Kaadhal

Kaadhal
Directed by Balaji Sakthivel
Produced by S. Shankar
Written by Balaji Sakthivel
Starring Bharath
Sandhya
Sukumar
Music by Joshua Sridhar
Cinematography Vijay Milton
Edited by G. Sasikumar
Distributed by S Pictures
Release dates
  • 17 December 2004 (2004-12-17)
Country India
Language Tamil

Kadhal (English: Love) is a 2004 Tamil romantic drama film based on a true story, directed by Balaji Sakthivel, starring Bharath and Sandhya in her feature film debut. It was produced by S. Shankar and featured music composed by Joshua Sridhar. The film opened to critical acclaim[1] and was a high commercial success. Upon release, the film was dubbed into Telugu as Premisthe. It was remade in Kannada as Cheluvina Chittara in 2007, in Bengali as Chirodini Tumi Je Amar in 2008, in Marathi as 'Ved Laavi Jeeva' in 2010, in Nepali as Manjari in 2013 and in Punjabi as Ramta Jogi in 2015.[2]

Plot

Murugan (Bharath) is a diligent scooter mechanic in Madurai and life goes on smoothly for the young man until a rich student Aishwarya (Sandhya) sets an eye on him. The infatuation reaches a dangerous level when she coaxes Murugan to take her from the constraint of her family, who have other plans about her future. Initially Murugan hesitates to love her as she belongs to a rich family but later understands her true love and reciprocates. The couple knows that Aishwarya's family will not agree for the wedding and decide to run away to Chennai. Murugan's friend Stephen (Sukumar) helps them in their hour of crisis and the lovers unite in marriage. But Sandhya's family dotes on her and is not going to give up so easily. The family tracks down the couple and reaches Chennai to meet them. But the family members pretend as if they had agreed for the wedding and convince them to return to Madurai along with them. On the way back to Madurai, the family members take the couple to their farmland where Aishwarya's relatives have gathered. They all beat Murugan and Aishwarya's father wants her to remove the mangalyam tied by Murugan. Aishwarya fears that if she does not obey her father, then Murugan will be killed and also Aishwarya agrees to marry another man to save Murugan's life. Murugan is heavily beaten and let go from the place. After a few years, Aishwarya while travelling with her husband and her child, comes across Murugan where she finds him as a mentally retarded beggar roaming near a traffic signal. Aishwarya faints realizing it is Murugan and gets admitted to the nearby hospital. At night she runs from the hospital to the same signal in search of Murugan and she finds him sitting over there. Aishwarys cries to Murugan and feels bad that she was responsible for his pathetic situation. Aishwarya's husband also comes to the spot and understands his wife's situation. He admits Murugan in a mental health center and also takes care of him.

The movie ends with title cards mentioning that this is a true incident narrated by the girl's husband to the director during a train journey which prompted him to a make a movie.

Cast

Production

After the average response of his debut film Samurai (2002), Balaji was supposed to direct again Vikram in a new venture which however got shelved.[3] During the shoot of Anniyan (2005), Balaji narrated the plot of Kaadhal to his mentor Shankar who agreed to produce the film after hearing the script.

The film was initially turned down by actors Dhanush and Shanthanu Bhagyaraj, before Balaji Sakthivel consulted Shankar's advice for the lead role. After considering both Manikandan and Bharath, Shankar chose the latter to star in his production.[4] Saranya Nag was in Class IX, when cinematographer Vijay Milton referred her on to Balaji Sakthivel who had subsequently cast her in Kaadhal. She was initially considered to play the heroine in the film, but the role was later handed to Sandhya, after the director felt she looked too young. She thus made her debut in a supporting role in the film as Sandhya's friend.[5] Balaji initially wanted Ileana as a lead actress since she couldn't spare the dates he opted for a newcomer Sandhya.[6] Dhandapani from Madurai was selected to play Sandhya's father. He became popular with this film and adopted the film's title as prefix.[7]

Box office

Produced on a budget of $100,000, the film was a surprise blockbuster grossing almost $1 million at the box office.[8]

Soundtrack

The film has eight songs composed by Joshua Sridhar. Lyrics were penned by Na. Muthukumar.

No. TitleSinger(s) Length
1. "Poovum Pudikkudhu"  Krish, Pop Shalini, Tippu 3:29
2. "Ivanthan"  Sunitha Sarathy 2:09
3. "Thandattikarupaiyee"  Pop Shalini, Vidhya, Malar, Maalaiamma 5:45
4. "Thottu Thottu"  Haricharan, Harini Sudhakar 5:41
5. "Pura Koondu"  Suresh Peters, Harish Raghavendra, Tippu, Premji, Karunas 5:31
6. "Kiru Kiru"  Karthik, Pop Shalini 4:32
7. "Unakkena Iruppaen"  Haricharan 6:16
8. "Kaadhal"  Haricharan 4:03

Notes

  1. http://www.hindu.com/fr/2004/12/24/stories/2004122402850300.htm
  2. http://www.bharatstudent.com/ (2008-09-02). "'Chirodini Tumi Je Amaar' shines with audience - Bollywood News & Gossips". Bharatstudent.com. Retrieved 2012-07-14.
  3. http://www.nilacharal.com/enter/cinebit/c66.html
  4. http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/bharath-hopes-that-kadugu-will-give-his-career-a-muchneeded-fillip/article8952844.ece?secpage=true&secname=entertainment
  5. http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/article3266069.ece
  6. http://www.behindwoods.com/features/Interviews/interview-5/director/balaji-sakthivel.html
  7. http://www.ibtimes.co.in/popular-actor-kadhal-dhandapani-passes-away-604867
  8. "Entertainment : Year 2004 — a flashback". The Hindu. 2004-12-31. Retrieved 2012-07-14. C1 control character in |title= at position 27 (help)

References

External links


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