Cholai is an Indian Bengali dark comedy film released in 2016. The film is based on the 2011 hooch fatalities.[1][2] in Bengal, India. Unlicensed Country liquor, commonly known as ‘Cholai’ is a prosper business in rural Bengal.It is very cheap and highly addictive.

Cholai
Directed byArun Roy
Produced byKR Movies and Entertainment, Jaspreet Kaur
StarringSaswata Chatterjee
Nimai Ghosh
Goutam Halder
Shankar Chakroborty
Partho Sarathi
Miska Halim
Debanjan Nag
Kharaj Mukherjee
Sumit Samaddar
Rayati Bhattacharya
CinematographyGopi Bhagat
Edited bySanglap Bhowmik & Edit FX
Music byMayukh & Mainak
Release date
  • 2 December 2016 (2016-12-02)
CountryIndia
LanguageBengali

Plot

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Skaktipada is a reputed teacher in his village. He has three sons, the eldest son Nimai sells milk for a living. Shaktipada’s second son Nitya is a fraud and has been absconding since a year. His youngest son Nata makes local alcohol and his disputed reputation exceeds the boundary of locality. The secret of the addiction of his alcohol is the presence of some pesticides in them. Nata and his wife work hard to keep the business afloat. One day accidentally both of them mix pesticides to the alcohol in the brewing process not knowing their partner as already done it. This leads to the death of 172 people who had consumed this poisonous alcohol.

Overnight this creates a huge unrest in the village as well as the media. To mitigate the unrest Government declares a lucrative compensation of 2 lakhs for the families of the dead. Peoples’ excitement takes mercurial height with the announcement. People starting from the doctor in the morgue to the carriers of the dead bodies, all became conscious of the compensation amount and demand their share in it.

A parallel incident soon draws public’s attention. The Govt. declares another compensation package to the families of the Maoist workers who are going to surrender. To the utter surprise of the villagers, Shaktipada’s long-unseen second son Nitya was seen queuing up with other Maoist activists to receive compensation. Sumitra, Nata’s wife is disheartened to see his brother-in-law get this kind of money. She thinks that Govt. gives money to people who kill others. And since Nata has killed 172 people he should be entitled to some compensation as well. A convinced Nata surrenders to the Govt. seeking pardon and compensation to start a new life.

Now only Nimai, the eldest, the milk seller finds himself at a loss. He is bullied by his wife to learn from his brothers who have both fame and money. Will Nimai now do something drastic to change is life ... to gain “fame” and “compensation”? Well, he does.

Cast

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  • Saswata Chatterjee as Minister
  • Kharaj Mukherjee as Bus Passenger
  • Partha Sarathi as Nata
  • Sandip Ghosh as Nimai
  • Sumit Sammadar as Bishu
  • Shankar Chakraborty as Doctor
  • Mishka Halim
  • Goutam Halder
  • Swapna Dey
  • Sneha Biswas
  • Subhomay Chatterjee
  • Rayati Basu
  • Sounava Basu
  • Arunima Ghosh

Crew

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  • Produced By: Jaspreet Kaur
  • Production House: KR Movies & Entertainment Pvt Ltd
  • Creative Producer: Pavel
  • Directed By: Arun Roy
  • Screenplay: Arun Roy
  • Dialogues: Subhomay Chatterjee
  • cinematography: Gopi Bhagat
  • Music Director: Mayukh & Mainak
  • Editor: Sanglap Bhowmick & Edit FX

Music

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The music of the film has been composed by Mayukh & Mainak

Recognition

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Cholai has been screened at several prestigious International Film Festivals. The film was screened at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival[3][4] and 7th Jagran Film Festival.[5] Cholai was nominated for 63rd National Film Awards[6] and was also nominated in six categories at Madrid IFF 2016 and won 1 award.[7][8] The movie was officially selected for Indian film festival of Melbourne, Australia.[9] Cholai was well-received internationally.[10] Cholai wins two film fare awards in the Jio Filmfare Awards (East) 2017. It secured the awards for Best Dialogue (Subhomay Chatterjee) & Critics' Best Film (Arun Roy).[11]

References

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  1. ^ "In the aftermath of a hooch tragedy". Shoma Chatterji. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  2. ^ "Film takes hard look at Mograhat hooch tragedy". Priyanka Dasgupta. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  3. ^ "Bengal's "Cholai" Wins Hearts at Cannes Film Festival". WBRI Web Desk. Archived from the original on 1 July 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ "India at Cannes". Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 23 June 2016.
  5. ^ "Cholai". Jagran Discovery.
  6. ^ "7 Bengali films eye National Awards". Priyanka Dasgupta. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  7. ^ "মাদ্রিদ জয়". Ebela. Archived from the original on 17 September 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
  8. ^ "Best Editing of a Foreign Language Film". WBRI Web Desk. Archived from the original on 11 August 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  9. ^ "Indian Film Festival Melbourne". IFFM.
  10. ^ "Film on Hooch Tragedy Bags Accolades Abroad". Shoma A. Chatterji. Retrieved 14 July 2016.
  11. ^ "Winners of the Jio Filmfare Awards (East) 2017". Filmfare. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
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