| Thajabagee Wangmada | |
|---|---|
| Poster | |
| Directed by | Oken Amakcham |
| Screenplay by | Narendra Ningomba |
| Story by | K. Joymati Devi |
| Produced by | Shanti Thokchom |
| Starring | K. Dinesh Sharma Binata Laishram Thingom Pritam Maya Choudhury |
| Cinematography | Irom Maipak [1] [2] |
| Edited by | Lalmani Rajkumar |
| Music by | Oken Amakcham |
Production company | Dashu Films |
| Distributed by | Dashu Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 131 minutes |
| Country | India |
| Language | Meiteilon (Manipuri) |
Thajabagee Wangmada (English: Beyond Belief) is a 2004 Manipuri film directed by Oken Amakcham. [3] [4] [5] K. Dinesh Sharma, Binata Laishram, Thingom Pritam and Maya Choudhury star as the leads. [6] It is produced by Shanti Thokchom under the banner of Dashu Films. [7] [8] The film was released at Pratap Talkies, Paona Bazar on 9 July 2004. [9] It also marked R.K. Hemabati's first Manipuri digital film. [10]
Thajabagee Wangmada got official selection at the First Festival of Manipuri Cinema 2007, held in January 2008. [11]
Bimol and Asha are lovebirds. Suresh loves Sarju but does not have the courage to express it. When Bimol engages in a fight with some miscreants in college, his parents decides to send him to Delhi for further studies. He gets a job there following his educational career. Suresh gets selected in the Army and goes to Punjab for formal training. Meanwhile, Rajen forcibly abducts Asha. Their families meet and wedding plans are carved out. Bimol suffers heartbreak as he receives their wedding invitation. Unfortunately, Rajen dies of heart attack before marriage. Bimol has no knowledge of this incident. Meanwhile, Asha gets a job in the Department of Information and Public Relations (DIPR), Government of Manipur on a contractual basis. Bimol returns home as he is transferred from Delhi. He joins as an Administrative Officer (A.O.) in the DIPR office, where he meets Asha again. The latter initially plans to apply for her job extension but decides to drop it post the former's joining in the office. Asha's brother-in-law clears the misunderstanding. Finally, Bimol and Asha reunite again. Suresh, while returning from his posting in Kashmir, meets Sarju. He finds out that Sarju is married to another guy.
Oken Amakcham composed the soundtrack for the film and Sarat Yumnam, Narendra Ningomba and G. Kabita wrote the lyrics. [12] [13] The songs are titled Leirangsingna Hairi, Thapla Thaplaga, Thajabagee Wangmada, Eimakna Maram Oiraga, Makholdi Thokta and Tamlaklaga. [14] [15]
| Thajabagee Wangmada | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soundtrack album by K. Dinesh Sharma, Pushparani Huidrom, Ranbir Thouna | |||||
| Released | 2004 | ||||
| Genre | Feature film soundtrack | ||||
| Length | 28:54 | ||||
| Label | Dashu Films | ||||
| Producer | Shanti Thokchom | ||||
| |||||
| No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Singer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Leirangsingna Hairi" | Narendra Ningomba | Oken Amakcham | K. Dinesh Sharma, Pushparani Huidrom | 04:32 |
| 2. | "Thapla Thaplaga" | Sarat Yumnam | Oken Amakcham | K. Dinesh Sharma | 04:31 |
| 3. | "Thajabagee Wangmada" | Narendra Ningomba | Oken Amakcham | Pushparani Huidrom | 02:39 |
| 4. | "Makholdi Thokta" | G. Kabita | Oken Amakcham | Ranbir Thouna | 05:55 |
| 5. | "Eimakna Maram Oiraga" | Narendra Ningomba | Oken Amakcham | K. Dinesh Sharma | 05:53 |
| 6. | "Tamlaklaga" | Narendra Ningomba | Oken Amakcham | Pushparani Huidrom | 05:24 |
| Total length: | 28:54 | ||||