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Virasat (transl. Inheritance) is a 1997 Indian Hindi-language action drama film, directed by Priyadarshan. The story was written by Kamal Haasan and remade after the success of the Tamil film Thevar Magan . [ 1 ]
The album features five songs, out of which three of them were released as singles. The first single "Bharat Ane Nenu" was released on 25 March 2018, at the occasion of Ram Navmi. The second single "I Don't Know" was launched on 1 April 2018.Farhan Akhtar lent his voice for the song "I Don't Know", which is first time for a South Indian movie ...
Telugu remake of 4 The People, footage from two songs reused 2005 Mannin Maindhan: Rama Narayanan: Tamil Tamil remake of Yagnam, Scenes involving Charminar and the footage of song "Chamakmani" from Telugu original dubbed in Tamil 2006 Gopi: G. K. Mudduraj Kannada Kannada remake of Murari, temple scenes involving Nagendra Babu dubbed from Telugu ...
Maharshi is the soundtrack album composed by Devi Sri Prasad for the 2019 Tollywood film of the same name starring Mahesh Babu, Pooja Hegde, and Allari Naresh in lead roles, directed by Vamshi Paidipally. [1]
Although the Indian film industry produces films in more than 20 languages and dialects, [2] the female playback singers who have received the 'Rajat Kamal' awards have recorded their renditions in nine major languages: Tamil (fifteen awards), Hindi (fourteen awards), Telugu (seven awards), Marathi (six awards), Bengali (six awards), Malayalam ...
Nenu Meeku Telusa? (transl. Do you know me?) is a 2008 Indian Telugu-language psychological thriller film directed by Ajay Sastry and produced by Lakshmi Manchu.The film stars Manoj Manchu, Sneha Ullal and Riya Sen while Nassar and Brahmanandam play supporting roles The film's songs are composed by Achu with score by Dharan, Santhosh Narayanan and Shakti.
The entire song was not selected by Hindu leaders in order to respect the sentiments of non-Hindus, and the gathering agreed that anyone should be free to sing an alternate "unobjectionable song" at a national gathering if they do not want to sing Vande Mataram because they find it "objectionable" for a personal reason. [49]
Anurakthi is the first Sanskrit 3D film with a song in the film picturised in 3D format. That also made Anurakthi the first Sanskrit film to have a song in it. [7] The film was screened at the 48th International Film Festival of India (IFFI) in Goa in 2017. [8] [9] Pratikriti is the first commercial film in Sanskrit. [10]