Vaddante Dabbu Explained

Vaddante Dabbu
Director:Y. R. Swamy
Story:G. D. Mudugulkar
Screenplay:Vempati Sadasivabrahmam
Y. R. Swamy
Starring:N. T. Rama Rao
Sowcar Janaki
Jamuna
Music:T. A. Kalyanam
Cinematography:D. L. Narayana
Editing:M.S. Parthasarathy
Studio:Rohini Pictures
Runtime:140 minutes
Country:India
Language:Telugu

Vaddante Dabbu is a 1954 Indian Telugu-language screwball comedy film directed by Y. R. Swamy.[1] It was produced by Moola Narayana Swamy and presented by H. M. Reddy on Rohini Pictures banner. The film stars N. T. Rama Rao, Sowcar Janaki and Jamuna, with music composed by T. A. Kalyanam. It is based on the George Barr McCutcheon novel Brewster's Millions (1902). Despite originally opening to a mixed response, it attained cult status in Telugu cinema, and was remade in the same language as Babai Abbai (1985).

Plot

Ram & Shyam are besties whose livelihood is to debt and absconding from lenders. Saroja, Shyam multimillionaire Rao Saheb Hemachalapathi's daughter, admires Shyam since he is an artist, and they endear. Being aware of it, Rao Saheb assigns a task to Shyam by allocating a copious amount of ₹1 lakh and asks him to spend it within 30 days. Eventually, he warns him not to donate or destroy it. Now, Shyam starts the operation with the aid of Ram in various means, i.e., racing, gambling, drama, constructing a house, etc. Their income magnifies at every level, which feds up Shyam. Ultimately, he backs Rao Saheb's wealth. At last, he affirms that the task is to study his character and that he should perceive the fruitlessness of treacherous money. Finally, the movie ends happily with the marriage of Shyam & Saroja.

Cast

Production

Vaddante Dabbu was adapted from George Barr McCutcheon's English-language novel Brewster's Millions (1902),[2] and was among the earliest screwball comedies of Telugu cinema.

Music

Music was composed by T. A. Kalyanam. Lyrics were written by Devulapalli, Vempati Sadasivabrahmam, and Sri Sri.

Song Title Lyrics Singers length
"Naa Priya"DevulapalliJikki3:14
"Alladi Avatala"Vempati SadasivabrahmamJikki3:05
"Chadavali"Vempati SadasivabrahmamA. M. Rajah, P. Susheela
"Evaro Doshulu"Vempati SadasivabrahmamRohini
"Endukoyi"DevulapalliR. Balasaraswathi Devi2:49
"Thimtalangthom"Sri SriA. V. Saraswathi, Rohini, V. Ramakrishna, S. P. Kodandapani, M. V. Raju
"Alakinchavoyi"DevulapalliJikki3:33
"Mansaemo Chalinchaneyo"Sri SriR. Balasaraswathi Devi2:55

Release and reception

Vaddante Dabbu was released on 19 February 1954.[3] Despite originally opening to a mixed response, it attained cult status in Telugu cinema, and was remade in the same language as Babai Abbai (1985).

Notes and References

  1. News: 26 February 1954 . వద్దంటే డబ్బు . te . Vaddante Dabbu . 10 . . Nellore . live . 1 June 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160913154028/http://zaminryot.com/pdf/1954/Feb/26-FEB-1954.pdf . 13 September 2016.
  2. Book: Ramachandran, Naman . Rajinikanth: The Definitive Biography . Rajinikanth: The Definitive Biography . . 2012 . 170–171 . Naman Ramachandran.
  3. Web site: Vadhante Dabbu . 2019-06-11 . indiancine.ma.