Kushi (2001)

Kushi

/5
Directed by S. J. Suryah • Music:

Soundtrack

Storyline

<p>The film opens when Madhu and Siddhu are born. Madhu’s family is based in of and Siddhu’s family is from . As babies, Madhu and Siddhu meet in a shopping complex. Madhu and her father love each other dearly. Madhu’s father wants her daughter to get married and wanted to keep his son-in-law with them and so that his daughter will not leave him. However, her groom elopes with his girlfriend, apologizing to Madhu that he did not want to ruin another girl’s life. Siddhu receives a visa for higher studies in Canada, his car met with an accident on his way to airport, which results him hospitalized for a period. Coincidentally, he receives Madhu’s blood. Madhu convinces her father to go for higher studies and not be bothered with marriage. Sidhu cannot make it to Canada and joins the same college as Madhu. Incidentally, they meet in a temple. They become good friends, while also helping Madhu’s friend, Santhi, and Siddhu’s friend, Babu, who are in love. Santhi’s father is a big goon, and Madhu and Siddhu ensure that Santhi and Babu do not reveal their love to Shanti’s father and get into any trouble. One day while Madhu is studying for exams, Siddhu happens to come. Madhu’s sari moves in the breeze, revealing her navel. Siddhu ogles it. Madhu accuses Siddhu of ogling, and Siddhu denies it. An argument breaks out leading to them accusing each other of hiding their feelings for the other. They end their friendship. After the summer holidays, Santhi’s dad finds out about Babu. Madhu and Siddhu meet again for the sake of their friend’s love. In the course of getting Babu and Shanti together, they realize they love each other. They try to confess each other but they miss still they manage to give their co-passengers the letter they read each other letters. 10 years later, Madhu and Siddhu are married with 17 children including one and others twins and Madhu is pregnant yet again. They are interviewed for their of having 17 kids in 10 years. After watching the of (1999), wanted to make a film with and zeroed in on a love story for the project. They cast for the Tamil version and for the Telugu version. As Kalyan was busy with the production of (2000) at the time, the Telugu version got delayed by a year while the Tamil version released in 2000. The film was announced in 1999 with the title and starring Pawan Kalyan and with music by . Regarding the title Rathnam later noted, “Surprisingly for this film, our original title was , on the lines of ’s (1998). The story is about two people who love each other but their ego stops them from expressing it directly, so we thought it was apt.” The title was later changed to after another film titled tried to cash in on the craze. Mani Sharma replaced Ramana Gogula as music director after the latter supposedly rejected the project to break the monotony of Pawan Kalyan-Ramana Gogula combination. As Ameesha Patel got busy after the release of (2000), the makers had to search for a new female lead. S. J. Suryah cast as the female lead after watching (2000). As Kalyan insisted on additional fight sequences in the film, Suryah asked Kalyan to direct them as he did not feel them necessary to the story. Kalyan also went on to direct three songs, namely, “Ye Mera Jahan,” “Premante Suluvu Kaaduraa” and “Aaduvari Matalaku.” The introduction song of the actress in the Tamil version was also replaced to accommodate the protagonist’s introduction. One song was shot in and two in . Producer A. M. Rathnam noted in September 2000 that the filming would be completed by December and the film would release for festival in January 2001. composed the film’s soundtrack, which was released in along with cassettes, by . The song “Aaduvari Maatalaku”, originally written by for (1955), was remixed by Mani Sharma with vocals by . Mani Sharma reused the songs “Ammaye Sannaga” and “Ye Mera Jaha” as “Achchacho Punnagai” and “Kadhal Oru,” respectively, in the Tamil film (2001). A. M. Rathnam was reported to have netted a table profit of 3 . The territory theatrical rights were bought outright for 4.5 crore. The film also set the record for distribution rights for a reported 15 beating s record of 9 lakh. was released on 27 April 2001. It was reportedly the first ever Telugu film to release in . It was later dubbed in as In 2002, reports indicated plans to re-release with 160 prints in April, a year after its initial release. If implemented, this would have been a record-setting second release in Telugu cinema. The film was eventually re-released in a remastered version on 31 December 2022. The re-release achieved significant commercial success, becoming the highest-grossing Telugu re-release of all time, surpassing the previous record held by Pawan Kalyan’s . rated the film 4.5/5 and called it a “One man show” of Pawan Kalyan. The reviewer also appreciated the screenplay by S. J. Surya. rated the film 3/5 and also called it “an out and out Pavan Kalyan film, which totally depends on his larger than life image”. was very successful at the box office. The film had a 50-day theatrical run in 101 centres and a 100-day run in 79 centres. It became the ever at the time. As per , the film has grossed worldwide in its initial run. was re-released in 2023 and became the highest grossing Telugu re-release of all time surpassing another Pawan Kalyan film . Years later, Suryah narrated the sequel’s storyline to Kalyan but the plans were dropped as Kalyan became busy in politics.</p>

Details

🎬
Genres: Drama
✍️
Writer:
👤
Producer: A. M. Rathnam
🎵
Music:
🎬
Director: S. J. Suryah
📸
Cinematography: P. C. Sreeram
👥
Starring: Pawan Kalyan, Bhumika
📅
Release Date: 27-Apr-01
✂️
Edited By: B. Lenin
💸
Budget:
🏭
Production Company:
📺
OTT Platform:
⏱️
Runtime:
🗣️
Language: Telugu
💵
Box Office: 49.00 crore
🌐
Other Languages:
📄
Screenplay: S. J. Suryah
🔒
Censorship:

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write one.

Write a Review

Instagram
Scroll to Top