IMDb RATING
8.2/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Keshya, a simple villager believes that god has arrived in his village but everyone disbelieves him. Later when the politics plays its part things take a drastic change.Keshya, a simple villager believes that god has arrived in his village but everyone disbelieves him. Later when the politics plays its part things take a drastic change.Keshya, a simple villager believes that god has arrived in his village but everyone disbelieves him. Later when the politics plays its part things take a drastic change.
- Awards
- 3 wins total
Dilip Prabhawalkar
- Anna Kulkarni
- (as Dilip Prabhavalkar)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
What worked:
The movie marks a fine performance by Girish. His character speaks louder than any other ones. Nana Patekar in a supporting role is fine as well. The concept and the theme of the movie is powerful, as a result the movie stands as an engaging watch. I think the movie is satirical and makes us question ourself and our actions, and our belief system. The movie is metaphorical and poetic in that sense
What did not work
The songs somehow disturbed the flow and the mood of the movie, making it a commercial entity. Also, the movie is a bit off somewhere at the middle, maybe it's got to do with the screenplay.
Final verdict: recommended
I had bookmarked Deool on Primevideo. Got around to watching it last night in orig. Marathi w/Eng. Subs.
Deool deserves to be ranked as a Marathi film political classic, ahead of its time. The stellar cast and in fact every actor deliver their respective characters as though to the manor born.
A nondescript village (Mangrul) in what looks very much like a sweeping Satara-esque landscape albeit overgrazed and barren, is the location for this film.
A scruffy looking young man Keshya (Girish Kulkarni) on the lookout for his cow Karde, rests in the shade of a solitary tree. He is startled out of his sleepy reverie with a vision of the three headed Lord Dattatreya. Convinced that it is for real, Keshya races back to his village to announce his revelation. Some in the village are convinced, others take a more rational approach such as the respected Anna (Dilip Prabhavalkar) who assures Keshya that his faith may well have allowed him a vision of his God but it would be better to be quiet about it. The local politician Bhau (Nana Patekar) is encouraged by his MLA boss (Mohan Agashe) to seize this opportunity and make hay while the sun shines. Bhau aided by his supporters - a motley bunch of typical local characters superbly essayed by their respective actors , the lady sarpanch, Bhau's wife, Keshya's girlfriend, the village bhajan mandal and most others, make political and economic capital by building a fancy temple to Lord Dattatreya on the hillock next to the tree where Keshya had his vision, with a special enclosure for the 'holy cow' Karde. They auction the stalls lining the now well paved path to the temple. To cut a long story short, the temple is profitably commercialised; the entire village 'develops' and prospers, making a lot of money with an endless stream of pilgrims coming from far and wide. Mangrul has indeed arrived as a "Sacred" place on the pilgrimage circuit.
The idealistic Anna is disappointed as Bhau chose the temple for political gain instead of the promised hospital project and leaves the village for good. Mohan Agashe and Bhau rise politically. One day, Karde the cow falls ill and soon passes away. Keshya is heartbroken, inconsolable and disillusioned. He steals the idol of Dattatreya and runs away from the village, immersing his God in a far off river before returning home. Nasiruddin Shah appears in a blink and miss moment as a North Indian dacoit taking momentary refuge in some archaeological ruins on the outskirts of Mangrul. He is grateful to Keshya for giving him water.
The last frames show the hugely successful politicians and their supporters leading a huge crowd of pilgrims on a march to the top of the hillock and installing a new flashy idol of Lord Dattatreya .......
The characters are quite real, the story very convincing as indeed several such examples of commercially profitable Sacred places all over India reveal. The shrewd political sub plot is well played, as are the various relationships.
The movie is slow in parts, but other than that it is a well crafted film and deserves much wider publicity with multi language subtitling.
Deool deserves to be ranked as a Marathi film political classic, ahead of its time. The stellar cast and in fact every actor deliver their respective characters as though to the manor born.
A nondescript village (Mangrul) in what looks very much like a sweeping Satara-esque landscape albeit overgrazed and barren, is the location for this film.
A scruffy looking young man Keshya (Girish Kulkarni) on the lookout for his cow Karde, rests in the shade of a solitary tree. He is startled out of his sleepy reverie with a vision of the three headed Lord Dattatreya. Convinced that it is for real, Keshya races back to his village to announce his revelation. Some in the village are convinced, others take a more rational approach such as the respected Anna (Dilip Prabhavalkar) who assures Keshya that his faith may well have allowed him a vision of his God but it would be better to be quiet about it. The local politician Bhau (Nana Patekar) is encouraged by his MLA boss (Mohan Agashe) to seize this opportunity and make hay while the sun shines. Bhau aided by his supporters - a motley bunch of typical local characters superbly essayed by their respective actors , the lady sarpanch, Bhau's wife, Keshya's girlfriend, the village bhajan mandal and most others, make political and economic capital by building a fancy temple to Lord Dattatreya on the hillock next to the tree where Keshya had his vision, with a special enclosure for the 'holy cow' Karde. They auction the stalls lining the now well paved path to the temple. To cut a long story short, the temple is profitably commercialised; the entire village 'develops' and prospers, making a lot of money with an endless stream of pilgrims coming from far and wide. Mangrul has indeed arrived as a "Sacred" place on the pilgrimage circuit.
The idealistic Anna is disappointed as Bhau chose the temple for political gain instead of the promised hospital project and leaves the village for good. Mohan Agashe and Bhau rise politically. One day, Karde the cow falls ill and soon passes away. Keshya is heartbroken, inconsolable and disillusioned. He steals the idol of Dattatreya and runs away from the village, immersing his God in a far off river before returning home. Nasiruddin Shah appears in a blink and miss moment as a North Indian dacoit taking momentary refuge in some archaeological ruins on the outskirts of Mangrul. He is grateful to Keshya for giving him water.
The last frames show the hugely successful politicians and their supporters leading a huge crowd of pilgrims on a march to the top of the hillock and installing a new flashy idol of Lord Dattatreya .......
The characters are quite real, the story very convincing as indeed several such examples of commercially profitable Sacred places all over India reveal. The shrewd political sub plot is well played, as are the various relationships.
The movie is slow in parts, but other than that it is a well crafted film and deserves much wider publicity with multi language subtitling.
I am a non maharastrian, but after staying here for 4-5 years, I started understanding marathi. I heard a lot from my colleagues about this movie. Then I decided to watch this movie. When I saw this movie, I was completely surprised with everything. Story, Story-telling, direction, acting and what not. Nana Patekar, Sonali Kulkarni, they are as usual superb actors. But it was Girish Kulkarni who clicked me. What an actor he is. I would never miss any of his future movies.
Overall, the bollywood movie makers should learn movie making and that to be without macho heros.
Excellent Job Team Deool.
Overall, the bollywood movie makers should learn movie making and that to be without macho heros.
Excellent Job Team Deool.
It's a masterpiece cinema from umesh kulkarni and team. Superb acting, dialogues, screenplay, and cinematography. This movie shows the reality of every innocent religious people and also depicts about how religion is being commercialized in name of god.
Everything about this movie dialogues, lifestyle, songs is a classic timepiece in itself. Well thought and researched play with perfect casting. Not the one to miss.
Did you know
- TriviaBefore the temple is constructed Nana Patekar has a Mahindra Bolero (MUV) where in the numbers as disguised as "Bhau" in Marathi. After the village becomes prosperous he upgrades to Mahindra Scorpio (SUV) with the same number plate.
- How long is Deool?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- ₹47,500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime2 hours 15 minutes
- Color
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