaloka Songs". Raaga.com. Archived from the original on 6 May 2014. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  2. ^ "Snehaloka album". Gaana. Archived from the original on 9 July 2021. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  3. ^ Srinivasa, Srikanth (26 December 1999). "SNEHALOKA (Kannada)". Deccan Herald. Archived from the original on 5 June 2000. Retrieved 13 June 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

External links

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