Children’s Day 2021: 5 South films that capture the essence of childhood

November 14 is celebrated as Children’s Day, also known as Children’s Day, to pay tribute to India’s first Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru on his birth anniversary. Born in 1988, he was affectionately called Chacha Nehru. It is a day to celebrate the innocence of childhood. Films made in languages ​​like Malayalam, Kannada, Tamil, Tamil and Telugu have explored various interesting aspects of childhood and its trials and tribulations. Below are five such pictures.

Balaraju Katha (1970) (Telugu)

The Telugu language children’s classic directed by Satthiraju “Bapu” Laxminarayan bagged the coveted Nandi Award for Best Feature Film. It tells the story of a young boy named Balaraju (Master Prabhakar) who chooses to become a tourist guide in order to provide for his poor family. The problem is that a childless couple wants to adopt her.

My Dear Kuttichattan (1984) (Malayalam)

This is India’s first 3D film made in Malayalam. Directed by Jijo Punnus, the film deals with an invisible spirit named Kuttichathan, who is enslaved by a black magician, who eventually befriends three children. The Hindi film Chhota Chetan (1997) is a remake of the same film.

Bettada Hoovu (1985) (Kannada)

Young protagonist Ramu (Puneet Rajkumar) has to sacrifice his love for books and desire for education to help his family, who are in dire straits. This movie N. It is directed by Laxminarayan and produced by Shirley L. Arora’s novel What Then is based on Raman. Rajkumar, who passed away recently, received a National Film Award for his performance in the film, which won two National Awards in total.

Mini (1995) (Malayalam)

Mini, directed by P. Chandrakumar, won the National Film Award for Best Film on Family Welfare. The film tactfully dealt with the issue of alcohol addiction and abuse of family members. The title character is a 10-year-old girl (Aarti Ghanshyam) who regularly sees her father getting drunk and her mother hurting. She decides to fast completely until her father gives up alcohol.

Kaka Muttai (2015) (Tamil)

The National Award-winning play directed by M. Manikandan tells the story of two poor slum children (J Vignesh, V Ramesh), whose urge to taste pizza forces them to betray and hurt their family members. They learn hard life lessons but at a great cost.

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