Gandhi Krishna

Gandhi Krishna is an Indian film director who has worked on Tamil films. After beginning his career as an assistant to Shankar, he has made commercially and critically successful films.[1][2]

Gandhi Krishna
Born (1977-01-01) 1 January 1977,
OccupationDirector
Years active1997-Present

Early Life

He was very passionate about films and went to theatres bunking his classes from a young age. The art-house South Indian films influenced him heavily. He completed his 12th from Municipal Higher Secondary School, Gudiyatham. After that, he decided to study Engineering. Gandhi Krishna attended Indian Institute of Industrial Engineers in Chennai to complete his Engineering. Then Gandhi Krishna made his portfolio and tried to pursue a career in Films.

Career

After apprenticing under Shankar in Indian (1996), Gandhi Krishna approached writer Sujatha to allow him to adapt his novel Pirivom Sandhipom into a screenplay. Sujatha refused the offer citing that film makers had often misinterpreted his novels' characters, so the plan was consequently dropped.[3] Gandhi Krishna then began work on his first venture, a social drama film titled Engineer in late 1997.[4] Touted as a big-budget project, the film starred Arvind Swamy and Madhuri Dixit and was based on a story regarding the building of a dam project in South India.[5][6] The film ran into financial trouble after eighty percent of the film's shoot had been completed and has since remained unreleased.[7] In 1999, director Shankar, the mentor of Gandhi Krishna, attempted to revive the project through his production house but was unsuccessful in doing so.[8] A further attempt was made to restart the project with Suriya in the lead role in 2004, but it also failed to materialize.[9]

Subsequently, Gandhi Krishna made his directorial debut through the art film Nila Kaalam (2001), a coming-of-age television film starring children. Based on Sujatha's novel Andru Un Arugil, the film won a National Film Award and received critical acclaim, with a reviewer from The Hindu stating the film "is a must for one and all" and that Gandhi Krishna tackles the "theme confidently".[10] He next made the romantic thriller, Chellamae (2004), featuring newcomer Vishal in the lead role alongside Reemma Sen and Bharath. The basic premise of the plot was taken from a line from the Ramayana, with Bharath portraying the antagonist.[11][12] Unlike his first venture, Chellamae was made to entertain audiences and prompted a positive response from critics as well as at the box office.[13]

Gandhi Krishna finally ended up making Pirivom Sandhipom from mid-2007 as Ananda Thandavam (2009), starring rookie actors Siddharth Venugopal, Tamannaah Bhatia and Rukmini Vijayakumar.[3][14] Despite being promoted heavily prior to release, the film garnered negative reviews and performed poorly at the box office. A critic from Rediff.com noted "though its scores in parts for sensitivity, the overall effect is rather lacking in enthusiasm".[15][16] In 2012, it was reported that Gandhi Krishna had taken over as the director of the fantasy film Karikalan from L. I. Kannan. The film, which starred Vikram, Zarine Khan and Radhika Apte, had been in production since 2010 but has failed to restart even after Gandhi Krishna's appointment.[17][18]

Filmography

Year Film Actors Notes
-EngineerAravind Swamy, Madhuri DixitDropped
2001Nila KaalamUdayaraj, Dinesh, NandhiniDirector
2004ChellamaeVishal, Reema Sen, BharathDirector
2009Ananda ThandavamSiddharth Venugopal, Tamannaah, Rukmini Vijayakumar, RishiDirector

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Awards

Television film: Nila Kaalam is a 2001 Indian Tamil-language television film directed by Gandhi Krishna. The film stars Roja and several child artists. The film was also released at film festivals and child artiste Master Udayaraj went on to win National Film Award for Best Child Artist.

References

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