చిత్రలహరి సినిమాలోని ప్రేమ వెన్నెల పాట ఆకట్టుకునేలా ఉంది.
సాయి ధరమ్ తేజ్, కల్యాణి ప్రియదర్శన్
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Published : Apr 2, 2019, 12:51 PM IST
సుప్రీమ్ హీరో సాయిధరమ్ తేజ్ హీరోగా నటించిన చిత్రం '‘చిత్రలహరి'’. కల్యాణి ప్రియదర్శన్, నివేదా పేతురాజ్ హీరోయిన్లు. ‘'నేను శైలజ’' ఫేం కిషోర్ తిరుమల దర్శకత్వం వహించారు. ప్రముఖ నిర్మాణ సంస్థ మైత్రీ మూవీ మేకర్స్ బ్యానర్పై నవీన్ ఎర్నేని, యలమంచిలి రవిశంకర్, చెరుకూరి మోహన్ ఈ నిర్మించారు. దేవీశ్రీ ప్రసాద్ సంగీతం సమకూర్చారు. సునీల్, వెన్నెల కిషోర్ ముఖ్య పాత్రలు పోషించిన ఈ చిత్రం ఏప్రిల్ 12న ప్రేక్షకుల ముందుకు రానుంది.
ఈ సినిమాలోని మూడో పాటను మంగళవారం విడుదల చేసింది చిత్రబృందం. ప్రేమవెన్నెల అంటూ సాగే ఈ పాటను దేవీశ్రీ తనదైన శైలిలో మెలోడీగా రూపొందించాడు. "రాయలోరి నగలలోంచి మాయమైన మణులిలా మారిపోయెనేమో నీ రెండు కళ్లలా" అంటూ శ్రీమణి రచన అలరించేనా ఉంది. సుదర్శన్ అశోక్ వాయిస్ వినసొంపుగా ఉంది.
సుప్రీమ్ హీరో సాయిధరమ్ తేజ్ హీరోగా నటించిన చిత్రం '‘చిత్రలహరి'’. కల్యాణి ప్రియదర్శన్, నివేదా పేతురాజ్ హీరోయిన్లు. ‘'నేను శైలజ’' ఫేం కిషోర్ తిరుమల దర్శకత్వం వహించారు. ప్రముఖ నిర్మాణ సంస్థ మైత్రీ మూవీ మేకర్స్ బ్యానర్పై నవీన్ ఎర్నేని, యలమంచిలి రవిశంకర్, చెరుకూరి మోహన్ ఈ నిర్మించారు. దేవీశ్రీ ప్రసాద్ సంగీతం సమకూర్చారు. సునీల్, వెన్నెల కిషోర్ ముఖ్య పాత్రలు పోషించిన ఈ చిత్రం ఏప్రిల్ 12న ప్రేక్షకుల ముందుకు రానుంది.
ఈ సినిమాలోని మూడో పాటను మంగళవారం విడుదల చేసింది చిత్రబృందం. ప్రేమవెన్నెల అంటూ సాగే ఈ పాటను దేవీశ్రీ తనదైన శైలిలో మెలోడీగా రూపొందించాడు. "రాయలోరి నగలలోంచి మాయమైన మణులిలా మారిపోయెనేమో నీ రెండు కళ్లలా" అంటూ శ్రీమణి రచన అలరించేనా ఉంది. సుదర్శన్ అశోక్ వాయిస్ వినసొంపుగా ఉంది.
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST: ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY San Jose - 23 March 2019 1. Wide of the town of La Carpio located on the outskirts of San Jose and where a large number of Nicaraguan exiles live 2. Wide of La Carpio homes 3. Children playing in a playground 4. Man carrying a baby 5. Pan down of a narrow alley in the home of Nicaraguan refugee who wants to be referred to as "the teacher" 6. Close of pipe and sewage 7. The teacher (beige hat) standing in her kitchen with relatives 8. Woman holding a baby 9. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Full name withheld, the teacher, Nicaraguan citizen living in Costa Rica: "For us in order to survive, it hurts me to say, because in my country I never had to do this, but here I do because nobody helps us. We go out to beg, with a cardboard (box), people help us, some Costa Ricans give us some coins, although they are the small ones." 10. Various of interior of the teacher's home which she shares with 11 other people 11. The teacher hanging laundry in her living room 12. Various of trash piled outside home of Cesar Gutierrez 13. Pan right of Gutierrez sitting in his living room 14. Close of Gutierrez's notebook 15. Gutierrez going up steps of his neighbourhood 16. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Cesar Gutierrez, Nicaraguan citizen living in Costa Rica: "I am now close to receiving my work permit. Meanwhile, I sell cheese to sustain myself in this country." 17. Close of Gutierrez 18. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Cesar Gutierrez, Nicaraguan citizen living in Costa Rica: "Those who came here due to this social movement, this popular uprising, want to go back to Nicaragua. We didn't come here to settle down in Costa Rica." 19. Sadie Rivas and Carlos Andres Monterrey watching live protest on cell phone at their apartment 20. Close of Rivas and Monterrey watching a protest on cell phone 21. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Carlos Andres Monterrey, Nicaraguan citizen living in Costa Rica: "I got notified overnight: 'you have to go to Costa Rica because we can no longer ensure your safety, it's too dangerous, so you have to leave'. Then we left taking only the basics, what we could, due to the urgency. We didn't have time." 22. Monterrey and Rivas sitting on couch looking at cell phone 23. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Sadie Rivas, Nicaraguan citizen living in Costa Rica: "I firmly believe and I will not retreat from the belief that civic struggle is the only way to save us from this. Even though we have a heavily armed military, the same way we have achieved what we did over the course of almost one year, I believe we can do more." 24. Various of Monterrey and Rivas in their apartment STORYLINE: The fate of the estimated 50,000 Nicaraguans who've fled violence and persecution for exile in Costa Rica over the last year is a central point in fledgling peace talks between Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega's government and the opposition, which is demanding guarantees for their safe return. But while negotiators in Managua haggle over that and other thorny issues with little sign of agreement, many exiles who came without means or savings are struggling to put food on the table and keep a roof over their heads, formerly working-class citizens reduced to living in near-indigence. In Nicaragua, this woman owned her own home and made enough as an elementary substitute teacher and lawyers' assistant to eke out a stable, if not luxurious, life. Now she spends her days on the streets of Costa Rica's capital, begging for spare change. "In my country I never had to do this, but here I do because nobody helps us. We go out to beg, with a cardboard (box), people help us," said the 53-year-old woman, who asked to be identified only by her nickname, "the teacher," for fear of retaliation against loved ones back home. The teacher fled during the so-called Operation Cleanup launched by Ortega last July, which the United Nations has termed a "witch hunt" aimed at suppressing any and all dissent. The teacher's offence was feeding student protesters. One day after she brought them breakfast, gunshots rang out, so the only thing to do was run. Like many others she ended up in La Carpio, a shantytown on the outskirts of the Costa Rican capital, San Jose, where the number of Nicaraguan exiles has swollen since the protests began last April. Water is scarce, trash piles up in the streets and sewage flows in open channels. Even before the latest influx of Nicaraguan refugees, half of the estimated 18,000 people in the neighbourhood lived in inadequate homes and 70 percent of households subsisted on less than 330 US dollars per month, according to a government study last year. Still lacking a work permit after eight months in the country, the teacher is sleeping on the floor of a rented, 300-square-foot (30-square-metre house along with two adult children, two grandchildren and six others from a different family. While asylum-seekers are guaranteed the right to work, the sheer numbers of Nicaraguans have overwhelmed Costa Rica's system for processing such requests. Authorities are able to handle about 600 per week, but given that rate only 8,000 have secured work permits compared with the nearly 29,000 who have received credentials as asylum-seekers. More than 20,000 are awaiting appointments. Negotiations between Ortega's government and the Civic Alliance opposition group began Feb. 27, but despite the release to house arrest of over 160 people considered political prisoners, hundreds more remain behind bars under a slow release plan that's supposed to take place over 90 days. On Friday the government and the opposition reached two accords, one of which supposedly restored the right to demonstrate freely, only for police to forcefully break up a protest the following day. Recently the government emphatically rejected calls for an early date for elections scheduled for 2021, a central opposition demand in addition to guarantees for exiles' return. Cesar Gutierrez, 63, is a regular at gatherings where he and fellow exiles plan demonstrations, coordinate with allies back in Nicaragua, share news of home gleaned from the internet and gossip about the latest from the talks. Gutierrez, a former fighter in the revolution that first brought Ortega to power in 1979, later soured on the president and fled after receiving threats against his life and home. He, too, is living in La Carpio, taken in by a woman who long ago worked as his nanny, moved to Costa Rica many years back and now is letting him sleep in the living room of her modest home where seven others also live. He makes a meagre living by selling homemade cheese to fellow exiles after leaving his family back home and his businesses, a bakery and some billiard halls. At least 168 Nicaraguan exiles are wanted due to their political activities, opposition leaders say. Among them is Sadie Rivas, who was active in protests in her home city of Matagalpa. She slipped across the border in August after being accused of a laundry list of crimes one would associate more with a narco-kingpin than a 19-year-old college student: torture, terrorism, money laundering, drug trafficking, weapons possession, destruction of public property, disturbing the peace. Such accusations are typical in cases against protesters, and both they and international observers call them groundless. Rivas' father and brother remain in hiding in Nicaragua, moving from safe house to safe house. =========================================================== Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.