Pandhayam | |
---|---|
Directed by | S. A. Chandrasekhar |
Written by | S. A. Chandrasekhar |
Produced by | Shoba Chandrasekhar |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Srinivas Devamsam |
Edited by | J. N. Harsha |
Music by | Vijay Antony |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Nemichand Jhabak |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Pandhayam (transl. Bet) is a 2008 Indian Tamil-language action thriller film directed by S. A. Chandrasekhar, starring Nithin Sathya and Sindhu Tolani while Prakash Raj and Radhika play supporting roles. Vijay did a guest role as himself. The music was composed by Vijay Antony with cinematography by Srinivas Devamsam and editing by J. N. Harsha. The film released on 19 September 2008.[1]
Masanam (Prakash Raj), a local thug and criminal who kills people, slowly rises up the ranks to be a minister. Shakthivel (Nithin Sathya) is a die-hard fan of an actor Vijay and studies in college. He falls in love with Masanam's sister Thulasi (Sindhu Tolani) and challenges him (he has a reason for that), and a cat-and-mouse game ensues. What follows is a series of incidents between the two that leads to a melodramatic climax.
Special appearances :
The film was originally planned with Raghava Lawrence and Mallika Kapoor who were later replaced by Nithin Sathya and Sindhu Tolani.[2]
The soundtrack was composed by Vijay Antony.[3] It features remixes of the songs "Surangani" and "Chinna Maamiye".[4]
Song | Singers | Lyrics |
---|---|---|
"Ammane" | Bellie Raj, Nidhesh Gopalan, Vinaitha | G. A. Robert |
"Chinna Maamiye" | Christopher, MK Balaji, Shoba Chandrasekhar, Vinaya | Ceylon Manohar, Eknaath |
"Kadhal Theeviravathi" | Vinaya, Jaidev | Priyan |
"Lusimbara" | Ramya NSK, Vijay Antony, Christopher | Annamalai |
"Surangani" | MK Balaji, Maya, Megha | Ceylon Manohar |
Behindwoods wrote, "There is no singular theme or accent in Pandhayam and the film abounds in illogical narrations."[5] Rediff wrote "Watch Pandhayam if you've challenged your friends about sitting through a ridiculous movie. Even then, you might end up losing."[6] IANS wrote, "The movie looks like one that suffered a double Rip Van Winkle slumber since the 70s sans the vintage quality of that era".[7] The Hindu wrote "Looks like the experienced director is losing grip! Helming a film whose theme toes the beaten track of revenge, writer-director S.A. Chandrasekaran makes a hotchpotch of it. Every creator has a saturation point. SAC is no exception as this V.V. Creations’ product shows".[8]