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Naan Pesa Ninaipathellam

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Naan Pesa Ninaipathellam
Poster
Directed byVikraman
Written byVikraman
Produced byPollachi Ashokan
Starring
CinematographyGopal
Edited byK. Thanikachalam
Music bySirpy
Production
company
Vasantham New Creations
Release date
  • 9 July 1993 (1993-07-09)
Running time
140 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Naan Pesa Ninaipathellam (transl. All that I think of speaking) is a 1993 Indian Tamil language drama film directed by Vikraman. The film stars Anand Babu and Mohini. It was released on 9 July 1993.[1]

Plot

Viswanath (Anand Babu) has only a cousin Kaveri (Latha) as family and is very affectionate towards her. He even dropped out of school to pay Kaveri's school fees. Viswanath worked hard for her and begins to sing in the street to support Kaveri.

A few years later, he becomes a singer in a band and organizes some stage performance with his friend Govind (Vivek). Unknowingly, Govind and Viswanath pick up a woman called Sandhya (Mohini). She tells that she isn't a singer, she doesn't have family and she has come to find a job in the city. But Sandhya helps Viswanath and Govind in a timely manner by helping them settle their house rent.

Kaveri completes her graduation and becomes a famous newscaster in a TV channel. However, she gets arrogant owing to her fame and she does not want to marry Viswanath as she thinks him to be a mismatch for her due to his poor condition. She challenges Viswanath to become rich.

Viswanath gets an opportunity to perform in a wedding reception. At the marriage reception, Viswanath sees Kaveri as the bride and is shocked knowing that Kaveri ditched him. Viswanath decides to commit suicide but Sandhya saves him and tells her past. Sandhya's father was a rich businessman. Anand (Anand) and Sandhya were in love and they later got engaged. When Sandhya's father's business went bankrupt, Anand refused to marry her. A few days later, her father died because of the shock.

Viswanath and Sandhya challenge to succeed in life. They decide to work hard separately. Sandhya passes civil services exam and she becomes a district collector. Sandhya meets with an accident and is spotted by Anand. Anand takes care of Sandhya in the hospital and he proposes to marry. Sandhya agrees to marry him and they decide to get married.

Viswanath on hearing about Sandhya's wedding plan gets shocked and rushes to the marriage hall but is stopped by the security guards at the entrance. Just before tying the knot, Sandhya cancels the wedding saying that she wanted to teach Anand a lesson by cancelling the wedding at the last moment. Sandhya walks out from the wedding hall and meets Viswanath and praises him as a great human being in front of everyone. She also informs everyone that she loves Viswanath and they get married. After a few years, it is shown that Viswanath becomes a famous singer and gets interviewed by Kaveri, embarrassed, in a TV interview. Viswanath and Sandhya live happily together.

Cast

Soundtrack

The music was composed by Sirpy, with lyrics written by Pulamaipithan, Piraisoodan, Palani Bharathi and Vikraman.[2]

Song Singer(s) Lyrics Duration
"Yalean Kiliyae" (solo) K. J. Yesudas Palani Bharathi 4:09
"Yalean Kiliyae" (duet) Mano, P. Susheela 4:13
"A For Ambika" Mano, Deepan Chakravarthy, Swarnalatha Poovarasan 3:51
"Manoduthu Mayiloduthu" K. S. Chithra Palani Bharathi 1:36
"Sentamizhil Puthu" Mano Pulamaipithan 4:03
"Adi Pulla Alla Marathula" Mano Palani Bharathi 1:03
"Kadhal Ennum Puthu Pattu" Mano, K. S. Chithra Vikraman 1:24
"Aagaya Gangaye" K. S. Chithra Palani Bharathi 3:54
"Poonguyil Ragame" (male) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam 3:51
"Poonguyil Ragame" (female) K. S. Chithra 1:48
"Devan Kovil" Mano, P. Susheela Piraisoodan 4:09

Reception

Malini Mannath of The Indian Express wrote, "Vikraman tried to infuse some freshness in the screenplay and treatment but has succeeded only partly."[3]

References

  1. ^ "Naan Pesa Ninaipathellam ( 1993 )". Cinesouth. Archived from the original on 12 August 2004. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  2. ^ "Naan Pesa Ninaipathellam". JioSaavn. 31 August 2014. Archived from the original on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  3. ^ M.M. (30 July 1993). "Orphans in love". The Indian Express. p. 6. Retrieved 3 June 2022.