Not Only Mrs. Raut | |
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Directed by | Gajendra Ahire |
Produced by | Aditi Deshpande |
Starring | Aditi Deshpande Tushar Dalvi |
Music by | Kaushal Inamdar |
Release date |
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Country | India |
Language | Marathi |
Not Only Mrs. Raut is a 2003 Indian Marathi social drama film directed by Gajendra Ahire. Aditi Deshpande, who plays the lead role of Mrs. Raut, has produced the film.
The film won National Award for Best Film in Marathi (Rajat Kamal) at the 51st National Film Awards for "its treatment of two women's struggle against male exploitation and domination".[1]
Plot
Mrs. Vidya Raut murders her boss Karkhanis near Juhu Beach and surrenders herself to the police. She also submits the bloody dagger, weapon of murder. Swati Dandavate, a budding scholar advocate decides to fight her case. Her initial meetings with Mrs. Raut go waste as she keeps confessing her crime and is ready for the punishment. Convinced that something is hidden, Swati decides to find it out. Swati's husband Aditya, who is also an advocate, is now public prosecutor in this case. His elder brother and he try to convince Swati to drop the case which she would obviously lose. But standing against her family, Swati decides to dig out truth and defend Mrs. Raut.
Cast
- Aditi Deshpande as Mrs. Vidya Raut
- Madhura Velankar as Advocate Swati Dandavate
- Tushar Dalvi as Public Prosecutor Aditya Vishnu Dandavate
- Mohan Joshi as Advocate Dada Vishnu Dandavate
- Vandana Gupte
- Vikram Gokhale as Judge
- Kaushal Inamdar as Witness / Hotel Boy
- Ketaki Karadekar as Sneha
- Ravindra Mankani as Raghuvir Karkhanis
- Milind Shinde as Advocate S.M. Garud
Awards
The film won the Silver Lotus Award (Rajat Kamal) for Best Film in Marathi.[1]
Aditi Deshpande won the Screen Best Actress - Marathi award for her performance of Mrs. Raut. She won this award jointly with Sonali Bendre, who played the role of Queen Sheelavati in Anahat (2003).[2]
References
- 1 2 "51st National Film Awards-2003". Press Information Bureau, Government of India. 14 August 2004. Retrieved 9 March 2012.
- ↑ "Screen Weekly Awards 2004". IMDB. 15 January 2004. Retrieved 9 March 2012.