- Fandry is a 2013 Indian Marathi-language film, written and directed by Nagraj Manjule in a directorial debut. It stars Somnath Avghade and Rajshree Kharat as the film.
- Rajshri Marathi 187,773 views.
- A unique project from a National Award winner.
- Fandry is a story of his aspirations, quest. It represents.
2014 NR 1h 42m. Social Issue Dramas, Independent Movies, International Movies, Indian Movies. Director: Nagraj Manjule. Subtitles: Spanish.
Fandry is an Indian Marathi movie released in 2014. It is a love story about the problems with caste discrimination that still looms large in the villages of India. Synopsis : After a grand success of Fandry producer Nagraj Manjule brings Sairat marathi movie.
Fandry (2. 01. 3) - IMDb. Edit. Love, the most beautiful emotion in all living creatures that God has made knows no bar, caste or boundaries, is the central theme of Fandry. A young lad (Jabya) falls in love with his classmate. Incidentally, he belongs to a lower caste, a family below the poverty line which does all sorts of jobs in the village to survive like catching Pigs and the girl belongs to a higher caste.
FANDRY - HD Movie - 2013. MOVIE SYNOPSIS - What's the story. You can watch this full movie free with English or Marathi subtitles on movie television. Movie Review FANDRY: “DON’T TOUCH ME, YOU PIG!” There is a scene in Marathi film Fandry, where two young boys, stand against Dr. Ambedkar’s painting on a wall.
His parents are working hard to arrange money for their daughter's wedding while Jabya is collecting money for new clothes to impress the girl. Fandry is a story of his aspirations, quest, sorrows, anguish and frustrations. Fandry also touches upon the age old monster of Caste System which is still lurking large upon the society.
Fandry (Marathi Movie) Trailer . It had won the Jury Grand Prize for the Second best film in International Competition at the 1. Mumbai Film Festival. It has been jointly produced by Nilesh Navalaka (Shala) and Vivek Kajaria. Writer- director Nagraj Manjule has admitted that the film is part autobiographical.
Somnath Avghade plays the lead role of Jabya and Kishore Kadam and Chaya Kadam play his parents. Sakshi Vyavhare plays Jabya’s love interest. Synopsis. A mesmeric force pulls Jabya onto the other side. The rarest of rare Black Sparrow, he is told, is the cure to his problem. The hypnotic spell of the sparrow makes him wander relentlessly.
Completely away from the magical world of Jabya, exists the callous reality of his parents who are working at the most oppressed level of the Indian Class Structure and assume him to do the same work which they have done all their life. The protagonist Jabya has to now struggle between his quest to find the magical sparrow and his parents’ expectations. Will Jabya be successful in his pursuit of the Black Sparrow? Will the magnetic power surpass the class differences between Jabya and Shalu created by centuries of customs.? Will Jabya break the fences and pass onto the other side? Here’s the trailer.
Fandry - Wikipedia. Fandry. Film Poster.
Directed by. Nagraj Manjule. Produced by. Starring. Kishor Kadam. Somnath Avghade. Suraj Pawar. Chhaya Kadam. Nagraj Manjule. Rajeshwari Kharat. Music by. Aloknanda Dasgupta.
Ajay- Atul (theme song)Cinematography. Vikram Amladi. Edited by.
Chandan Arora. Distributed by. Reliance Media Works. Zee Entertainment. Release date. 17 October 2. MIFF)1. 4 February 2. India)Running time.
Language. Marathi. Budget. It stars Somnath Avghade and Rajshree Kharat as the film leads. The story focuses on a young boy's infatuation amidst caste- based discrimination. The film set in Akolner, a village near Ahmednagar is about a teenager from a Dalit (lower caste) family, who lives at the village fringe, and falls in love with an upper caste girl.
The family belongs to a low- caste community (Kaikadi) and earns its living by doing menial jobs. Owing to the caste- ridden power structure of the village society, the boy's father has a fearful and submissive personality which is exploited by the upper- caste villagers. Jabya is disillusioned by the predicament of his family and shows interest in school where he has also fallen in one- sided love with a forward caste girl named Shalini (nickname: Shalu) (Rajeshwari Kharat) who he has never talked to but tries desperately to get her to notice him. The plot opens with Jabya and his school friend Pirya (Suraj Pawar) armed with a slingshot trying to catch a bird (the Black Sparrow) in the wilderness. However, the bird call that punctuates the film is that of the Red Wattled Lapwing (Titawi), which is supposed to bring bad luck. The black sparrow, with its distinctive forked tail, and the call of the red wattled lapwing occur repeatedly throughout the film.
The duo keep trying to catch the bird in the entire film for an unknown reason which is later explained in the film. According to a local legend, it is believed that when the ash obtained by burning the black sparrow is sprinkled on someone, it hypnotizes them to fall in love with the person sprinkling it. Jabya also befriends a bicycle mechanic named Chankya (Nagraj Manjule) who sees his young self in the boy. Chankya had once gotten married to a girl but she was soon forcefully taken away by her brother and left him beaten very badly. Since then he has renounced family life and taken up refuge in spirituality, mysticism and liquor. Jabya seeks support from Chankya in his quest to obtain his love, which Chankya readily extends. Perhaps the idea of sprinkling the ash of black sparrow on Shalu is suggested to Jabya by Chankya himself.
The idea, however, is executed only in Jabya's dream. Back in the village, a face of social politics is displayed over and over again as members of the segregated village exploit and ruthlessly dehumanize Jabya and his family who co- operate in the act due to poverty, fear and social hierarchies. The film reaches its climax in one such exploitation where Jabya finally reaches his tipping point and explodes in an impulse driven intense backlash against the oppressors. He hurls a stone at one of the high- caste boys, who were teasing Jabya and his family by calling them . The stone is seen fast approaching towards the audience and the film ends.
The closing scene deliberately aims the stone at the audience, which is not only a victim but also a carrier of the exploitative caste- based social system. Somnath Awghade as Jambuwant Kachru Mane (Jabya)Suraj Pawar as a Piraji (Pirya)Chhaya Kadam as Nani. Kishor Kadam as a Kachru Mane (Nana)Rajeshwari Kharat as Shalu. Bhushan Manjule as Dada Patil.
Nagraj Manjule as a Chankya (Chankeshwar Sathe)Sohail Shaikh as Sangram. Sanjay Chaudhri as Teacher. Vikas Pandurang Patil as a Navhi. Prashant Kamble. Jyoti Subhash.
Suhas Sirsat. Moinuddin Inamdar as a principal. Pooja Dolas as a Vedant's Mother. Shruti Awate as a Rani. Sakshi Vyavhare as a Dhurpa. Pravin Tarde as a Sarpanch.
Suresh Vishwakarma. Story, screenplay, dialogues & direction – Nagraj Manjule. Producers – Nilesh Navlakha & Vivek Kajaria. Executive producer – Vivek Wagh. Costume designers – Gargee Kulkarni and Priyanka Dubey. Art director – Santosh Sankhad.
Sound design – Nimish Chheda. Chief assistant director – Gargee Kulkarni and Kutub Inamdar. Assistant editor – Kutub Inamdar. On location sound – Christopher Robleto Harvey.
Production and release. Vivek Kajaria, who produced the film along with Nilesh Navalakha, said . Our partnership with Zee Entertainment has helped us a lot. We are trying our best to give it a wide release and hoping that the word- of- mouth will help us grow. Then it’s up to the audiences really.