Panjaa

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Panjaa
Bearded man in black suit holding pistol
Film poster
Directed byVishnuvardhan
Written byAbburi Ravi (Dialogues)
Screenplay byRahul Koda
Vishnuvardhan
Abburi Ravi
Story byVishnuvardhan
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyP. S. Vinod
Edited byA. Sreekar Prasad
Music byYuvan Shankar Raja
Production
companies
Distributed bySri Venkateswara Creations
Release date
  • 9 December 2011 (2011-12-09)
Running time
156 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

Panjaa (transl.Claw) is a 2011 Indian Telugu-language action film[1] directed by Vishnuvardhan and produced by Arka Media Works and Sanghamitra Art Productions. The film stars Pawan Kalyan, Sarah-Jane Dias, Anjali Lavania, Jackie Shroff, Adivi Sesh and Atul Kulkarni. The plot follows Jaidev (Kalyan), a gangster's loyal henchman who is forced to go on the run following a botched mission and killing his boss's son for committing a violent atrocity. The film features music scored by Yuvan Shankar Raja and cinematography by P. S. Vinod.[2] The film marks Dias' debut in Telugu cinema and Lavania's film debut. Vishnuvardhan, who works primarily in the Tamil cinema, also makes his directorial debut in Telugu.

Principal photography of the film commenced on 6 May 2011. The filming took place primarily at Kolkata, Pollachi, Karaikudi, Vagamon and Palasa. Panjaa was released theatrically on 9 December 2011. Upon release, it received generally mixed reviews from critics who praised the technical aspects, performances and action sequences while criticizing the narration pace and lack of lengthy songs.[3][4] The film performed well in the overseas but failed at the Indian box office.[5][6]

Plot[]

Jaidev is a Kolkata-based hitman working for a don named Bhagavan, and they together share a business rivalry with Kulkarni. When Bhagavan's psychotic son Munna returns to India after 8 years, he mistreats the accountant Sabapathy and humiliates him. Receiving no support from Bhagavan, Sabapathy joins Kulkarni's gang, making Bhagavan order Jai to kill him. As per the plan, Jai kidnaps Rahul, the son of Kulkarni's brother Sampath. He asks Guruvayya to hold Rahul hostage at a club until he is back with Sabapathy. Jai demands a meeting with Sabapathy in exchange for Rahul's freedom. Sabapathy tells him he switched sides not to retaliate but to protect himself. Munna, on the other hand, visits the club to inquire about Jahnavi, a club dancer he is attracted to. Learning from Guruvayya that she loves Jai, Munna is enraged and kills Rahul after he teases him. He also kills Kulkarni's henchman, who came to pick up Rahul. When Sampath and Kulkarni receive no response, Jai tries to escape, and a chase ensues. He manages to flee but is shocked to learn of Rahul's death. Munna finds Jahnavi at Jai's house and beats her to death. Jai arrives and gets into a fight with Munna. Guruvayya sees Jai kill Munna and reports him to Bhagavan. Jai decides to tell Bhagavan the reason behind killing Munna, and is on his way attacked by the henchmen as per Bhagavan's orders. Following a gunfight, Jai escapes while Bhagavan vows to seek revenge for Munna's death.

Jai escapes to Palasa, where he stays at his love interest Sandhya's house. On the other hand, the rivalry between Bhagavan and Kulkarni intensifies after Jai's exit as Bhagavan loses power and his trusted men join hands with Kulkarni. Bhagavan learns about Jai's nursery he used to run with the help of his friend Chotu, and gets it destroyed by his men upon learning about Chotu. Back to Palasa, when some goons invade their home at night, Ashok and Jai together fight them off, following which Sandhya reveals about a criminal named Sambasiva who was after her life since she got him sent to prison. Jai kills Sambasiva and gives the credit to a police officer named Paparayudu. Bhagavan learns about Chotu's location through his girlfriend, kills her, and captures Chotu. He finds out about Jai and Sandhya through a photo from Chotu's phone. When Chotu refuses to tell anything about Jai, Bhagavan gets him asphyxiated. Jai reveals to Sandhya that he was the one who killed Sambasiva for her, further revealing about his past and the reason for loyalty towards Bhagavan. When a young Jai's mother and sister were raped and killed, Bhagavan had helped him seek revenge and, in exchange, received his loyalty.

Jai is soon attacked by Sampath and his henchmen, but Ashok comes to his rescue. Following a gunfight and a brawl, Jai kills Sampath and learns Sandhya has been kidnapped. Jai goes back to Kolkata and attacks Kulkarni's house, where he kills his henchmen and holds Kulkarni on gunpoint. Kulkarni tells him he hasn't kidnapped Sandhya, and it was Guruvayya who told them about Jai's location. Jai proceeds to first kill Kulkarni and then Guruvayya, following which he arrives at Bhagavan's house and finds Sandhya held captive. Jai reveals why he killed Munna and tries to convince Bhagavan into sparing Sandhya. However, Bhagavan ends up shooting her, and Jai ends up shooting Bhagavan. Sandhya survives, but Bhagavan dies.

Cast[]

Production[]

Development[]

In November 2010, sources reported that director Vishnuvardhan would direct a film featuring Pawan Kalyan in the lead role, to be produced by Neelima Nagesh and Shobu Yarlagadda.[7] Neelima, in an interview, stated that she was a big fan of Pawan Kalyan.[8] Vishnnuvardhan, following the release of his 2009 film Sarvam, which fared poorly at the box office, had been working on two scripts – the other one being the prequel to the 2007 version of Billa – but was unable to start either project due to unavailable dates of Pawan Kalyan and Ajith Kumar.[9] He had planned to shoot both projects simultaneously from March 2011 onwards, but since that was not possible, he was forced to drop one of the projects, with Vishnuvardhan eventually deciding to direct this film.[9] Abburi Ravi was roped in to write the dialogues, while the screenplay was provided by Rahul Koda.[10]

Casting[]

Former Miss India Sarah-Jane Dias was signed for one of the two female lead characters, making her Telugu film debut.[11] Jiah Khan and Shazahn Padamsee, who starred in Orange opposite Ram Charan Tej, were considered for the other female role.[12] However, eventually Mumbai-based model Anjali Lavania, best known for her appearances in the Kingfisher calendar and several other advertisements, was finalised for the second character. Director-actor Sesh Adivi was roped in for an antagonist role.[13] Yuvan Shankar Raja and A. Sreekar Prasad, Vishnuvardhan's norm associates, were signed to score the music and handle the editing department, respectively, while P. S. Vinod was selected as the cinematographer in place of Nirav Shah who had worked on Vishnuvardhan's previous projects.[2] Action sequences were choreographed by Sham Kaushal, a noted stunt co-ordinator in Bollywood films, while Sunil Babu was chosen as the art director.[14] Vishnuvardhan's wife, Anu Vardhan, worked as the costume designer.

Filming[]

Principal photography was expected to start from 15 April 2011, with the scenes during the first schedule being shot in Kolkata, West Bengal. Filming eventually began on 6 May in Kolkata,[15] where the major part of the film was shot.[16] The Kolkata schedule was completed by late June 2011,[17][18] and the following month, filming was held in Pollachi, Tamil Nadu,[19] which was followed by schedules in Karaikudi, Tamil Nadu and across Kerala.[18][20] In Kerala, the crew shot for five days at the Vagamon hill station, located 1,100 metres above sea level.[21] A song sequence featuring Pawan Kalyan and Sarah Jane was shot at the Ramoji Film City in Hyderabad in September under the choreography of Firoz Khan.[22] From 10 October, the last song picturised on Anjali Lavania was canned in a Hyderabad studio. Anjali performed belly dance in the song, which was choreographed by Geeta Kapoor, best known for her work in the song Sheila Ki Jawani from the Hindi film Tees Maar Khan.[23]

The film was launched under the working title The Shadow, with the team indicating that the title may be changed. The film, began its principal photography in early May 2011, which was completed by October 2011, with filming being held primarily at Kolkata, West Bengal, Pollachi and Karaikudi in Tamil Nadu and Vagamon in Kerala apart from Palasa. In the following months, several titles including Kaali, Thilak, Power and Patel, were considered.[24][25] The official title was revealed as Panjaa by the producers during Dussera.[14]

Soundtrack[]

Panjaa
Soundtrack album by
Released18 November 2011 (2011-11-18)
Recorded2011
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length23:54
LanguageTelugu
LabelAditya Music
ProducerYuvan Shankar Raja
Yuvan Shankar Raja chronology
Mankatha
(2011)
Panjaa
(2011)
Kazhugu
(2011)

For the film's score and soundtrack, Vishnuvardhan's friend and usual associate, Yuvan Shankar Raja, was signed up. Panjaa's soundtrack features six tracks. Chandrabose and Ramajogayya Sastry penned the lyrics for every three songs. The composing began in late January 2011. The soundtrack album was originally planned to be launched on 6 November 2011 but was postponed due to the sudden demise of Yuvan Shankar Raja's mother.[26] The audio launch was held on 18 November 2011 in a grand manner at the Gachibowli Indoor Stadium in Hyderabad. Along with the cast and crew, noted film personalities including directors K. Raghavendra Rao and S. S. Rajamouli, composer M. M. Keeravani and actor Rana Daggubati attended the function,[27] which was anchored by comedian Ali and Suma Kanakala.[28] The event was broadcast live on MAA TV.[29]

Upon release, the songs generally garnered positive response.[30] The songs became chartbusters, with the title track Panjaa becoming the most played song in all Hyderabad radio channels,[31] as well as the song of the year.[32] 123Telugu gave a positive response stating "Pawan Kalyan has tried out a new look for this movie and the buzz in the industry is that ‘Panjaa’ is going to be very different from his earlier flicks. The audio album reflects this. Yuvan’s music is very different and modern. There are some pretty good numbers in this album. The title track ‘Panjaa’ absolutely rocks. ‘Ela Ela’ and ‘Paparayudu’ will be quite popular too. A better item number would have been a major asset. Do not expect a regular Pawan Kalyan style audio album this time. Listen to this album with an open mind and you will appreciate the music."[30] In 2013, the film's music director Yuvan Shankar Raja reused the background score in the Tamil-language film Ameerin Aadhi-Bhagavan.

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Panjaa"Ramajogayya SastryYuvan Shankar Raja3:34
2."Ela Ela"ChandraboseHaricharan, Shweta Pandit5:06
3."Veyra Chey Veyra"Ramajogayya SastrySaloni Aswani4:29
4."Kshanam Kshanam"ChandraboseShweta Pandit1:45
5."Anukoneledhugaa Kalakaanekaadhugaa"ChandraboseBelly Raj, Priya Himesh4:25
6."Paparayudu"Ramajogayya SastryHemachandra, Sathyan, Pawan Kalyan, Brahmanandam5:15
Total length:23:54

Marketing and release[]

Prior to its release, the film's official merchandise was made available on the official site, including a game application.[33][34][35] 15% of the merchandise sales were donated to major NGOs.[36] An anti-piracy initiative was also launched through the site itself.[37] The film's official merchandise was also released across Andhra Pradesh.[38] A teaser trailer was released a day prior to Diwali, which received a high response. According to Sify, it was seen more than 200,000 times on the film's official YouTube channel within 24 hours, setting a new record.[39]

In order to prevent any major cuts, the makers accepted the A (adults only) rating from the Central Board of Film Certification for their release in India, while they actually wanted the U/A (parental guidance) rating.[40][41] The film was released on 9 December 2011 with six cuts.[42] Following multiple fan requests, the makers added the title track in the beginning as well, while it initially played only during the end.[43]

In 2012, the film was released on DVD and Blu-ray formats by Bhavani DVD.[44][45] The same year, a Tamil-dubbed version titled Kuri (transl.Mark) was also scheduled to release, but the plan was later on dropped.[46][47] In 2015, a Hindi-dubbed version titled Jaandaar (transl.Brave) was released.[48]

Reception[]

Critical reception[]

Panjaa received largely mixed reviews from critics. Fullhyd gave it 3.5 stars out of 5, praising the film's technical aspects and performances while criticizing the dubbing for both the heroines.[49] 123Telugu gave it 3 stars out of 5, praising the performances and action sequences while also criticizing the second half and lack of lengthy song sequences.[3] Idlebrain.com also gave it 3 stars out of 5, similarly praising the action sequences and performances apart from technical aspects, but criticized the lack of emotions.[4] CNN-News18 praised the film's art work and styling, but criticized the narration pace.[50]

On the other hand, Rediff gave 2 stars, criticizing the script and pointing out that it reminded of Kalyan's earlier film Balu ABCDEFG but praised Sesh's performance[51] Greatandhra also gave it 2 stars, criticizing the lack of a "major conflict point".[52] Oneindia.in criticized the film but praised Kalyan's performance, cinematography and the music.[53]

References[]

  1. ^ "Panjaa - A Sleek Action Entertainer". Indiaglitz.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Pawan-Vishnu flick in March. Sify.com (1 February 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Review 2: Panjaa - stylish, but misses the mark". 123Telugu.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "Panjaa film review". Idlebrain.com. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
  5. ^ "PANJAA Power in US Premieres". AndhraBoxOffice.com.
  6. ^ "Boxoffice Status: Panjaa 1st Week". AndhraBoxOffice.com.
  7. ^ Vishnu Vardhan to direct Pawan Kalyan – idlebrain film news. Idlebrain.com (19 November 2010). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  8. ^ Interview : Pawan Kalyan is my inspiration – Neelima Thirumalasetty – 123telugu film news. 123telugu.com (8 December 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Vishnu cancels billa date. The Times of India.(18 February 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  10. ^ Panjaa shoot complete except for a song – Telugu cinema. Idlebrain.com (15 October 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  11. ^ Pawan may romance with Sarah Jane Dias – Telugu Movie News. IndiaGlitz. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  12. ^ Shazahn to pair up with Power Star – Telugu Movie News. IndiaGlitz. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  13. ^ Sesh bags a role in Pawan Kalyan's film?. The Times of India, (11 April 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b Pawan Kalyan's film titled Panjaa. Ragalahari.com (5 October 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  15. ^ Pawan's next from May 6. Sify.com (3 May 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  16. ^ Pawan`s Shadow for Dussera?. Sify.com (31 May 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  17. ^ Pawan Kalyan's film wraps up Kolkata shooting schedule. Ragalahari.com (26 June 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  18. ^ Jump up to: a b Title of Pawan`s next on Sep 2. Sify.com (19 July 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  19. ^ Pawan's Kaali in Pollachi. Sify.com (19 July 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  20. ^ Pawan's movie in winter. Sify.com (18 August 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  21. ^ The travails of Panjaa's Vagamon schedule – Telugu Movie News. IndiaGlitz. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  22. ^ Pawan film title to be announced soon. Sify.com (19 September 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  23. ^ Geeta Kapoor for Pawan`s Panjaa. Sify.com (18 October 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  24. ^ First look: Pawan Kalyan's Panja – Rediff.com Movies. Rediff.com (10 October 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  25. ^ Not Shadow/Kaali, but Panjaa. Sify.com (6 October 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  26. ^ Music launch of Panjaa postponed. Sify.com (5 November 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  27. ^ SS Rajamouli Launches | Actor Pawan Kalyan | Telugu Movie Panjaa | Audio Launch. Entertainment.oneindia.in (19 November 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  28. ^ Panjaa music launch function – Telugu cinema – Pawan Kalyan. Idlebrain.com (18 November 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  29. ^ Panja Audio live on MAA TV and Mahaa news. Supergoodmovies.com (16 November 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  30. ^ Jump up to: a b Audio Review : Panjaa – New age music | Telugu Cinema. 123telugu.com (18 November 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  31. ^ Panjaa cleared with an `A`. Sify.com (8 December 2011). Retrieved on 5 January 2014.
  32. ^ "Tollywood 2011: Mahesh Babu Rules!". The New Indian Express.
  33. ^ "Merchandise". Panjaa.com. Archived from the original on 1 November 2011.
  34. ^ "Game app". Panjaa.com. Archived from the original on 29 December 2011.
  35. ^ "Panjaa game to attract children". Indiaglitz.
  36. ^ "Panjaa.com". Archived from the original on 2 November 2011.
  37. ^ "Report Piracy". Panjaa.com. Archived from the original on 21 October 2011.
  38. ^ "Panjaa's merchandise up for sale". 123Telugu.
  39. ^ Panjaa teaser sets records. Sify.com (28 October 2011). Retrieved 6 December 2011.
  40. ^ "Panjaa Gets A rating". 123Telugu.com.
  41. ^ "Will Panjaa's "A" rating have an impact at the box office?". 123Telugu.com.
  42. ^ "Pawan Kalyan's Panjaa bags 'A' certificate". Filmibeat.
  43. ^ "Panjaa: Title song added". Yahoo!.
  44. ^ "Description - Panjaa Telugu DVD". NJMTV.com.
  45. ^ "Description - Panjaa Telugu Blu Ray". NJMTV.com.
  46. ^ "Pawan Kalyan's 'Panjaa' as 'Kuri' in Tamil". Times of India.
  47. ^ "Pawan Kalyan's Panjaa to be dubbed in Tamil". 123Telugu.com.
  48. ^ "Watch Jaandaar 2015 Full HD Movie Online". Voot.
  49. ^ "Panja Review: Panjaa (Telugu) Movie Review". Fullhyd.
  50. ^ "Telugu Review: 'Panjaa' is a must watch". CNN-News18.
  51. ^ Radhika Rajamani. "Review: Pawan Kalyan's Panjaa lacks power". Rediff. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
  52. ^ "'Panjaa' Review: Powerless 'Panjaa'". greatandhra. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
  53. ^ "Panjaa – Movie Review". Oneindia.in. Retrieved 9 December 2011.

External links[]

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