Kuttichathan Serial Wiki
• 24 August 1984 ( 1984-08-24) • • • • Country India Language Malayalam Box office ₹2.5 crore+ My Dear Kuttichathan ( lit. My Dear Little Ghost) is a 1984 Indian, directed.
The film was produced by his father under Navodaya studio in Kerala. This was the first Indian film to be filmed in.
Aug 15, 2008 - MALAYALAM MOVIE, DAILY NEWS,IDEA STAR SINGER 2008 AND MALAYALAM SERIALS. Malayalam TV Serial Ennte Manasaputhri.
The film revolves around a mystical Indian god 'Kuttichathan' who is under the spell of an evil sorcerer, however it gets released by three children and then befriends them. The film's script was written by Raghunath Paleri and T.
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The film's soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja. The film's cinematography and editing was done by Ashok Kumar and T. Sekar respectively. The film was well received and grossed over ₹2.5 from the box office. Originally filmed in Malayalam, a re-edited version was re-released in 1997, which makes it the first DTS movie in Malayalam.
It was also dubbed in Hindi as in 1997, which was also a box office success grossing ₹1.30 crore. Scenes with were later added. In 2010, further scenes were added in with and and was released as. Ne udalosj zapustitj steam gta 5.
A new re-mastered version with additional footage released on 25 August 2011. Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Plot [ ] The character 'Kuttichathan' is formed on the basis of the specialties of a deity popularly known as 'Chathan' who is being worshiped mainly in the south Indian state, Kerala. There are cruel magicians everywhere in the world. One of them is Karimbhootham (black magician), who enslaved an invisible spirit with his magic spells, whom he calls 'Kuttichathan' ('Little Ghost' in English and 'Chhota Chetan' in Hindi). Two boys and a girl befriend Kuttichathan by accident and release him from the grip of the magician. On the way Kuttichathan meets Ashish, a member of the police, who is after Karimbhootham.
They understand that this Chathan is friendly to kids and is a very good friend. Therefore, the girl promises to keep Kuttichathan in her house for two reasons: one, her father drinks too much, so she wants Chathan, who is a very good magician, to make him come to his senses, as after her mother died, there is no one to control him; second, Chathan, despite being a small boy, also drinks a lot. He could drink and finish off all that her father drinks, thereby changing her father's attitude. At the same time, the cruel magician wants the Kuttichathan to lay his hands on a treasure. Even though the magician is the owner of the Kuttichathan, he is burnt and killed by the Chathan in the climax. Chathan then turns into a bat and flies away.
Cast [ ] • – The Cruel Magician • Kuttichathan — Master Aravind/M. Ramnath • – voice of invisible Kuttichatan • – Laxmi • Master Suresh/Suryakiran— Vijay • Arvind — Vinod • – Laxmi's father • • • • • • – Bartender • – School Teacher • – Cabaret Announcer • – Magician • Kallapetti Singaram — Rickshaw driver • - Traffic policeman • - Musician • - Musician Production [ ] Development [ ] My Dear Kuttichathan was the first Indian film to be filmed in 3D., son of Navodaya Appachan made his directorial debut with this film. After (1982), Jijo decided to direct a 3D film after getting inspired by an article in 'American Cinematographer' shown to him by cinematographer Ramachandra Babu.
Technology [ ] To understand the technology, Jijo travelled multiple trips to Burbank, California and bought sample reels of 3D films and held a preview in his studio. Appachan who was thoroughly convinced decided to produce this film under the allocated budget of 40 lakhs. David Schmier worked as the film's stereographer along with the film's cinematographer to ensure multiple images converge for 3D effect.
Jijo travelled to the US once again where he met Chris Condon, an expert in 3D technology. Jijo bought the special camera lens and after much discussion Chris agreed to assist Jijo in his film. The required equipment needed for the film had to be imported from the US and Jijo managed to do this with the help of his friend, Thomas J Easho. Script [ ] For the 3D film, the makers wanted a universal theme in order to appeal children. Jijo carried the idea of a friendly ghost for years, he sought the opinion of people such as Anant Pai and Padmarajan for the film's writing. Raghunath Paleri came on board as the film's writer, took all the inputs from the experts and created the plot of three kids and a ghost.
Paleri cited he wrote the script in such a way 'that would have worked even if it was 2D'. Casting [ ] S. Puram Anand, who worked as an production executive for this film revealed that Jijo wanted to do this film with an entirely new cast. Anand suggested Dalip Tahil for the supporting role.