Kalavani | |
---|---|
Directed by | A. Sarkunam |
Written by | A. Sarkunam |
Produced by | Nazir |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Om Prakash |
Edited by | Raja Mohammad |
Music by | S. S. Kumaran |
Production company | Sherali Films |
Distributed by | Ayngaran International |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Budget | ₹1.5 crore (equivalent to ₹3.4 crore or US$400,000 in 2023)[1] |
Box office | ₹5 crore (equivalent to ₹11 crore or US$1.3 million in 2023)[2] |
Kalavani (transl. Thief) is a 2010 Indian Tamil-language romantic comedy film written and directed by newcomer A. Sarkunam. It stars Vimal and debutante Oviya, with Saranya Ponvannan, Ilavarasu, Ganja Karuppu, and Soori in supporting roles. The music was composed by S. S. Kumaran with cinematography by Om Prakash and editing by Raja Mohammad. The film was made on a shoe-string budget, and released on 25 June 2010.[3][4] and became a sleeper hit of 2010. Later the movie was remade in Kannada as Kirataka with Oviya reprising her role.[2][5]
Two villages in Thanjavur are always at loggerheads with each other, and it spills even to a T20 cricket match between kids from both villages. Arivazhagan aka Arikki (Vimal) is a wayward son of Lakshmi (Saranya Ponvannan), who is in awe but at the same time fears him. Her husband Ramasamy (Ilavarasu) is away in Dubai, and a large part of the money he sends home is taken away by Arikki using extortionist methods, such as threatening to break the TV set at home. He is yet to pass his 12th standard. Arikki spends time in bars with friends, teases girls, asks them to profess their love for him, and gets into brawls after conning others. He meets Maheshwari (Oviya) and wants her to declare her love for him, which she finally confesses. He abducts her, and they eventually marry. Her brother Ilango (Thirumurugan) is a tough guy who has an axe to grind against Arikki and his gang, which leads to the twist in the climax. Ilango, fuming with rage, is out to slice Arikki into pieces. What transpires is answered in an interesting climax that is pleasantly humorous.
A. Sarkunam approached K. Bhagyaraj with his script, and asked for help in improving the script and for Bhagayraj's son Shanthanu to play the lead role. Sarkunam later moved away from Bhagayraj citing that his producer was uncomfortable with the potential salary that Shanthanu may have expected.[6]
The film score and soundtrack for Kalavani was composed by S. S. Kumaran. The album consists of seven tracks featuring lyrics penned by Na. Muthukumar. The song "Oru Murai" was well received and was retained in the Kannada remake.[citation needed]
Kalavani | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 2010 | |||
Recorded | 2010 | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Language | Tamil | |||
Producer | S. S. Kumaran | |||
S. S. Kumaran chronology | ||||
|
Song Title | Singers |
---|---|
"Oru Murai Iru Murai" | Harish Raghavendra, Srimathumitha |
"Pada Pada Padavena" | Yash Golcha |
"Peancha Mazhai" | A. Devendran |
"Sinthaiyiley" | Prasanna |
"Dubaikku" | Ranjith, Uma |
"Ooradangum Samathiley" | Senthilvelan |
"Edakku Madakku" | S.S.Kumaran |
Kalavani generally opened to positive reviews. Bhamadevi Ravi from The Times of India gave 4/5 and calling it "a complete entertainer."[7] Sify rated the movie 4 out of 5 and stated that "Kalavani is a knockout entertainer set in a rural milieu."[8] A critic from Top10Cinema wrote that "Kalavani is a blatant revision of Bharathiraja's yesteryear films based on villager's conflicts and guy-gal falling in love."[9] Gautaman Bhaskaran of Hindustan Times gave it 3/5 and wrote that "Kalavani is a canvas of delightful rural romance."[10]
Following the film's success, director Gautham Vasudev Menon's Photon Kathaas has acquired the film's rights to remake it other languages.[11] It was remade in Kannada as Kirataka with Oviya being retained as the female lead. It was also remade in Telugu as Umapathi in 2022.[12]
Seven years after the film's release, the Chennai branch of the Censor Board Of Film Certification (CBFC) was served a notice by the High Court after a minor pregnant girl told the court that she obtained inspiration from the film Kalavani. The girl's parents claimed that the censor board had acted negligently in giving the film a U certificate.[13]
A sequel, Kalavani 2, was announced in 2016.[14]
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