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Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa

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Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya
Official poster
Directed byGautham Vasudev Menon
Written byGautham Menon
Produced byMadhan
VTV Ganesh
S. Elred Kumar
Jayaraman
StarringSilambarasan Rajendar
Trisha Krishnan
CinematographyManoj Paramahamsa.
Edited byAnthony Gonsalves
Music byA. R. Rahman
Production
companies
Escape Artists Motion Pictures
R. S. Infotainment
Distributed byRed Giant Movies
Two95 Entertainment
Release date
  • 26 February 2010 (2010-02-26)
Running time
157 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
Budget14 crore (US$1.7 million)[1]
Box office53 crore (US$6.4 million)[2]

Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa (English: Will you Cross the Skies and Come?) is a 2010 Tamil romantic drama film directed and written by Gautham Menon, featuring Silambarasan Rajendar and Trisha Krishnan in the lead roles. The film, distributed by Udhayanidhi Stalin, features a successful soundtrack composed by A. R. Rahman, cinematography by Manoj Paramahamsa and editing by Anthony Gonsalves. The story was simultaneously shot and released by Gautham in Telugu as Ye Maaya Chesave, starring Naga Chaitanya and Samantha Ruth Prabhu, however, with a different cast and climax.[3]

Launched by a wave of publicity posters with no details about the cast and crew, Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa began its initial run in February 2009.[4] Shooting continued through 2009, with the film garnering significant media interest, through schedules in Malta and the United States.[5] Before release, it became the first Tamil project to have a music soundtrack premiere outside of India, with a successful launch at the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) in London.[6]

Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa explores the complicated relationship between a Hindu Tamil assistant director, Karthik, and a Syrian Christian Malayali girl, Jessie Thekekuttu. Karthik falls in love with Jessie only to be met by her indifference and reluctance as they belong to different religions and her strict conservative family will never consent. Undeterred Karthik pursues her, going as far as her native town. She also falls in love with him. However, they have to face many problems and emotional conflicts. The film released on 26 February 2010, along with the Telugu version to advance bookings worldwide. Upon release, it achieved positive reviews, with several critics giving "modern classic" status, whilst also becoming a commercially successful venture.[7][8] It was later remade in Hindi as Ekk Deewana Tha starring Prateik Babbar and Amy Jackson, which was not as successful.[9]

Plot

Karthik (Silambarasan) is a student of mechanical engineering in Chennai who aspires to become a filmmaker. His friend introduces him to cinematographer Ganesh (Ganesh Janardhanan). With Ganesh's help Karthik becomes an assistant to director K. S. Ravikumar. Karthik's family, who are Hindu Vellalars, rent Jessie's (Trisha Krishnan) house. Jessie is from a conservative Nasrani Christian family from Alappuzha, Kerala, that lives upstairs. Karthik falls in love with Jessie the moment he meets her. Karthik tries to interact with Jessie, who is afraid of speaking to men around her strict father, and ends up angering her. Unable to hide his feelings any longer, Karthik confesses his love for her; she does not respond. A few days later, Karthik learns from his sister that Jessie has gone to Kerala to visit her grandmother. He and Ganesh end up in Kerala to look for her. After several days, he finds her and apologises. She introduces him to her family in Kerala as her "classmate". Jessie denies she has any feelings for him but agrees to be his friend. On the train journey back home, however, the two get close and share a kiss. Karthik is convinced Jessie loves him; the two meet several times and Jessie begins to admit that she also likes Karthik, but wants to refrain from any problems because she knows her father wouldn't give her hand in marriage to a Hindu. Consequently, due to various misunderstandings between Jessie's brother and Karthik, her parents learn of their supposed affair. They fix a match and schedule her wedding. The day arrives and midway through the ceremony, Jessie refuses to marry the groom, displeasing everyone in her family. Karthik, who had, without anyone's knowledge, come to Kerala to witness the wedding is ecstatic and secretly visits Jessie at her home. It is then that Jessie admits she has indeed fallen in love with him. Karthik and Jessie continue to love each other without the knowledge of their parents.

At this point of time, Karthik goes to Goa on a 45-day shoot, where he gets rather busy. Meanwhile, the topic of Jessie's marriage comes up again at her home when the guy whom she refused to marry earlier pays them a visit. Panicking, Jessie calls Karthik and tells him that she wants to elope with him. Karthik, since he is travelling through less than ideal places, tells Jessie to stay in Chennai for now, and that soon he would be back and they can discuss. Jessie stops taking Karthik's calls and so he goes back one night to check on Jessie. He comes to know that Jessie has decided to break up, as the relationship is not peaceful due to her parents' disapproval. She says she has agreed to get married to a boy of their choice. When Karthik pleads her not to do it, she tells him that a time had come when she was willing to elope, but the moment was gone. She doesn't want Karthik to wait for her too long, as he has his dreams to fulfill. Karthik later comes to know that she is married and settled abroad.

Two years later, Karthik meets Nandhini (Samantha Ruth Prabhu). She falls in love with him, but is rejected by Karthik by saying that he hasn't yet gotten over Jessie. He then comes up with a script for his first film, which happens to be his very own love story. He calls upon Naga Chaitanya Akkineni as the film's protagonist, Nandhini as the female lead and Ganesh as the film's cinematographer, and the film is eventually titled Jessie. While shooting for the film in New York, he sees Jessie and she comes to speak with him. She admits that she is not married and is still in love with him, and he too says she is still in his heart. Karthik proposes yet again and they get married the same day. This is actually revealed to be the end scene in Karthik's movie – which Karthik and Jessie in real life are watching together in the theatre. After it gets over, it is revealed to the audience that Jessie had in fact seen Karthik in New York but had not come forward to meet him. She is married now and hence asks Karthik to fall in love again and move on. She tells Karthik that they cannot lead a life which is full of obstacles and they part, once and for all to lead different lives and different destinies.

Cast

  • Silambarasan Rajendar as Karthik Sivakumar, a Hindu Vellalar. He aspires to become a film director, and subsequently becomes assistant director to K. S. Ravikumar. Parallelly, he falls for his neighbour Jessie, a Syrian Christian. She accepts him, but her parents do not because of their personal differences. Despite all attempts to connect with Jessie, he ends up getting rejected by her.
  • Trisha Krishnan as Jessie Thekekuttu, a Syrian Christian Malayali girl from Aalappuzha, Kerala. She comes from a strict family, to whom watching films, attending clubs, etc. are considered as sins. She falls for her assistant director neighbour Karthik and asks her parents to unite her with him, but they disapprove of him because of his profession and because he is a different religion from them. Forced to obey her parents, Jessie finally rejects Karthik, but still keeps him in her heart and eventually gets estranged from her family.
  • Ganesh Janardhanan as Ganesh, a cinematographer and Karthik's right hand. He assists Karthik in his repeated attempts to connect with Jessie.
  • K. S. Ravikumar as himself. Karthik works for him as an assistant director.
  • Naga Chaitanya as himself. An actor hired by Karthik to act as the male lead in Jessie, a film directed by Karthik himself.
  • Samantha Ruth Prabhu as Nandhini. After Karthik's split with Jessie, she falls for him. He does not return her love, but let's her act in his directorial venture Jessie, as the titular character.
  • Babu Antony as Joseph Thekekuttu. He is Jessie's father, and disapproves of her relationship with Karthik, as they are from different backgrounds.
  • Kitty as Sivakumar
  • Sathiya as Jerry Thekekuttu
  • Uma Padmanabhan as Mrs. Sivakumar
  • Lakshmi Ramakrishnan as Teresa Thekekuttu
  • Trisha Alex as Karthik's sister
  • Janani Iyer as an assistant director

Production

Development

In late January 2009, speculation arose surrounding a potential collaboration between Silambarasan Rajendar, Gautham Menon and A. R. Rahman, but none confirmed the news.[10] In a surprise move, in early February 2009 a poster appeared in Indian papers featuring Silambarasan, but with no names of crew members. This was a significant move as this was Gautham's first project after his split with Harris Jayaraj. Furthermore, the early poster suggested that the film was titled Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa, in homage to the song "Vennilavae Vennilavae" from the 1997 film, Minsaara Kanavu.[11] Subsequently, each day leading up to Valentine's Day saw the launch of a new poster, still without details of the crew except the inclusion of Trisha Krishnan as the lead actress; posters released after the one tributing Minsara Kanavu were those of stills from Dil Se.., Alaipayuthey, Kaakha Kaakha and Geethanjali.[12] It eventually surfaced as a Gautham Menon film, with music by Rahman and cinematography by Manoj Paramahamsa. Gautham stated that the movie would be his return to the love genre after having directed action thriller post his debut venture, Minnale.[13] Nagarjuna Akkineni approached Gautham Menon to do a Telugu version simultaneously. He agreed and the scenes were shot at the same time. Menon cited that he was "a week away from starting the film with a newcomer" before his producer insisted they looked at Silambarasan, with Menon revealing that he was unimpressed with the actor's previous work.[14][unreliable source?]

Filming

The shooting started on 14 February 2009 and was held in several locations as New York City, Malta, Kerala, Chennai, Trichy, Thanjavur and Rome. The songs were shot in Malta at sets and choreographed by Flexy Stu. Before release, the film was passed with a U/A (Parental Guidance) rating by the Indian Censor Board due to intimate scenes between Silambarasan and Trisha.[15]

Release

Critical response

The film opened to positive reviews from critics. Oneindia.in said "The slow phase of the second half and frequent use of bad words (Chennai Tamil) are major minuses in Goutham's narration. But these are all not preventing one to enjoy the content of true and painful love of the film!"[16]

Sify said that it was "Very good" further citing "The film is a must watch for those who cares for cinema of sense and substance. It stresses the fact that Tamil cinema has to break the mould if it aims to grab eyeballs. Gautham Menon has crafted a movie that will stay in our hearts for a long, long time."[17] Indiaglitz stated "If and only if, you have all the time in the world, and you like the slow romantic genre, you'll enjoy this one."[18]

Pavithra Srinivasan of Rediff.com called the film a "Must watch" further citing "The best part about VTV is that it revolves around people, rather than events. It's like putting a camera into the intimate, everyday life of two people and following them on their adventures. The characters go through a whirlwind of emotions, laugh and cry, and take you along with them." However, the reviewer points out certain drawbacks in the film citing "On the minus side, VTV suffers from the same defect as Vaaranam Aayiram: the second half lags in pace. The dialogues and confrontations are repetitive. There's a would-be love-track that seems unnecessary before the story takes off again."[19]

Malathi Rangarajan from The Hindu said "Twenty two-year old Karthik's true-to-life overtures, reactions and recklessness are just as you would expect from a director of Menon's calibre. It is his authentic depiction of Jessie's confusion that's all the more amazing – Menon's complete understanding of a woman's psyche bowls you over! So do the young lovers!"[20] Aravindan D. I. of nowrunning.com gave the film three stars out of five and said "Gautam Vasudev Menon's "Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya" is a clean romantic story without any deviation or sub-plots."[21]

Chennai Online said, Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa (VTV) is an excellent effort on the part of Gautam Vasudev Menon in narrating a clean romantic story without any deviation from the plot" and further cited "As is Menon’s forte, the dialogues and the execution of scenes are top-notch. The joys of falling of love and the pangs of separation have been portrayed well. The way Simbu nurtures his love for Jesse and the positive but ambiguous reactions from Trisha to his overtures are very nice indeed."[22]

Box office

Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya took a grand opening, grossing around 67 lakh (US$80,000) in its first three days in Chennai.[23] The film grossed 5.75 crore (US$690,000) at the Chennai box office in the 12th weekend. It totally grossed 53 crore (US$6.4 million) and was officially declared a commercial hit.[2]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by A.R. Rahman. Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa marked the beginning of a famed collabration between A.R. Rahman and Gautham Menon.[24]

The world premiere was held at BAFTA in London on 19 December 2009 and later it was relaunched in Chennai on 12 January 2010. The album consists of seven tracks released with positive responses and was appreciated.[25] The audio received overwhelming pre-release response and was marked as No. 1 in Asia, in advance bookings.[26] The album was ranked among the best musicals of 2011.[27]

Accolades

Edison Awards[28]
Vikatan Awards[29]
BIG Tamil Entertainment Awards[31]
  • Most Entertaining Actor – Silambarasan Rajendar
  • Most Entertaining Male Singer – Vijay Prakash
Vijay Music Awards
Vijay Awards[32]
Filmfare Awards

Sequel

In 2011, Gautham Menon and Silambarasan confirmed the possibility of a sequel Vinnaithaandi Varuven to be made shortly after completion of a few projects, with an additional star cast of Amy Jackson and Santhanam.[33][34][35]

References

  1. ^ "Half-yearly BO report: Suriya rules Tamil". Rediff. 23 June 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  2. ^ a b Box Office 2010, retrieved 18 August 2011
  3. ^ Daithota, Madhu (14 September 2009). "'I don't treat Naga Chaitanya like a star kid'". Times of India. Retrieved 14 September 2009.
  4. ^ "Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya – The Silambarasan mystery unveiled". Behindwoods.com. 2009. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
  5. ^ Moviebuzz (2009). "Simbu and Trisha go to Malta". Sify. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  6. ^ "Silambarasan, Trisha, Gautam & Rahman in London!". Behindwoods.com. 2009. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  7. ^ Srinivasan, Pavithra (2010). "Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa is a must watch". Rediff. Retrieved 26 February 2010.
  8. ^ "Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya review". Sify. Retrieved 26 February 2010.
  9. ^ Sunayana Suresh (28 February 2012). "Maybe I got the casting wrong: Gautham Menon". The Times of India. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  10. ^ "Will Gautham, Simbu and Rahman work together?". Indiaglitz. 2009. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
  11. ^ Moviebuzz (2009). "Vinnaithandi Varuvaaya- Gautham-Simbu film?". Sify. Retrieved 9 February 2009.
  12. ^ Moviebuzz (2009). "Enter contest, win a chance to act in a Kollywood movie". Sify. Retrieved 11 February 2009.
  13. ^ Aishwarya, S (2009). "Gautam Menon now eyes the skies lovely with love". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Retrieved 26 February 2009.
  14. ^ http://baradwajrangan.wordpress.com/2011/02/12/between-reviews-shooting-from-the-lip/
  15. ^ "Sweet smooches gets Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya U/A". Chennaionline.com. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  16. ^ Vinnaithandi Varuvaya – Review, oneindia.in, 27 February 2010, retrieved 18 August 2011
  17. ^ Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya review, Sify, retrieved 18 August 2011
  18. ^ innaithandi Varuvaya Movie Review, IndiaGlitz, 26 February 2010, retrieved 18 August 2011
  19. ^ Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa is a must watch, Rediff.com, 26 February 2010, retrieved 18 August 2011
  20. ^ "Taste of candyfloss – Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya", The Hindu, retrieved 18 August 2011
  21. ^ Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa Review, nowrunning.com, 27 February 2010, retrieved 18 August 2011
  22. ^ Movie Review: Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya, chennaionline.com, 27 February 2010, retrieved 18 August 2011
  23. ^ CBO – Feb 26 to 28, Sify, 2 March 2010, retrieved 18 August 2011
  24. ^ "2 crore for NEP audio rights!". The Times of India. 10 May 2012. Retrieved 3 October 2012. {{cite news}}: |first= missing |last= (help)
  25. ^ "Top Tamil films of 2010". Rediff. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  26. ^ "Vinnai Thandi Varuvaaya audio creates history!". Sify.
  27. ^ REWIND: The Music of 2010, IndiaGlitz, 7 January 2011, retrieved 18 August 2011
  28. ^ "Simbu and Trisha win Edison awards 2011, for Vinnai Thaandi Varuvaaya". 15 February 2011. Retrieved 17 February 2011.
  29. ^ "Exclusive: Results of Ananda Vikatan Awards 2010". Kollywoodz.
  30. ^ "Exclusive: Results of Ananda Vikatan Awards 2010". Kollywoodz.com. 22 January 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
  31. ^ A 'big' night for Tamil entertainment industry, Behindwoods.com, retrieved 18 August 2011
  32. ^ Winners List Of Vijay Awards 2011, tamilkey.com, 26 June 2011, retrieved 18 August 2011
  33. ^ "A sequel to VTV – STR and Gautham team up again!". Behindwoods.com.
  34. ^ Simbu in Vinnaithandi Varuvaya 2, supergoodmovies.com
  35. ^ "I won't have an arranged marriage: Simbu". Times of India. 6 July 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2011.