Chanthupottu
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Chanthupottu | |
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Directed by | Lal Jose |
Written by | Benny P Nayarambalam |
Produced by | Lal |
Starring | Dileep Gopika Indrajith Lal Biju Menon |
Cinematography | Alagappan N |
Edited by | Ranjan Abraham |
Music by | Vidyasagar |
Distributed by | Lal Release & PJ Entertainments |
Release date |
|
Running time | 125 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Malayalam |
Chanthupottu is a 2005 Indian Malayalam-language romantic comedy-drama film directed by Lal Jose, written by Benny P. Nayarambalam, and produced by Lal. The film was based on a play of the same name, which in turn, was based on the life of an actual man with feminine mannerisms. The story is about a man named Radhakrishnan (Dileep) who was brought up like a girl by his grandmother. This film was a commercial success at the box office.
Plot[]
Radhakrishnan is brought up like a girl by his grandmother who wanted a granddaughter. She calls him Radha, which becomes his nickname. Radha's father Divakaran goes to jail for a murder that he accidentally commits. Radha is ridiculed among the people in the village as he is considered effeminate, but he is not worried and spends time with the girls singing and teaches dancing. His best friend is Malu who is wooed by Kumaran, a local money lender and the son of the man whom Radha's father had killed in a fight after Kumaran insults Radha for behaving like girl.
Divakaran comes back from jail and dislikes his son's mannerisms, but can do nothing about them. Slowly Radha's liking for Malu turns into love and when Kumaran sees it, he beats up Radha with the help of her father, a local astrologer and dumps him in deep sea by saying he is a curse to the shore. But he is saved by Freddy, a restaurant owner, in some distant shore. Freddy takes him to the former's native where he is living with his sister Rosie and his grandmother, who is a mental patient due to the shock of the sudden death of Freddy's other sibling, Jonfy. He soon becomes a part of their family, as the grandmother begins to identify him as the late Jonfy. With a change in environment, he also changes his behaviour, adopting more traditionally male mannerisms.
Once, he gets involved in a fight with Cleetus, an old enemy of Freddy, after Cleetus tries to molest Rosie. During the fight, Cleetus gets severely injured on the head. Radha is forced to return to his home to escape from the police.
On reaching his native shore, he discovers that his family, along with his house was brutally burned down by Kumaran. He also learns that Malu is pregnant with Radha's child. His arrival follows a fight with Kumaran. Towards the end of the fight, Radha defeats Kumaran and is about to kill him but, reminded of how his father had to suffer in jail due to murder charges, he spares Kumaran. In the meantime, Malu prematurely gives birth to Radha's child. When Radha sees the child, he vows to raise it as a boy, ripping off the ribbon tied to its hair.
Cast[]
- Dileep as Radhakrishnan
- Gopika as Malu
- Indrajith as Komban Kumaran
- Lal as Divakaran, Radhakrishnan's father
- Biju Menon as Freddy
- Bhavana as Rosie, Freddy's sister
- Rajan P. Dev as Thorayil Aasan, Malu's father
- Mala Aravindan as Kanaran
- Sukumari as Radhakrishnan's grandmother
- Shobha Mohan as Shantha , Radhakrishnan's mother
- Salim Kumar as Vareed ,Tea shop owner
- Anil Murali as Kumaran's father
- Sreejith Ravi as Cleetus.
- Valsala Menon as Freddy's and Rosie's grandmother
- Joju George
- George Peter
- Kalabhavan Shajohn
- Koottickal Jayachandran as Lawrence
- Cherthala Lalitha as Karthu
- Renjusha as Ramani
Portrayal of gender roles[]
The film was criticized by the LGBT community of Kerala for its distorted portrayal of gender and sexuality. In 2019, queer activists reported that the word "chanthupottu" was used to harass transgender persons, and pointed at the deeply problematic idea that beatings and a heterosexual relationship could "correct" behaviour that goes against traditional gender norms.[1][2] Prabhakaran and Poovathingal (2013) argue that "the movie brought forth traditional machismo of the male hero and defined an unsophisticated masculinity", despite its attempts to portray an effeminate man in a positive light.[3]
Music[]
Chanthupottu | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 2005 | |||
Genre | Feature film soundtrack | |||
Vidhyasagar chronology | ||||
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- "Azhakadalinte" – S. Janaki
- "Azhakadalinte" male - P Jayachandran
- "Omanapuzha" – Vineeth Sreenivasan
- "Chanthu Kudanjoru" – Shahabaz Aman, Sujatha Mohan
- "Kana Ponnum" – Franko, Ranjith, Chorus
Box office[]
The film was commercial success and ran over 125 days in theatres.[4][5][6][7][8]
References[]
- ^ "Queer activists slam Lal Jose for defending problematic 2005 film Chanthupottu". The News Minute. 15 November 2019.
- ^ "In a touching post, Kerala gay man recounts how a blockbuster film wronged him". The News Minute. 22 December 2017.
- ^ Prabhakaran, Roshni and Poovathingal, Nithya Thomas (2013). "Masculinizing Radha: The Politics of Representation in Chandupottu". Language in India. 13 (8): 318–325.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- ^ "Dileep's citadel". Sify. 30 December 2005. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016.
- ^ "Reflection of society". The Hindu. 6 January 2006.
- ^ "Surya is the 'surprise' hero". Rediff.com. 6 October 2006.
- ^ Meghna George (1 December 2009). "Mammootty's Chattambinadu". Rediff.com.
- ^ "Picture isn't perfect in Mollywood". Business Standard. 6 February 2013.
External links[]
- Chanthupottu at IMDb
- Chaanthupottu at the Malayalam Movie Database
- 2005 films
- Malayalam-language films
- Indian films
- Transgender-related films
- Cross-dressing in Indian films
- Bisexuality-related films
- Indian LGBT-related films
- 2000s Malayalam-language films
- 2005 romantic comedy-drama films
- LGBT-related romantic comedy films
- Indian romantic comedy-drama films
- Films scored by Vidyasagar
- Films directed by Lal Jose
- 2005 LGBT-related films