Story, Synopsis, Trivia, Dialogues for Buddhimanthudu (1969)


Buddhimanthudu is a 1969 Indian Telugu drama film released on Sep 20, 1969. The film is directed by Bapu, produced by N S Murthy , music composed by K.V.Mahadevan. There are very few films which stay in the commercial ambit yet question very pertinent questions over theology and its practicality in the day-to-day life. Bapu directed "Buddimanthudu (1969)" falls in that rare category. The story of this film penned by Mullapudi Venkataramana asks important questions about our own belief system with regards to religion. The story of the film starts with Madhavacharyulu (ANR), the temple priest of the village who is widely respected and is seen as a man who converses with Lord Krishna (Shoban babu) himself. He is of the variety of persons who follows God blindly and his unwavering faith in God and the temple trustee, Seshayya (Nagabhushanam) is never accepted by his younger brother, Gopi (ANR in a dual role), who is an atheist. He is the sort of a man who believes in his own luck and work rather than depending on some unknown force called, GOD.
There are very few films which stay in the commercial ambit yet question very pertinent questions over theology and its practicality in the day-to-day life. Bapu directed "Buddimanthudu (1969)" falls in that rare category. The story of this film penned by Mullapudi Venkataramana asks important questions about our own belief system with regards to religion. The story of the film starts with Madhavacharyulu (ANR), the temple priest of the village who is widely respected and is seen as a man who converses with Lord Krishna (Shoban babu) himself. He is of the variety of persons who follows God blindly and his unwavering faith in God and the temple trustee, Seshayya (Nagabhushanam) is never accepted by his younger brother, Gopi (ANR in a dual role), who is an atheist. He is the sort of a man who believes in his own luck and work rather than depending on some unknown force called, GOD.
There are very few films which stay in the commercial ambit yet question very pertinent questions over theology and its practicality in the day-to-day life. Bapu directed "Buddimanthudu (1969)" falls in that rare category. The story of this film penned by Mullapudi Venkataramana asks important questions about our own belief system with regards to religion. The story of the film starts with Madhavacharyulu (ANR), the temple priest of the village who is widely respected and is seen as a man who converses with Lord Krishna (Shoban babu) himself. He is of the variety of persons who follows God blindly and his unwavering faith in God and the temple trustee, Seshayya (Nagabhushanam) is never accepted by his younger brother, Gopi (ANR in a dual role), who is an atheist. He is the sort of a man who believes in his own luck and work rather than depending on some unknown force called, GOD.
There are very few films which stay in the commercial ambit yet question very pertinent questions over theology and its practicality in the day-to-day life. Bapu directed "Buddimanthudu (1969)" falls in that rare category. The story of this film penned by Mullapudi Venkataramana asks important questions about our own belief system with regards to religion. The story of the film starts with Madhavacharyulu (ANR), the temple priest of the village who is widely respected and is seen as a man who converses with Lord Krishna (Shoban babu) himself. He is of the variety of persons who follows God blindly and his unwavering faith in God and the temple trustee, Seshayya (Nagabhushanam) is never accepted by his younger brother, Gopi (ANR in a dual role), who is an atheist. He is the sort of a man who believes in his own luck and work rather than depending on some unknown force called, GOD.
There are very few films which stay in the commercial ambit yet question very pertinent questions over theology and its practicality in the day-to-day life. Bapu directed "Buddimanthudu (1969)" falls in that rare category. The story of this film penned by Mullapudi Venkataramana asks important questions about our own belief system with regards to religion. The story of the film starts with Madhavacharyulu (ANR), the temple priest of the village who is widely respected and is seen as a man who converses with Lord Krishna (Shoban babu) himself. He is of the variety of persons who follows God blindly and his unwavering faith in God and the temple trustee, Seshayya (Nagabhushanam) is never accepted by his younger brother, Gopi (ANR in a dual role), who is an atheist. He is the sort of a man who believes in his own luck and work rather than depending on some unknown force called, GOD.
There are very few films which stay in the commercial ambit yet question very pertinent questions over theology and its practicality in the day-to-day life. Bapu directed "Buddimanthudu (1969)" falls in that rare category. The story of this film penned by Mullapudi Venkataramana asks important questions about our own belief system with regards to religion. The story of the film starts with Madhavacharyulu (ANR), the temple priest of the village who is widely respected and is seen as a man who converses with Lord Krishna (Shoban babu) himself. He is of the variety of persons who follows God blindly and his unwavering faith in God and the temple trustee, Seshayya (Nagabhushanam) is never accepted by his younger brother, Gopi (ANR in a dual role), who is an atheist. He is the sort of a man who believes in his own luck and work rather than depending on some unknown force called, GOD. Check out this page for more updates on Buddhimanthudu.

Buddhimanthudu Keywords


Buddhimanthudu, Drama, Telugu, 1969, Buddhimanthudu movie reviews

Comments


1.06MB-0.0241"