Kadal Pookkal
Kadal Pookkal | |
---|---|
Directed by | Bharathiraja |
Written by | Bharathiraja, R. Rathnakumar |
Produced by | Sivasakthi Pandiyan |
Starring | Manoj Sindhu Menon Umashankari Murali Pratyusha |
Cinematography | B. Kannan |
Edited by | K. Pazhanivel |
Music by | Deva |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Budget | ₹ 13 crores |
Box office | ₹ 2.0crores |
Kadal Pookkal (transl. Sea Flowers) is a 2001 Indian Tamil-language drama film directed by Bharathiraja which stars his son Manoj Bharathiraja in the leading role, with Sindhu Menon, Pratyusha, Murali and Umashankari in supporting roles.[1] The film was delayed several times before release but opened to critical acclaim with Bharatiraja winning the National Film Award for Best Screenplay and Murali has won Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Actor
Plot[]
Karuthayya (Murali) and Peter (Manoj Bharathiraja) are the best friends, sharing with each other their hopes and dreams. Karuthayya's plan to get his beloved sister Kayal (Umashankari) married elsewhere is thwarted when he learns that she is in love with Peter. He hears this from Uppili (Pratyusha), who has a soft corner for Karuthayya and vice versa. For his sister's sake, Karuthayya approaches Peter with the marriage proposal. A shocked Peter, who had all along shared an easy relationship with Kayal, consents for the sake of friendship. Peter then makes a counter proposal that Karuthayya marry his sister Maria. Peter however withholds the fact that Maria had been seduced by a man from the city and was carrying his child. Family honor being uppermost in his mind, friendship takes a back seat. But Peter does not know that Karuthayya was already aware of his sister's affair, though not of her pregnancy. Karuthayya, knowing his friend's aggressive nature, had not told Peter about the matter earlier. Karuthayya now throws the ball back in Peter's court, asking him to first get Maria's consent. Sure that Maria would not give her consent for the marriage. But to his shock Maria agrees.
Forced by her mother and Peter to toe the line, she had no other option. The two pairs get married. While Peter and Kayal are blissfully happy, Karuthayya and Maria have their own crosses to bear. A guilt-stricken Maria finally confesses to Karuthayya about Peter's treacherous act. A shocked and hurt Karuthayya goes to confront Peter. The man from the city appears on the scene. A furious Peter takes the unsuspecting youth on a boat ride, ties a stone on him, and dumps him into the sea. Karuthayya, who reaches the place, tries to save the guy.
Cast[]
- Murali as Karuthaiya
- Manoj Bharathiraja as Peter
- Sindhu Menon as Mariyam
- Pratyusha as Uppili
- Umashankari as Kayal
- Puthu Kavithai Jyothi as Peter's mother
- Shyam Ganesh as Fernandes
- Vaiyapuri
- Santhana Bharathi
- Sridhar as Susai
Production[]
The film set in the backdrop of sea and was shot completely in Nagercoil.[2]
Soundtrack[]
Soundtrack was composed by Deva and lyrics were written by Vairamuthu. Chennai Online called it "A lovely sea breeze by Deva".[3]
No. | Song | Singers | Lyrics |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Aadu Meyuthe | Sathya, Krishnaraj | Vairamuthu |
2 | Alai Alai | Unni Menon, Swarnalatha, Srinivas | |
3 | Ogama I | Malaysia Vasudevan, Ganga | |
4 | Ogama II | Deva, Ganga | |
5 | Paithiyamaanene | Harini, P. Unnikrishnan | |
6 | Siluvaigale | Anuradha Sriram, Unni Menon |
Critical reception[]
Rediff wrote that director "shows no sign of being able to change his storytelling style to match the times".[4] Chennai online wrote "it is a well-crafted script, the tale well told, the narration moving smoothly, and the scenes emotion-charged."[5] Thiraipadam wrote "The movie is not as good as movies from Bharathiraja's golden era".[6]
References[]
- ^ "Filmography of Kadal Pookkal". CineSouth. 14 December 2001. Archived from the original on 26 September 2012. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
- ^ "Kadal Pookkal". Sify. Archived from the original on 25 July 2014. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20030220132736/http://www.chennaionline.com/musicreviews/kadal.asp
- ^ "Oceans apart..." Rediff.com. 7 January 2007. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20010601120159/http://www.chennaionline.com/moviereviews/tammov119.asp
- ^ "Movie Review: Kadal Pookal (2001)". Subash Awards Movie Review. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
- 2001 films
- Tamil-language films
- Indian films
- Films scored by Deva (composer)
- Films directed by Bharathiraja
- 2000s Tamil-language films
- Films whose writer won the Best Original Screenplay National Film Award