Mangamma Sapatham (1965 film)

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Mangamma Sapadham
Theatrical release poster
Directed byB. Vittalacharya
Written bySamudrala Jr.
(dialogues)
Screenplay byB. Vittalacharya
Produced byD. V. S. Raju
StarringN. T. Rama Rao
Jamuna
CinematographyR. Sampath
Edited byG. D. Joshi
Music byT. V. Raju
Production
company
D. V. S. Productions
Release date
  • 6 March 1965 (1965-03-06)
Running time
176 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Mangamma Sapadham (transl. Mangamma's vow) is a 1965 Indian Telugu-language film, produced by D. V. S. Raju under the D. V. S. Productions banner and directed by B. Vittalacharya.[1][2] It stars N. T. Rama Rao and Jamuna, with music composed by T. V. Raju. The film is a remake of the 1943 Tamil film of the same name.

Plot

Once upon a time, there was a kingdom, and its king Raja is a tomcat. Once he spots Mangamma a plucky village girl with self-esteem when genuinely loves her and proposes. Anyhow, she denies it and mortifies him when enraged Raja challenges her to knit and lock her virginity throughout life as an avenge. Ergo, Mangamma too vows to have a son by him without his knowledge and molds the child to whip him in his court. Here, Raja accepts it, splices Mangamma, and seizes her. However, Mangamma triumphs in covertly shooting up by digging a tunnel from therein to her home with the aid of her father Narasaiah & sibling Baja Govindam. Following, in the attire of a tribal she entices Raja, consummates with him, and bestows his ring as a token. Next, she conceives and gives birth to a baby boy Vijay whom she poses as his brother's kid. Years roll by, and Vijay turns into a gallant who crushes with the Chief Commander's daughter Vijaya. Knowledge of it, his grandfather chides and sends him to his mother via the tunnel where he faces her everyday torture by his father when Mangamma divulges the actuality. Now, Vijay pledges to complete her vow, starts mocking Raja in various forms of disguise, and whips him in the court. Whereat, Mangamma lands bars it, proclaims Raja that Vijay is his heir, and confirms it with the evidence. At last, Raja transforms, apologizes to Mangamma, and hails her as his queen. Finally, the movie ends on a happy note with Vijay & Vijaya.

Cast

Soundtrack

Music composed by T. V. Raju.[3]

Song Title Lyrics Singers length
"Rivvunasage" C. Narayana Reddy P. Susheela 4:50
"Dheedikku" C. Narayana Reddy Jikki, S. Janaki 3:05
"Kanuleevela" C. Narayana Reddy Ghantasala, P. Susheela 2:59
"Ayyayya Aeisapaisa"
Kosaraju
P. Susheela 4:03
"Neerajupilichenu" C. Narayana Reddy Ghantasala, P. Susheela 3:33
"Aavooru Needikadu" Kosaraju Madhavapeddi Satyam, Swanalatha 3:13
"Chirunavvulurinchu" Kosaraju P. Susheela, Swanalatha 3:59
"Vayyara Molide Chinnadi" C. Narayana Reddy Ghantasala, P. Susheela 2:58
"Andalanaraja" C. Narayana Reddy P. Susheela 3:34

References

  1. ^ "మంగమ్మ శపథం" [Mangamma Sapatham]. Andhra Jyothi (in Telugu). 12 March 1965. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  2. ^ "చిత్ర సమీక్ష: మంగమ్మ శపథం" [Film review: Mangamma Sapatham]. Andhra Patrika (in Telugu). 14 March 1965. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Mangamma Sapadam (1965)-Song_Booklet". Indiancine.ma. Archived from the original on 6 December 2022. Retrieved 6 December 2022.

External links