Takkari Donga
Poster
Directed byJayanth C. Paranjee
Written bySatyanand
Screenplay byJayanth C. Paranjee
Story byJayanth C. Paranjee
Produced byJayanth C. Paranjee
StarringMahesh Babu
Lisa Ray
Bipasha Basu
CinematographyJayanan Vincent
Edited byMarthand K. Venkatesh
Music byMani Sharma
Production
company
Jayanth Fulcrum Cinergies
Release date
  • 16 January 2002 (2002-01-16)
Running time
146 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Takkari Donga (transl.The Sly Thief) is a 2002 Indian Telugu-language revisionist western film produced, written, and directed by Jayant Paranjee. The film starred Mahesh Babu, Lisa Ray, Bipasha Basu, and Rahul Dev in pivotal roles. Shot entirely in the United States, upon release, Takkari Donga received mixed reviews, having won five state Nandi Awards including Best Audiography, Best Cinematography, and Best Action.

Plot

The film starts with the slain bandit Shaka killing his own elder brother for information related to diamond valley, who is also known to rancher Veeru Dada. In the encounter, Veeru jumps off into a river from a cliff. After 18 years in Gajner, Rajasthan, we have Veeru with an amputated leg, giving info to Raja, a mischievous, and tough outlaw who loots banks in style. Raja gives Veeru a share of 50% for all his tip-offs. Raja becomes more daring as the price tag on his head increases by thousands. There is another mischievous thief, Panasa. She and her uncle follow Raja so she can dupe him and escape with all the looted money. As things go on a frolicking way between Panasa and Raja, Shaka is searching for Veeru. Veeru realizes Shaka will kill him soon.

Hence, Veeru offers a large diamond to Raja and asks him to take his daughter Bhuvana to his brother Dharma's place via a dangerous route. Enroute, there are some romantic encounters, and they fall in love. Raja sees a house that emotionally disturbs him. When Bhuvana asks about it he reveals that it is his childhood house and his father and sister were killed by an unknown masked person and he became a thief on the journey of finding him. When Bhuvana asks how will he identify the killer, he tells her there is a scar on the killer's hand by which he can identify him.

Later, when they go to Dharma's place, Dharma is killed. Raja goes to a nearby shop to arrange a funeral for Dharma. But it is Shaka who is disguised as the shop owner. When Shaka arrives he sees a map in Bhuvana's hand. He forcibly tries to take it and in excitement he said that for that map he killed his brother, Bhuvana's father, Dharma and that map is the way to diamond valley. Meanwhile, a fight ensues in which the map is burnt. Then Shaka ties Raja to a tree and forcibly takes Bhuvana as only she knows the route to that hidden diamond treasury.

Meanwhile, Raja releases himself and went to Shaka. A fight takes place. Later, Shaka reveals he knows who killed Raja's father and he will give details about him only when Raja helps him cross the dangerous terrain to reach diamond valley with hidden treasure. Raja agrees. With the help of Raja, Shaka finds the path to the hidden treasure. While Shaka is taking the diamonds, Raja notices the scar on Shaka's hand by which he realizes it is Shaka who killed his father and sister. t the climax, Raja kills Shaka and reunites with Bhuvana.

Cast

Production

90% of the film's shoot was done in Colorado.[1]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by Mani Sharma and the lyrics were written by Bhuvana Chandra, Vennelakanti, Chandra Bose and Kula Sekhar.

Reception

A critic from Deccan Chronicle wrote that "A smooth, technically brilliant movie after a considerable time in Telugu, Takari Donga is entertaining and, in spite of its stereotypical pitfalls, is certainly a refreshing break from the deluge of routine love stories".[2] A critic from The Hindu said that "Though it is not new for the Telugu film makers to make cowboy films, this film scores in technical quality, with cinematographer Jayanan Vincent leading in his department. The visual is set against a kind of dusty hue throughout its run, reflecting the wild West".[3] A critic from The Times of India stated that "If you don't mind half a dozen songs slackening the pace of the film Takkari Donga is a complete entertainer".[4] Jeevi of Idlebrain.com wrote that "Takkari Donga is a sweet and sensible film".[5]

Release

The film was dubbed into Hindi as Choron Ka Chor by Goldmines Telefilms in 2014 and into Tamil as Vetri Veeran.[6]

Awards

Nandi Awards

References

  1. "Happy Birthday Mahesh Babu: 5 underrated performances of the 'Greek God of Telugu Cinema'". The Times of India. 9 August 2020.
  2. Revalli, Usha. "Takkari Donga". Deccan Chronicle via Idlebrain.com.
  3. Srihari, Gudipoodi. "Western entertainer". The Hindu via Idlebrain.com.
  4. K., Sangeeta Devi. "Takkari Donga". The Times of India via Idlebrain.com.
  5. jeevi (12 January 2002). "Movie review - Takkari Donga". Idlebrain.com.
  6. "Reaping double benefits". The Hindu. 19 August 2003.
  7. "నంది అవార్డు విజేతల పరంపర (1964–2008)" [A series of Nandi Award Winners (1964–2008)] (PDF). Information & Public Relations of Andhra Pradesh. Retrieved 21 August 2020.(in Telugu)
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