Milaga

Milaga
Directed by Ravi Mariya
Produced by Shyamsundar
Sujit Sarkar
Starring Natarajan Subramaniam
Poongodi
Ravi Mariya
Singampuli
Music by Sabesh Murali
Cinematography Balaji V. Ranga
Edited by V. Jaishankar
Production
company
Natarajan Arts
Distributed by S. Thanu
Release dates
  • 25 June 2010 (2010-06-25)
Country India
Language Tamil

Milaga (English: Chilli) is a 2010 Tamil action film directed by Ravi Mariya. The film stars himself in a negative role while Natrajan playing the lead role with Poongodi playing the pair. The film was released on 25 June 2010 to negative reviews.[1]

Plot

The film revolves around Alagar (Nataraj), who takes care of the family’s red chilli business. But he spends most of the time with his friends and leads a happy life till he comes across three brothers who control Madurai.

He earns the wrath of the evil brothers while trying to save a girl called Thenmozhi (Poongothai). How our one man army successfully defeats the baddies and joins hands with his ladylove.

Cast

Production

"Milaga" was Ravi Mariya's second directorial after Aasai Aasaiyai (2002). Directors Singam Puli, Jegannath, Nanda Periyasamy and G. M. Kumar don the grease paint for playing the major characters in the movie.[2]

The crew had imported a Mumbai item girl named Maushmi Udeshi to shake her legs for the song. Suddenly when the crew was unaware, a man jumped out from the crowd, hugged Maushmi and kissed her. Shocked by this, the girl had thrashed the man furiously and made him unconscious. Awed by the actress wildness and the condition of the man, the crew had carried him to the hospital.[3]

The shooting of this film commenced in Madurai and continued in Theni, Kambam, Kodaikanal and Thiruparakundram. The shooting took place for 60 days without a single day break. An enormous Karupanna Samy temple set was erected by art director Vasuki G P at the back of Thiruparakundram hills. A festival song sequence was shot in this set.[4]

Soundtrack

Critical reception

Indiaglitz wrote that director is "only partially successful in striking a perfect balance. Despite being racy, the film somehow fails to work big time, thanks to predictable scenes, especially in the second half".[5] Sify wrote "first half of the film moves at a rapid pace [sic] it is the predictable second half of the film which hampers the pace".[6] Rediff wrote that "movie doesn't quite capitalise on strengths".[7]

References


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