Meesai Madhavan
Meesai Madhavan | |
---|---|
Directed by | S. Ramu |
Written by | Siddique-Lal |
Produced by | S. V. Thangaraj |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Ravishankar |
Edited by | P. C. Mohan |
Music by | Bharani |
Production company | Uvasree Creations |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Meesai Madhavan (English: Moustache Madhavan) is a 2004 Indian Tamil film written and directed by S. Ramu. The film stars debutant Ramana, Kutty Radhika of Iyarkai fame, Ilavarasu and S. V. Thangaraj in lead roles. The film is produced by S. V. Thangaraj of Uvasree creations, which earlier produced Sundara Travels (2002). The film was a remake of the Malayalam film Kabooliwala.[1][2]
Plot[]
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (April 2021) |
The story begins in Kerala. Vignesh is the four year child of a Doctor (Rajeev). Vignesh has two elder sisters. On his Vignesh's fourth birthday the Doctor was late for the celebration; but he gives Vignesh a trumpet which he likes very much. The same night while they were celebrating, a Kabooli (Manivannan) comes with a child who was suffering from fever to the doctor. The doctor doesn't treat the child and ask him to take the child to hospital. A call comes at midnight saying that the Kabooli's son is serious. The doctor rushes to the hospital and he takes his son with him. Vignesh is very much attached to the music played by the Kabooli. Kabooli's son Madhavan dies in the hospital and he runs away from the hospital with Vignesh. After 15 years the story shifts to Chennai, where we see Kannas (Thangaraj) and Kadalas (Ilavarasu) who are street boys. They stay with Amminiamma (Sabitha Anand) and they are in love with her daughters. One of her daughters steals some valuables from the house where she does household work. In order to save them, Kannas and Kadalas go to prison. When they return, they find both are married and move out of the house with sorrow. Madhavan (Ramana) comes in search of Kannas and Kadalas because they went to prison for stealing the trumpet which was at stake. Kannas and Kadalas have buried the trumpet in the ground and now there is a circus tent around it. While trying to take it out; the trumpet is taken by Rani (Kutti Radhika) the daughter of the circus owner. Madhavan asks for the trumpet and she refuses to give it. They fight with each other and in the process Madhavan tries to prove that Rani has an illicit relation with him. Her father Meesaikarar (Anandraj) is furious and he tries to kill Madhavan. But before that Madhavan tells him that he did all this for his trumpet and he has no relation with his daughter. Meesaikarar asks Rani to return the trumpet. Madhavan plays the same music which the Kabooli used to play. All in the circus tent are shocked to hear it and it is revealed that Madhavan is Meesaikarar's nephew. All in the circus tent accept him wholeheartedly. Madhavan ignores Rani and she tries to commit suicide. Madhavan confesses his love for her. While romancing he plays the same music and the doctor who was passing by hears it and he comes with his daughters and sons-in-law and they forcefully take him. Madhavan tries to leave but is given sedation. One of the sons-in-law is a police officer and the other is a doctor and they are able to arrest Meesaikarar who comes to release Madhavan. The doctor shows the photograph of dead Madhavan and the newspaper articles reporting the kidnap of Vignesh to the people in the circus tent. Meesaikarar is released under the condition that they would leave the city within 48 hours. Meesaikarar is also furious and says that he will marry off his daughter within 48 hours and his son would curse him for being his father. Kannas and Kadalas come to Madhavan's house and she stops them. She requests Kannas and Kadalas not to take her son back to the streets. Kannas and Kadalas reveal the love between Madhavan and Rani and also tell her that Madhavan would be happy only with Rani. The doctor also decides to leave the city the next morning. Madhavan sees the door of his bedroom opened. He is successful in getting out of the house through the back door, but is shocked to see her there. She tells him that she was the one who opened all doors for him because she couldn't see him sad. She asks him to run with his Rani. The mother blesses her son and he leaves. But when he reaches the circus tent he is badly beaten up by Meesaikarar and party. Rani is not allowed to leave. Kannas and Kadalas take Madhavan from there and they help Rani run away with Madhavan. But Meesaikarar finds them. He tries to kill Madhavan, but can't. After getting accepted by both families, Rani and Madhavan are getting married that day and all are invited to the marriage. When Kannas and Kadalas and their gang reach for the marriage they are stopped at the gate. When they try to reach to Madhavan, they are stopped by his relatives. Kannas and Kadalas bid a tearful farewell to Madhavan saying that their place is in the streets and they leave. While leaving they leave a gift with the watchman for Madhavan. Madhavan's brothers-in-law stop the watchman, open the gift and find it is the trumpet. They throw the trumpet away and it falls in front of Kannas and Kadalas. They take the trumpet and play the same tune. Madhavan comes from the house and he is welcomed to his marriage. He scolds his relatives for those kindnesses. Kannas and Kadalas then take their bag where they put waste materials and leave the place.
Cast[]
- Ramana as Madhavan / Vignesh
- Kutti Radhika as Rani
- Ilavarasu as Kadalas
- S. V. Thangaraj as Kannas
- Rajeev as Vignesh's father
- Manivannan as Kabuliwala
- Anandaraj as Rani's father
- Pandu as Nair
- Thyagu as Paramaguru
- Sabitha Anand
- Saranya Ponvannan as Devi, Vignesh's mother
- Gowthami Vembunathan as Rani's mother
- Raj Mohan as Vignesh's uncle
- Manohar as Vignesh's uncle
- Vijay Ganesh as Circus worker
- Bonda Mani as Circus worker
- Muthukaalai as Circus worker
- Susmitha as Rambha
- Anjali Devi as Vignesh's aunt
- Manasa as Urvashi
Production[]
The film is directed by debutant S. Ramu, who apprenticed under directors S. A. Chandrasekhar, Vincent Selva, A. Venkatesh and Thaha. A 17-day shooting was scheduled at the Gemini Circus in Chennai. Five hundred junior artistes too part in the scenes where even a couple of fight scenes and songs were picturised. The climax scene, where the eloped lovers are chased by the police and Anandraj's men, were shot in the Thalakkonam forest areas. It took 10 days and three cameras to shoot the scenes. The stunts were choreographed by Power Fast, and the camera cranked by Ravishanker.[3]
Soundtrack[]
Music was composed by Bharani.[4]
- "Kabuliwala" - P. Jayachandran
- "Pudavai Vaangi" - Krishnaraj, Malathi
- "Kottu Kottu" - Manikka Vinayagam, Mahathi
- "Paal Nilavile" - P.Jayachandran
- "Vaada Vaada" - Anitha
- "Karuvakattu" - Krishnaraj, Malathi
Reception[]
Balaji Balasubramaniam of bbthots.com stated, "The formula, which consisted of crude comedy coupled with cinematic sentiments, is dumbed down further for Meesai Madhavan resulting in a truly abominable film that makes Sundara Travels seem like a comedy classic! One can only hope that this movie's failure prevents the producer from making even one more similar feature".[5] S. R. Ashok Kumar of The Hindu said, "Producer S. V. Thangaraj should have refrained from acting, as he is yet to learn the basics. Ilavarasu has excelled in his role as Kadalas. Manivannan as the Kaboolivala does a neat job while Anantharaj proves that he is one of the good performers who can handle any role with confidence. There is no need for `Kutty' Radhika, endowed with a charming face, to resort to heavy makeup which only produces the opposite effect. Ramana as the hero is convincing".[6]
References[]
- ^ "Review: Meesai Madhavan". Sify. 16 August 2004. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
- ^ "Confusion ... Only in name". The Hindu. 28 May 2004.
- ^ "Archived copy". chennaionline.com. Archived from the original on 10 February 2005. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ http://www.raaga.com/channels/tamil/moviedetail.asp?mid=t0000882
- ^ Balaji Balasubramaniam. "MEESAI MADHAVAN". bbthots.com. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
- ^ S. R. Ashok Kumar (24 December 2004). "Entertainment / Film Review : Meesai Madhavan". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 27 December 2004. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
- 2004 films
- Tamil-language films
- Indian films
- Tamil remakes of Malayalam films
- 2000s Tamil-language films