Gyanendra Bahadur Deuja | |
Birth Date: | 5 May 1967 |
Birth Place: | Kapan, Nepal |
Nationality: | Nepali |
Occupation: | Director |
Years Active: | 1997 - Present |
Gyanendra Deuja (born 5 May 1967) (Nepali: ज्ञानेन्द्र देउजा) is a Nepali film director and screenwriter.[1] He directed his first movie, Rakshak, in 1997.[2] It contained the first instance of an underwater action scene in a Nepali movie. He then started adding a novelty to each of his movies. One of his notable movies is Muna Madan based on the long poem of the same name by Laxmi Prasad Devkota.[3] [4] [5] This movie was Nepal's submission for Best Foreign Language Film at the 2004 Oscars.[6] As of May 2016, he was shooting his latest film, Buddha - born in Nepal, which is a story of a struggling Nepali student In America.[7]
Gyanendra Deuja was born in Kapan, Nepal. He is the youngest of Mr. Dev Bahadur Deuja and Late Mrs. Kanchhi Deuja's four children. He has two sisters and a brother. His father is a farmer and a Nepalese Army veteran. He went to school at the Pashupati School in Chabahil, and to college at the Nepal Commerce Campus in Minbhawan.
He is married to Rosani Adhikari Deuja. He has a son, Sulav Pratik Deuja and a daughter, Samikshya Deuja. Apart from being a screenwriter and director, Mr. Deuja is also a professional banker, having been the deputy Director of Nepal Rastra Bank since 1988.
When he was still an undergraduate, he worked in the theater called Aarohan (nepali:आरोहण), now Gurukul (nepali: गुरुकुल), where he got acquainted with senior actors and directors, such as Sunil Pokharel, Saroj Khanal, Badri Adhikari, Narayan Puri and so on.
With the establishment of Nepal television in the early 1980s, many of the theater artists transitioned to making soap opera. He started taking minor roles and working as production assistant as well. when he was doing some educational awareness program for the TV, he met Resh Raj Acharya - a senior movie director who later mentored him. Mr. Deuja worked as chief assistant director in tele-serials like Sparsh, Dushman, Aama, etc. and celluloid feature films like Tuhuro, Bandhan, Aama with Mr. Acharya.
His first directorial venture was Rakshak (1997) which had scenes shot under water, a novelty in Nepali Cinema. He has since built a reputation for innovative experiments in his movies. His films are usually based on contemporary social issues. Rakshak was highly controversial for depicting maoist issues during the Maoist insurgency. The movie was followed by Gorkhali and Dagbatti in the late nineties and early 2000s. Then, he did Muna Madan based on an epic love poem by the great poet Lakshmi Prasad Devkota (Nepali: महाकवि लक्ष्मीप्रसाद देवकोटा). It was selected as Nepal's entry to the 76th Academy Awards in 2004 in the "Best Foreign Language Film" category. It was also screened at Palm Springs Film Festival the same year.
Deuja is a graduate of Tribhuvan University. He graduated as a Bachelor of Commerce.
He has worked as deputy director of Nepal Rastra Bank since 1988.
Year | Title | |
---|---|---|
1997 | Rakshak[8] | |
1999 | Gorkhali[9] | |
2000 | Daagbatti[10] | |
2002-2003 | Muna Madan[11] | |
2004 | Kurukshetra[12] | |
2006 | Barmala[13] | |
2006 | Lavkush[14] | |
2007 | Hami Taxi Driver[15] | |
2008 | Dewar Babu[16] | |
2009 | Rana Sangram | |
2010 | Hifajat[17] | |
2010 | Khusi[18] | |
2011 | Chhabilal Kanjus Chaina[19] | |
2013-2016 | Buddha Born in Nepal |
Deuja has also done work in television: