Sairat

Sairat
Theatrical release poster
Directed byNagraj Manjule
Written byNagraj Manjule
Bharat Manjule
Produced byNittin Keni
Nikhil Sane
Nagraj Manjule
StarringAkash Thosar
Rinku Rajguru
CinematographySudhakar Reddy Yakkanti
Edited byKutub Inamdar
Music byAjay–Atul
Production
companies
Distributed byZee Studios
Release date
  • 29 April 2016 (2016-04-29)
Running time
174 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageMarathi
Budget4 crore[1]
Box officeest. 110 crore[2]

Sairat (transl. Wild) is a 2016 Indian Marathi-language social romantic tragedy film directed and co-produced by Nagraj Manjule under his banner Aatpat Production, along with Nittin Keni and Nikhil Sane under Essel Vision Productions and Zee Studios. Starring Rinku Rajguru and Akash Thosar in their debuts, it tells the story of two young college students from different castes who fall in love, sparking conflict between their families.

Manjule conceived the story in 2009, basing it on his experiences of caste discrimination, but scrapped it when he decided that it was boring. After making Fandry (2013), he revisited the story and completed its script the following year. The screenplay was written by Manjule, and his brother Bharat penned the dialogues. The film was shot in Manjule's village, Jeur in Karmala Taluka of Solapur district in Maharashtra. Sudhakar Reddy Yakkanti was the director of photography, and Kutub Inamdar edited the film.

Sairat premiered at the 66th Berlin International Film Festival, where it received a standing ovation. It was released on 29 April 2016 in Maharashtra and several other locations in India, receiving positive reviews from critics. The film was a box-office success, and became the highest-grossing Marathi film of all time. Rajguru received the National Film Award – Special Mention at the 63rd National Film Awards. Sairat received 11 awards at the 2017 Filmfare Marathi Awards, including Best Film, Best Director (Manjule), Best Actress (Rajguru) and Best Music Album. Rajguru and Thosar won in the Best Debut female and male categories. The film was remade in several languages: Manasu Mallige (2017) in Kannada, Channa Mereya (2017) in Punjabi, Laila O Laila (2017) in Odia, Noor Jahaan (2018) in Bengali and Dhadak (2018) in Hindi.

  1. ^ "Sairat: Why a doomed love story has become India's sleeper hit". BBC News. 7 June 2016. Archived from the original on 22 July 2018. Retrieved 21 July 2018.
  2. ^ Verma, Smitha (22 April 2018). "Made in Marathi". The Financial Express. Archived from the original on 22 April 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2018.