Pallavi (transl. Refrain) is a 1976 Indian Kannada-language drama film directed by novelist P. Lankesh, in his directorial debut. He also stars, alongside Vimala Naidu and T. N. Seetharam. The film is based on his own 1967 novella Biruku (transl. Crack), and focuses on two lovers whose relationship ends when the man fails in life while the woman succeeds.
Shanta is a bouncy university teenager who idolises film actresses. She is as idealistic as her boyfriend Chandru. The two apply for jobs; while Chandru is rejected because of his rudeness, Shanta is accepted because of her charm and self-confidence. Chandru ends his relationship with Shanta. Shanta eventually marries her boss, Jagannathan. Shanta then combines her new leisurely existence as a sophisticated wife with traditional chores and rituals. Boredom and pregnancy overcome her.
Chandru suddenly resurfaces, a fugitive from justice. Shanta is initially intrigued by his attitudes which are very much in opposition to hers. But when Chandru harangues Shanta for resigning herself to security and a constricting marriage, she refuses to go with him, and accuses him of abandoning her in the first place. He threatens to destroy her world, but is finally overpowered by the police. Shanta is left to carry on with her undisturbed, uneventful life.
Pallavi is novelist P. Lankesh's directorial debut.[2] It is based on his own 1967 novella Biruku. In his 1997 autobiography Huli-Maavina Mara (transl. A Sour-Mango Tree), Lankesh claimed that his passion for making films led him to direct a film without any prior experience in the field.[3] The film was produced by K. S. Indira Lankesh under the banner Indira Lankesh Productions.[1][4] Cinematography was handled by S. Ramachandra.[5]T. N. Seetharam made his acting debut with this film.[6]Principal photography began on the same day as the declaration of "the Emergency".[3] P. Lankesh's voice was dubbed by T. S. Ranga.[7]
Themes
Pallavi deals with themes such as student union revolution,[8] college life, and unemployment issues in the hands of bureaucrats.[9] According to the 1998 edition of Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema, it was one of only three films to have direct political and formal links with the Navya Movement.[10]
In the book A Handbook of Karnataka, historian Suryanath U. Kamath considered Pallavi, amongst many other films, to be responsible for establishing the 1970s as the "age of the new-wave or experimental films" in Karnataka.[14]