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Suyamvaram

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Suyamvaram
File:Suyamvaram.png
Directed by14 directors
Screenplay bySiraj
Story byGiridharilal Nagpal
Produced byGiridharilal Nagpal
Cinematography17 cinematographers
Edited by4 editors
Music by4 composers
Production
company
L. S. Movies
Release date
  • 16 July 1999 (1999-07-16)
Running time
155 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Suyamvaram is a 1999 Indian Tamil-language comedy-drama film starring an ensemble cast from actors in the Tamil film industry and shot by a large technical team from the industry. The film was planned by Giridharilal Nagpal who produced and wrote the film's story and brought together 14 major directors, 19 cinematographers and over thirty leading actors in the Tamil film industry.

The film also holds the Guinness World Record for casting the most stars in a film and also for being the quickest ever feature-length film made, with filming being completed in 23 hours and 58 minutes. The film released on 16 July 1999, to positive reviews from critics, praising the intentions of the makers.

Plot

Kuselan (Vijayakumar) and Suseela (Manjula) have nine children: three boys (Arunachalam (Sathyaraj), Aavudaiappan (Prabhu) & Indiran (Abbas)) and six girls (Urvashi (Rambha), Easwari (Roja), Uma (Kasthuri), Aishwarya (Maheswari), Hema (Preetha Vijayakumar) & Ezhilarasi (Suvalakshmi)). Azhagappan (Parthiban) is the family's loyal servant, while Krishna (Napoleon) is their family doctor.

The movie opens with Kuselan's 60th birthday celebrations, but he gets a heart attack. At the hospital, the family is informed that Kuselan will not live long and decides to keep him comfortable in his last days. From the devastated family, Kuselan asks for one last favour: all his children get married before he dies. The children agree, and a statewide ad is put out saying that those chosen to marry Kuselan's children would get a piece of the family properties and a crore in cash. Needless to say, the mention of wealth brings in potential brides and grooms by the truck full to be interviewed by either Gnanapithan (K. Bhagyaraj) and Arivozhimangai (Urvashi) or the doctors Mithrabuthan (Janagaraj) and Panchabootham (Senthil).

Kuselan, Suseela, and Krishna are happy upon thinking that everything would happen as planned, but there is a major hitch that they did not know about: most of the children have already fallen in love. Arunachalam, Aavudaiappan, and Indiran have fallen love with Kushboo, Savithri (Ishwarya), and Heera respectively. Easwari, Uma, Aishwarya, and Hema are in love with Kanna (Prabhu Deva), Pallavan (Pandiarajan), Gautham (Vineeth), and Kanthen (Livingston) respectively. Each of them gets their lover ready for the interview, and after some hard work and bribing, they are all selected. Urvashi is linked with the absent-minded doctor Ram Kumar (Karthik), who shows up at the interview upon thinking it is an interview for a doctor's post in a clinic while Ezhilarasi pairs with Azhagappan.

Kabilan (Mansoor Ali Khan), with Vichitra (Vichithra) in tow, tries to worm his way in as a groom, and when that effort fails, he kidnaps the nine brides for ransom. Krishna calls his friend ACP Sanjay IPS (Arjun Sarja), who defeats Kabilan and his aides, defuses the bomb planted by Kabilan at the marriage hall and saves the brides.

After finding the brides and after the marriage, Kuselan explains that his heart attack was a joke, and he wanted them to get married.

Cast

In order of appearance:

Crew

Production

Producer Giridharilal Nagpal announced his intentions of making, Suyamvaram, a film shot within 24 hours in January 1999, citing it had been a fourteen-year dream. The film's launch occurred in January 1999 with Rajinikanth and Kamal Haasan in attendance.[1] The makers originally planned on making the entire film on 24 March 1999, but the making was delayed and there were major changes made to the agreed cast and crew.[2] Nagpal then announced his intentions of shooting the film within 24 hours on 5 and 6 April 1999 across film studios in Chennai. Along with Nagpal, the film brought together 19 associate directors, 45 assistant directors, 19 cameramen, 36 assistant cameramen, nine steadycam operators, 14 heroes, 12 heroines, villains, comedians, five dance masters, 16 assistants, 140 chorus dancers, stunt coordinators, art director, makeup, costume and set designers, 15 film units, a still photographer and 1,483 extras to make the film.[3] Despite months of planning, Nagpal left many details to the last minute with no script produced and directors describing scenes to actors, who would rehearse them once before filming.[4] Two representatives, on behalf of the Guinness World Records, were present to oversee the time-schedule.[5][6] They were joined by representatives from the Limca Book of Records on the set.[7] Giridharlal said, "The goal is to finish every stage of film-making within the stipulated 24 hour period, Shooting, developing rushes, editing, dubbing, re-recording and final mixing for the master copy will all be done in that time. The script is being divided into 11 parts, and one director will shoot one part, all of them working on the same day, at different sets and venues".[8]

Production began on 5 April at 7 am on the sixth floor of the AVM Studios and then the AVM Gardens directed by Sundar C.[9] At 9.30am scenes were shot at the Kamaraj Memorial involving Prabhu Deva and Roja, while at 11am scenes with Sathyaraj and Kushboo were shot in studios resembling a gypsy tent camp.[3] At noon in Film City, a song sequence with Abbas and Heera was shot and at Guindy, Ramdoss shot scenes involving Pandiarajan and Kasthuri.[3] P. Vasu filmed scenes involving Prabhu and Aishwarya in a room with computers at 2.45pm, after a brief delay caused by missing props.[7] Karin Przygocki, an English teacher at the American International School Chennai, was recruited to play an American who marries into a traditional Indian family but her role was later changed to that of a jilted lover in Prabhu's office.[7] A dance sequence at a discothèque in Abu Palace was shot at 5.30pm with Vineeth and Maheswari, and by 6.30pm, the entire team assembled at the Vijaya Vauhini studios, which was designed to look like a wedding hall, for the final scenes to be canned. At 3am on 6 April, the film ran two hours behind schedule and four directors improvised and changed the storyline with two scenes being cut and planned into one.[3] Furthermore, at 3am, Vineeth refused to shoot for a scene where he was locked in the bathroom, and time was lost when the directors attempted to convince him to continue with the shoot. At 6.25am, the team finished filming the kidnap scenes at Kushaldoss House. The filming finished at 6.50am on 6 April 1999 with ten minutes to spare.[4]

Director Sundar C, who shot the opening scene of the film, revealed that the all the directors of the film had "several sittings together and had planned everything in advance".[9] While, P. Vasu claimed that all the directors were constantly in touch with each other so that one scene smoothly merged into the other. Actor-director, Arjun appeared as a cop in the film as well as directing and coordinating the action scenes in the film's climax.[9] Costume designer S. V. Kumar worked on the film with forty assistants, while dance choreographer Lalita Mani worked on some of the film's songs.[10] Art director, G. K., was in charge of co-ordinating sets at all 21 locations and managed to keep in control of events through his mobile phone; while Giridharilal's son Vinay, scooted from location to location, ensuring that the project was developing smoothly.[9]

Release

The film was released on 16 July 1999 to positive reviews from critics, with reviewers praising the production of the film rather than the overall content.[11] Shobha Warrier of Rediff.com claimed the attempt "particularly praiseworthy if we take into consideration the time factor and the amount of co-ordination the film-makers had to do", whilst adding that the movie was "slicker and better made than many churned out regularly by some film factories".[12] A reviewer from Indolink.com cited that "it is a laudable venture" and "they have even tried to have a storyline for this movie".[13] In regard to the technical aspects the critic claimed that "the songs are okay — nothing to rave about".[13] Another reviewer labelled that it "is not only a fairly humorous entertainer but an example of how the artistes and technicians of Tamil filmdom can co-operate wholeheartedly", praising the final product.[14] A critic from Sify.com noted "it can be seen for its record achievement feat but entertainment it does not offer."[15]

The film was dubbed into Telugu as Pellante Idera! by P. R. Kutumba Rao and released in October 2001.[16] Rao was persuaded to release the film in Telugu by Narasimha Rao of the Raasi Movies studio, while Vennelakanti worked on the Telugu dialogues and music was rearranged by G. Anand. The makers of the Telugu version opted to select a different voice artist for each character, rather than save costs by using individuals who can provide multiple voices.[17] A Hindi remake of the film was pondered by the producer, but later shelved.[5] Inspired by the film, the producers later announced their next project, which would feature five actors and actresses, to be shot within ten days, but the project did not proceed.[18]

Soundtrack

Suyamvaram
Soundtrack album by
Released1999
GenreFilm soundtrack

The soundtrack consists of five songs composed by four music directors.[19] Lyrics written by Mu. Metha, Pazhani Bharathi, Ponniyin Selvan and Ilakkiyan. Actor Prabhu Deva featured as a singer in the soundtrack.[20]

Song Title Singers Music Director Lyrics
Kaanakozhikku Anuradha Sriram, Sabesan Deva Ponniyin Selvan
Kathirunthaalea Rajakumari Sujatha Mohan S.A. Rajkumar Mu. Metha
Margazhi Maasathu S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Mano, Unni Krishnan, Swarnalatha, Sujatha Mohan S. A. Rajkumar Pazhani Bharathi
Sekka Sivanthavalea Hariharan, Sujatha Mohan Sirpy
Siva Siva Shankara Prabhu Deva Vidyasagar Ilakiyan

References

  1. ^ "Latest News about Rajnikanth". Reocities.com. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  2. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20041116232459/http://www.dinakaran.com/cinema/english/cinenews/28-01-99/13heroes.htm
  3. ^ a b c d B Sumangal; Illustrations by Sudheer Nath. "The 24-hour Film! | Kids Magazine > Features for kids [Page: 2] | Pitara Kids Network". Pitara.com. Archived from the original on 25 August 2003. Retrieved 5 August 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b Karp, Jonathon (9 May 1999). "A day in a director's life -- Giridharilal Nagpal shoots film in 24 hours". Indian Express. Archived from the original on 21 October 2000. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
  5. ^ a b PTI (7 April 1999). "Swayamvaram: all in a day's work". Times of India. Archived from the original on 22 March 2012. Retrieved 17 July 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ Darpan, Pratiyogita (June 1999). "Competition Science Vision".
  7. ^ a b c Karp, Jonathon (6 May 1999). "Indian Director Works to Make A Major Movie in Only One Day". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
  8. ^ "Rediff On The NeT, Movies: Gossip from the southern film industry". Rediff. 26 March 1999. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  9. ^ a b c d Warrier, Shobha (7 April 1999). "24 hours". Rediff. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
  10. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20010515042251/http://www.cinesouth.com/masala/24102000/news07.shtml
  11. ^ Vijiyan, K. N. (7 August 1999). "Be entertained by the stars". New Straits Times: 21.
  12. ^ "Rediff On The NeT, Movies: The review of Swayamvaram". Rediff. 15 July 1999. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  13. ^ a b "Suyamvaram: Movie Review". Indolink.com. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  14. ^ "Suyamvaram! - Movie Review". Oocities.org. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  15. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20041229090534/http://sify.com/movies/tamil/review.php?id=6006720&ctid=5&cid=2429
  16. ^ On the Sets - South
  17. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/19991012052904/http://screenindia.com:80/south.htm
  18. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20000818181624/http://www.tamilstar.com/topnews/swayam.shtml
  19. ^ Sathees T Tamilmp3world.Com, Oslo Norway. "Suyamvaram — Suyam Varam Songs — Suyamvaram Movie Songs". Tamilmp3world.Com. Archived from the original on 15 July 2012. Retrieved 5 August 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20000226051714/http://www.india4u.com/kollywood/snippets.htm