Vasool Raja MBBS
Vasool Raja MBBS | |
---|---|
Directed by | Saran |
Written by | Crazy Mohan (dialogues ) |
Screenplay by | Rajkumar Hirani, Vidhu Vinod Chopra |
Story by | Rajkumar Hirani |
Produced by | Gemini Film Circuit |
Starring | |
Cinematography | A. Venkatesh |
Edited by | Suresh Urs |
Music by | Bharadwaj |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Raaj Kamal Films International |
Release date | 12 August 2004 |
Running time | 160 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Vasool Raja MBBS (Collection King MBBS) is a 2004 Indian Tamil-language comedy drama film directed by Saran. The film is the Tamil remake of the Hindi film Munnabhai MBBS. It stars Kamal Haasan, Prabhu, Sneha, and Prakash Raj, in the lead roles, while Nagesh, Rohini Hattangadi, Jayasurya, Malavika, Crazy Mohan and Karunas, among others, play supporting roles. The film's music was composed by Bharadwaj.[1][2]
Plot
Rajaraman, nicknamed "Vasool Raja" (Kamal Haasan), is a local don in Chennai who makes a living by collecting money from people who refuse or dilly-dally in paying their debts to others, with the help of his right-hand man Vaddi (Prabhu). Given that his father Sriman Venkataraman (Nagesh) had wished him to be a doctor, he creates the faux Venkataraman Charitable Hospital. which is named after his father and pretends to live in accordance with this wish whenever his father and mother Kasturi (Rohini Hattangadi) visit him in Chennai.
One year later, Raja's plan goes awry when Venkataraman meets an old acquaintance, Dr. Vishwanathan (Prakash Raj). The two men decide to get Raja married to Vishwanathan's daughter Dr. Janaki aka "Paapu" (Sneha), who was a childhood friend of Raja under that name. At this point, the truth about Raja is revealed. Vishwanathan insults Raja's parents and calls them "fools" for being ignorant of Raja's real life. Venkataraman and Kasturi, who are both aghast and heartbroken, leave Raja for their village.
Raja, in grief and despair, decides that the only way to redeem himself and gain revenge for the humiliation suffered by his father at the hands of the spiteful Vishwanathan is to become a doctor. He goes to a medical college to obtain an MBBS degree, the graduate medical degree in South Asia.
With the help of Vaddi and others, Raja gains admission to the SLR Institute of Medical Sciences by threatening Dr. Margabandhu (Crazy Mohan), who is a faculty member of the college, where he again encounters Vishwanathan, who is the college dean. His success there becomes dependent upon the coerced help of Margabandhu. While Raja's skills as a medical doctor are minimal, he transforms those around him with the "Kattipudi Vaithiyam" ("hugging therapy"), a method of comfort taught to Raja by his mother, and the compassion he shows towards those in need. Despite the school's emphasis on mechanical, Cartesian, impersonal, often bureaucratic relationships between doctors and patients, Raja constantly seeks to impose a more empathetic, almost holistic, regimen. To this end, he defies all convention by treating a brain-dead man as if the man were able to perceive and understand normally; intimidating Dr. Kalidas (Chitra Lakshmanan) into admitting and treating a suicide patient named Neelakandan (Nithin Sathya); interacting on familiar but autocratic terms with patients; humiliating school bullies; effusively thanking a hitherto-underappreciated cleaner; helping a terminally ill cancer patient named Zakir (Jayasurya); and encouraging the patients themselves to make changes in their lives so that they do not need pharmaceuticals or surgery.
Vishwanathan, who perceives all this as symptoms of chaos, is unable to prevent it from expanding and gaining ground at his college. He becomes increasingly irritable, almost to the point of insanity. Repeatedly, this near-dementia is shown when he receives unwelcome tidings and begins laughing in a way that implies that he has gone mad. This behavior is explained early on as an attempt to practice laughter therapy, an attempt that seems to have backfired. Vishwanathan's laughing serves more to convey his anger than diffuse it. Meanwhile, Janaki becomes increasingly fond of Raja, who, in his turn, becomes unreservedly infatuated with her. Some comedy appears here because Raja is unaware that Janaki and his childhood friend "Paapu" are one and the same; an ignorance that Janaki hilariously exploits. Vishwanathan tries several times to expel Raja, but is often thwarted by Raja's wit or the affection with which the others at the college regard Raja, having gained superior self-esteem by his methods.
Eventually, Raja is shamed into leaving the college: His guilt for not being able to help Zakir gets the better of him. In the moments immediately following Raja's departure, the bedridden man miraculously awakens from his vegetative state; at this point, Janaki gives a heartfelt speech wherein she criticizes her father for having banished Raja, saying that to do so is to banish hope, compassion, love, happiness, etc. from the college. Vishwanathan eventually realizes his folly.
Raja later marries Janaki, learning for the first time that she is "Paapu", while also reconciling with his parents.
Cast
- Kamal Haasan as Rajaraman Venkatraman (alias "Vasool Raja")
- Prabhu as Vatti
- Sneha as Janaki Vishwanathan (alias "Paapu")
- Prakash Raj as Vishwanathan
- Nagesh as Venkatraman
- Rohini Hattangadi as Kasturi Sriman Venkatraman
- Crazy Mohan as Professor Margabandhu
- Jayasurya as Zakir
- Malavika as Priya
- Karunas as Amit
- Yatin Karyekar as Anand
- Ajay Rathnam as Medicine Professor
- Kavithalaya Krishnan as Surgery Professor
- Nithin Sathya as Neelakandan
- Chithra Lakshmanan as Dr. Kalidas
- Thalaivasal Vijay as Doctor
- Santhana Bharathi as Gangadharan
- Kaka Radhakrishnan as Margabandhu's father
- Madhan Bob as Mani Raja, Raja's client
- Vaiyapuri as Piles Patient
- E. Ramdoss as Ward Boy
- Karate Raja as Raja's sidekick
- Kadhal Sukumar as Raja's sidekick
- Sampath Ram as Raja's sidekick
- Meera Krishnan as Mani Raja's wife
- A. K. Veerasami as Hospital Cleaner
- Kaajal Pasupathi as Nurse
- Boys Rajan as Professor
- Yatin Karyekar as Coma Patient
- Ragasya as dancer in song "Cheena Thaana"
Production
Simran was initially approached to play the leading female role but her reluctance to accept the offer immediately due to her post marriage meant that the team sought and consequently signed on actress Sneha for the film. Saran hoped to sign on director K. Balachandar to play Kamal Haasan's father in the film, with the veteran director being both Kamal Haasan's and Saran's film industry mentor. However Balachandar was reluctant to act and the team finalised Girish Karnad for the role, before later replacing him with veteran actor Nagesh.[3] Actor Dhanush initially agreed to play a cameo role in the film, as he was a big fan of Kamal Haasan, but later opted out and was replaced by Malayalam actor Jayasurya.[4]
Production on the film cost a total of ₹5.5 crore rupees.[5]
Soundtrack
Vasool Raja MBBS | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 2004 | |||
Recorded | 2004 | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Length | 28.62 | |||
Label | Hit Musics Star Music Ayngaran Music An Ak Audio | |||
Producer | Bharadwaj | |||
Bharadwaj chronology | ||||
|
The soundtrack was composed by Bharadwaj, repeating his successful collaboration with director Saran. All songs were penned by Vairamuthu.
No. | Title | Singer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Kallakapovathu Yaaru" | Kamal Haasan, Sathyan | 4:37 |
2. | "Pathukullae Number" | KK, Shreya Ghoshal | 5:19 |
3. | "Alwarpetai Aaluda" | Kamal Haasan | 5:13 |
4. | "Kaddu Thiranthae" | Hariharan, Sadhana Sargam | 4:14 |
5. | "Seena Thana (Siruchi)" | Grace Karunas | 4:38 |
6. | "Sakalakala Doctor" | Bharadwaj, Arjun | 4:31 |
Total length: | 28:62 |
Box office
Made on a budget of ₹5.5 crore, Vasoolraja MBBS was sold for ₹1 crore in Coimbatore distribution territory with 20 prints.[6] The film was shown on about 285 screens worldwide to highly positive reception and box-office success.[7] Tabloid reported 10 million tickets were sold worldwide.[8]
Controversy
The film faced controversy as the petition filed by Tamil Nadu Medical Council president K R Balasubramanian stated that the film's title ridiculed the medical profession and tarnished the image of the medical fraternity. Moreover, the film title is considered to be a mockery on the medical profession which would lower dignity of the medical fraternity in eyes of public.[9]
References
- ^ "Munnabhai MBBS in Tamil — Tamil Movie News". IndiaGlitz. 20 April 2004. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
- ^ "Kamal in remake of 'Munnabhai MBBS' – Tamil Movie News". IndiaGlitz. 29 May 2009. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
- ^ Reel Talk – Khushboo signs up Arjun. Web.archive.org. Retrieved on 12 March 2016.
- ^ https://www.indiaglitz.com/dhanush-to-act-in-kamals-film-tamil-news-9280
- ^ http://www.thehindu.com/mp/2004/09/22/stories/2004092200320100.htm
- ^ "Vasoolraja MBBS fetched 1 crore price in Coimbatore area". Archived from the original on 26 October 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
- ^ Krishna Gopalan (29 July 2007). "The boss, no doubt". Business Today. Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
- ^ No stopping him. The Hindu (27 September 2004)
- ^ "HC stays release of 'Vasoolraja, MBBS' – Tamil Movie News". Indiaglitz. 27 July 2004. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
External links
- 2004 films
- Indian films
- Tamil-language films
- Films featuring an item number
- Tamil remakes of Hindi films
- 2000s Tamil-language films
- Films directed by Saran
- Medical-themed films
- 2000s comedy-drama films
- Indian comedy-drama films
- Tamil film scores by Bharathwaj
- Indian gangster films
- Films with screenplays by Crazy Mohan
- 2004 comedy films
- 2004 drama films