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Le Chakka

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Le Chakka
Theatrical poster
Directed byRaj Chakraborty
Written byPadmanabha Dasgupta
Abhimanyu Mukherjee
Produced byShyam Agarwal
Starring
CinematographySomak Mukherjee
Edited byRabi Ranjan Maitra
Music byIndraadip Das Gupta
Production
company
Srijon Arts
Distributed byEskay Movies
Release date
  • 10 June 2010 (2010-06-10)
Running time
134:05 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageBengali

Le Chakka (English: Take a Sixer) is a 2010 Indian Bengali-language sports romantic comedy film co-written and directed by Raj Chakraborty. Produced by Shyam Aggarwal under the banner of Srijan Arts, the screenplay and dialogues of the film were by Padmanabha Dasgupta and Abhimanyu Mukherjee. It stars Dev, Payel Sarkar in lead roles, while Kharaj Mukherjee, Biswajit Chakraborty, Dipankar De, Supriyo Dutta, Laboni Sarkar, Biswanath Basu, Parthasarathi Chakraborty, Pradip Dhar, Prasun Gain, Ritwick Chakraborty and Anindya Banerjee play another pivotal roles.[1] The soundtrack and background score was composed by Indraadip Das Gupta.[2]

Le Chakka marks the 2nd collaboration between Dev and Raj Chakraborty after Challenge (2009). The film received positive reviews from the audiences, while critics were appraisal of the portrayal of the famous 'Rock culture' in North Kolkata; differences between North and South Kolkata; 'Khep Khela', a popular term of cricket taken places in North Kolkata.[3]

Plot

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11 Bullets is a very bad cricket team of North Kolkata. The team is formed by the people of the locality, who have various professions. The film starts with a match between 11 Bullets and a cricket team of South Kolkata. The hero, named Abir, alone smashes 11 Bullets. The team members of 11 Bullets are then abused by the people of their locality. In the meantime, Abir comes with his family to stay at Dorjipara, which is the locality of 11 Bullets. But, due to huge cultural deference between North Kolkata and South Kolkata, Abir becomes irritated to stay over there. The niece of the landlord of Abir's tenant house, stars having regular quarrels with Abir. Then, Abir discovers that a political leader is trying to grab Dorjipara, and for that, the leader wants the tenant house, which the landlord does not want to sell. When Abir teaches the 11 Bullets people, that without protesting against these political evils, they will not be able to survive, slowly, those people come close to Abir, and vice versa. Then slowly, Abir gets intimate with Rani, which her brother Rajat does not like. A Person, Shankar, who is attached to that leader comes and gets involved with the unmarried, frustrated, elder sister of Rani, named Ratna. But, when Shankar says that he wants to marry Rani, not Ratna. Ratna kills herself. Ultimately, when the party leaders come to take control over Dorjipara, Abir throws a challenge of a cricket match, which is going to decide who's going to get control over the house. 11 Bullets have a tensed and marvelous win, and Abir has a romantic win over Rani.

Cast

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Soundtrack

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Le Chakka
Soundtrack album by
Released14 May 2010 (2010-05-14)
Recorded2010
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelEskay Movies

The film score of the film as well as the soundtrack was scored by Indraadip Das Gupta. The soundtrack, featuring 5 tracks overall, was released on 14 May 2010 in India. The lyrics were written by Priyo Chattopadhyay, Prosen and Srijit Mukherji.

Track Song Singer(s) Duration (min:sec) Lyricist Notes
1 "You And Me" Shaan, June Banerjee 4:56 Priyo Chattopadhyay, Prasenjit Mukherjee and Srijato
2 "Shabba Rabba Reeba Ru" Kunal Ganjawalla, Monali Thakur 5:00 Priyo Chattopadhyay, Prasenjit Mukherjee and Srijato
3 "Ali Maula" Shreya Ghoshal, Shaan, Shahadab Hussain 6:04 Priyo Chattopadhyay
4 "Ekta Bindaas Para" Kunal Ganjawalla, Shahdab Hussain, Prasenjit Mukherjee 4:38 Priyo Chattopadhyay, Prasenjit Mukherjee and Srijato
5 "Le Chakka" Kunal Ganjawalla, Prasenjit Mukherjee 4:24 Priyo Chattopadhyay, Prasenjit Mukherjee and Srijato

References

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  1. ^ "Le Chakka". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 18 June 2024.
  2. ^ "Copycat chronicles". The Telegraph. Calcutta. 12 September 2010. Archived from the original on 15 September 2010. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  3. ^ "Ley Chakka Movie Review". The Times of India. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 18 June 2024.
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