Jump to content

Gomathi Nayagam

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kailash29792 (talk | contribs) at 08:37, 20 July 2022 (clean up). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Gomathi Nayagam
Directed byPonvannan
Written byPonvannan
Produced byAroma Mani
Starring
CinematographyK. B. Ahmed
Edited byK. Pazhanivel
Music byM. Jayachandran
Production
company
Sunitha Productions
Release date
  • 24 December 2004 (2004-12-24)
Running time
135 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Gomathi Nayagam is a 2004 Indian Tamil language comedy film directed by Ponvannan. The film stars Ponvannan, Haripriya and Karthika, with Manivannan, Ilavarasu, Ponnambalam, Devan, Vishnu Prasad, Madhan Bob, Halwa Vasu and Kottachi in supporting roles. The film, produced by Aroma Mani, had musical score by M. Jayachandran and it was released on 24 December 2004.[1][2][3]

Plot

In a remote village, Kunjappan (Ponvannan) is a carefree man who has the dream of becoming a cinema hero and he renames himself as Gomathi Nayagam to avoid embarrassments. His innocent relative Sevanthi (Karthika) is in love with Gomathi Nayagam but Gomathi Nayagam is adamant about being single until he becomes a cinema hero. In the meantime, Parameshwari (Haripriya) arrives at the village with her family to become the new school teacher. Aravindan (Vishnu Prasad) who is in love with Parameshwari since the college days comes to the village to charm her and Gomathi Nayagam decides to help him.

Later, Gomathi Nayagam's parents want him to marry Parameshwari but Gomathi Nayagam refuses. Meanwhile, Parameshwari's mother has a heart attack and on her hospital bed, she gets a promise from Gomathi Nayagam that he will marry Parameshwari. Gomathi Nayagam then plans to have a fake marriage with Parameshwari but things get complicated and after a misunderstanding, Gomathi Nayagam marries Parameshwari for real. After the marriage, Gomathi Nayagam reveals that he doesn't love her and Parameshwari decides to change his mind. Thereafter, all the issues are solved and Gomathi Nayagam finally understands Parameshwari's true feelings. Gomathi Nayagam eventually decides to direct and produce his own film to become a cinema hero.

Cast

Production

Ponvannan, who played character roles and acted in TV serials, returned to direction with the film titled Gomathi Nayagam. He also played the lead role, handled the story, screenplay, and the dialogue in this film. Haripriya and Karthika were selected to play the heroines. Produced by Malayalam film producer Aroma Mani for Sunitha Productions, the film had in the supporting cast Manivannan, Ponnambalam, Ilavarasu, Devan, Vishnu Prasad, Saranya Ponvannan, Vanitha Krishnachandran and Sumithra. The music director of Malayalam film M. Jayachandran made his debut in Tamil cinema and Palani Bharathi had penned all the songs. The film had cinematography by K. B. Ahmed, editing by K. Pazhanivel, and art by Sreeni. The film was shot in places like Pollachi, Kerala, Pondicherry, Chennai and Sri Lanka. Speaking of the film, Ponvannan said, "It will be on the lines of comedies like Avvai Shanmughi and Thenali".[4][5]

Soundtrack

Gomathi Nayagam
Soundtrack album by
Released2004
Recorded2004
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length19:31
ProducerM. Jayachandran

The film score and the soundtrack were composed by M. Jayachandran. The soundtrack features 5 tracks.

All lyrics are written by Palani Bharathi

Tracklist
No.TitleLength
1."Enga Cinema"3:28
2."Yaaru Yaaru Enga"3:58
3."Roja Pole"3:55
4."Valayosai"4:23
5."Chithiratha"3:47
Total length:19:31

References

  1. ^ "Gomathi Nayagam". bharatmovies.com. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  2. ^ "Gomathi Nayagam (Celluloid)". movies.syzygy.in. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  3. ^ "List of Tamil Films Released In 2004". Lakshman Sruthi. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  4. ^ "Tamil Cinema Preview – Ponvannan, Haripriya". cinesouth.com. Archived from the original on 21 December 2004. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  5. ^ Malini Mannath. "'Gomati Nayakam'". chennaionline.com. Archived from the original on 4 February 2007. Retrieved 6 November 2019.