Kappu Bilupu

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Kappu Bilupu
Directed byPuttanna Kanagal
Written byAryamba Pattabhi
Screenplay byPuttanna Kanagal
Based onKappu Bilupu
by Aryamba Pattabhi
Produced byRavikumar
StarringKalpana
Balakrishna
CinematographyD. V. Rajaram
Edited byG. Veluswamy
Music by R. Rathna
Release date
1969
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada

Kappu Bilupu (Kannada: ಕಪ್ಪು ಬಿಳುಪು, which means Black and White) is a 1969 Indian Kannada language film directed by Puttanna Kanagal. Based on a novel of the same name by Aryamba Pattabhi, this movie revolves around the contrasting behaviors of an identical, yet distinct pair of twins. The film starred Kalpana in dual roles. Puttanna himself remade the movie in Tamil as Irulum Oliyum and in Telugu as Iddaru Ammayilu.[1]

Puttanna used the movie as a medium for speaking to the youth of the ideals he derived from Vivekananda. The settings are simple and mostly rural. The story is about how domestic peace was better than a glamorously consumptive lifestyle. The juxtaposition of the two sisters played by Kalpana in a black and white background was a clever trick.[according to whom?] H R Shastry and Balakrishna play dignified elders who in many ways are sympathetic but helpless. There were a couple of simple but moving melodies.

Cast[edit]

Story[edit]

A Cinderella-inspired story. A commentary on the ultimate triumph of good character over situational advantages. Kalpana as Vatsala is a poor and docile girl ill-treated by her stepmother. Her second character Chandra is rich, arrogant and bold.

Soundtrack[edit]

R. Rathna composed the music for the soundtrack.

Sl No Song Title Singers Lyrics
1 "Amma Ninna Tholinalli" P. Susheela R. N. Jayagopal
2 "Bhale Brahmachari" L. R. Eswari R. N. Jayagopal
3 "Cheluvina Kenneye" L. R. Eswari R. N. Jayagopal
4 "Indina Hindu Deshada" P. B. Srinivas R. N. Jayagopal
5 "Ee Chandada Maneyalli" P. Susheela R. N. Jayagopal
6 "Ide Roopa Ade Nota" P. B. Srinivas R. N. Jayagopal

Remakes[edit]

The film was remade in 1971 by Puttanna in two languages - in Tamil as Irulum Oliyum and in Telugu as Iddaru Ammayilu.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Irulum Oliyum (1971)". The Hindu. 22 October 2016. Retrieved 13 July 2021.

External links[edit]