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Aalukkoru Aasai

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Aalukkoru Aasai
Directed byV. Sekhar
Written byV. Sekhar
Produced byK. Parthiban,
S. Tamilselvi
StarringSathyaraj
Meena
Vadivelu
CinematographyP. S. Selvam
Edited byA.P.Manivannan
Music byS. A. Rajkumar
Production
company
Thiruvalluvar Kalaikoodam
Release date
12 September 2003
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Aalukkoru Aasai (transl. Different things appeal to different people) is an Indian Tamil-language comedy-drama film directed by V. Sekhar, starring Sathyaraj, Meena and Vadivelu.

Synopsis

Arivazhagan (Sathyaraj) is a man who dreams of marrying an educated, employed girl, building a dream house of his own, and having one child. Due to a trick of his scheming orthodox grandparents, he instead finds himself married to Angala (Meena) – an illiterate rustic whose dreams are confined to marrying a swarthy man, having a dozen kids and visiting temples. Her dreams came true and Arivazhagan's dreams of a modern lifestyle are destroyed one by one. Meanwhile, Arivazhagan's friend Pazhani (Vadivelu) hoodwinks his own wife Govindamma Pazhani (Kalpana) and has many affairs. As the two men cheat on their wives, a hooker Manthara (Raasi) develops a soft spot for Sathyaraj. Eventually, Arivazhagan and Pazhani leave their family and stay at Manthara's house for a short period. In the end, Arivazhagan happily goes back to his wife.

Cast

Production

Sneha was approached for the lead role but she refused to pair with Sathyaraj and she was replaced by Meena pairing with Sathyaraj for the fourth time.[1]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by S. A. Rajkumar, while lyrics written by Ravi Bharathi, Pazhani Bharathi, P. Vijay, Kabilan and Nandalala.[2] New Straits Times cited Rajkumar "lost his magic" and called the songs "below average".[3]

  • Belpoori Naan – Kalpana
  • Iduppodu Sungidi – Tippu, Anuradha Sriram
  • Kaathal Kaathal – Srilekha Parthasarathi, Kalpana, S. A. Rajkumar
  • Kanthan Endral Arivu – Karthik
  • Kottaikku Nee Roja – S A Rajkumar

Reception

Bizhat wrote "The whole film looks like a stage play and all the characters speak lengthy dialogues, testing one's patience. In this age of technological advancement, the director V. Shekar takes us forty years back with his story and screenplay".[4] BBthots.com[5] wrote "Aalukkoru Aasai seems suspiciously like a movie that was started with only the basic premise of conflict in hand and no ideas about the resolution of the conflict. The movie sets up an interesting situation and even manages to raise some laughs along the way. But it then gets lost completely and never recovers. The director has no clue about the direction to adopt, whether with the storyline or with the characters of the main players. The result is a movie with a confusing story-line and characters that are stupid and easy to dislike".[5] Chennai Online wrote "it looked like director V. Sekhar had the potential plot to build upon his story-line and to justify his title. But it doesn't quite turn out that way! After the initial promise, the script soon loses focus, the issues get muddled, and the dreams and desires of the characters take a back seat".[6]

References

  1. ^ "கிசு கிசு கார்னர்". tamil.filmibeat.com. 5 February 2004.
  2. ^ "Aalukkoru Aasai (2003)". Music india online.
  3. ^ "Vintage Vidyasagar". New Straits Times: 26. 16 October 2003.
  4. ^ "BizHat.com – Aalukkoru Aasai Review. Sathyaraj, Meena, Mantra, Vadivelu, Delhi Ganesh, Senthil, Vadivukkarasi". movies.bizhat.com.
  5. ^ a b http://www.bbthots.com/reviews/2003/aaasai.html
  6. ^ "Aalukkoru Aasai". web.archive.org. 27 September 2003.