Magadheera | |
---|---|
Directed by | S. S. Rajamouli |
Written by | S. S. Rajamouli |
Dialogues by |
|
Story by | V. Vijayendra Prasad |
Produced by | Allu Aravind B. V. S. N. Prasad |
Starring | Ram Charan Srihari Kajal Aggarwal Dev Gill |
Cinematography | K. K. Senthil Kumar |
Edited by | Kotagiri Venkateswara Rao |
Music by | M. M. Keeravani |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Geetha Arts |
Release date |
|
Running time | 158 minutes 167 minutes (extended theatrical version) |
Country | India |
Language | Telugu |
Budget | ₹35–44 crore[a] |
Box office | est.₹73 crore[1] |
Magadheera (lit. 'The Heroic Man')[2] is a 2009 Indian Telugu-language romantic fantasy action drama film co-written & directed by S. S. Rajamouli, based on a story by V. Vijayendra Prasad and with dialogues by M. Rathnam. Produced by Allu Aravind and B. V. S. N. Prasad under Geetha Arts, the film stars Ram Charan, Srihari, Kajal Aggarwal and Dev Gill. It is themed on reincarnation and eternal love.
Made on a budget of ₹35–44 crore,[b] Magadheera was the most expensive Telugu film at the time of its release.[a] The film's production began on 2 March 2008, with principal photography commencing on 19 March 2008. The film's soundtrack and background score were composed by M. M. Keeravani, and cinematography by K. K. Senthil Kumar. The action sequences were choreographed by Peter Hein and the duo of Ram–Lakshman. It was the first Telugu film to list a "visual effects producer" in its credits.
Magadheera was released on 31 July 2009 to critical acclaim and commercial success. It is the first Telugu film to enter the 100 crore club. [7] It collected a distributors' share of ₹73.4 crore and gross collections of ₹150.5 crore at the end of its theatrical run. It became the highest-grossing Telugu film in history at that point of time.[1] Its 1000-day theatrical run surpassed Chandramukhi (2005) as the longest-running South Indian film.[8] Featured at the Fantastic Fest,[9] it won the National Award for Best Choreography and Best Special Effects at the 57th National Film Awards as well as winning six Filmfare Awards, and nine states Nandi Awards.
The film was dubbed into Tamil as Maveeran, and into Malayalam as Dheera: The Warrior, both of which were released on 27 May 2011.[10] The Japanese-dubbed version, released on August 2018 and became one of the highest-grossing Indian films at the Japanese box office.[1] Additionally, the film was remade in Odia as Megha Sabarire Asiba Pheri in 2010, and in Bengali as Yoddha: The Warrior in 2014.[citation needed]
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