Arasatchi
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Arasatchi | |
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Directed by | N. Maharajan |
Written by | N. Maharajan |
Produced by | Murali Manohar |
Starring | Arjun Lara Dutta Riya Sen Karan Raghuvaran Nassar Vivek Manivannan Delhi Ganesh Anandaraj P. Vasu |
Cinematography | S. Saravanan |
Edited by | B. S. Vasu Saleem |
Music by | Harris Jayaraj |
Production company | Cee (I)TV Entertainment(p)ltd |
Distributed by | Mars Entertainment Group Motion Pictures Partners |
Release date |
|
Running time | 154 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Arasatchi (English: Government Rule / Government Authority) is a 2004 Tamil action film directed by N. Maharajan. The film was directed by N Maharajan. The film starred Arjun and Lara Dutta in the lead roles alongside an ensemble cast. The film's music was composed by Harris Jayaraj. The film was released in September 2004. It was dubbed into Telugu as "Judgement" and in Hindi as "Ghatak The Destroyer".
Plot
Anandaraj, who argues for rapists and murderers, is killed by a cricket ball hit by Siddharth (Arjun).
Siddharth is a GM of a five-star hotel owned by S. Ve. Shekher. Shekher's daughter is Lara (Lara Dutta), who is introduced with a song. She comes from abroad to join her dad's hotel but only as a trainee under the macho GM. Within no time, Lara is in love with Siddharth.
It's now time for duets. Lara's friend Prakash (Karan) is a campaigner of public cause. His efforts lead to a brothel raid and a minister getting arrested. The minister's goons bump off Prakash, and Siddharth is an eyewitness. Siddharth refuses to testify and Lara walks out on him. Charan Raj pleads for the killer and lets him off. Siddharth bumps off Charan Raj. Nassar, a military officer, is a witness to the murder. He even postpones his heart operation until the killer is nabbed. Siddharth now tells his story of why he is on a hunt of the lawyers who plead for the bad guys. Nassar gives up his mission.
Next, Devan takes a brief for a rapist, and he too is killed. Next is the turn of advocate Ashok Mehta (Raghuvaran), who comes from Delhi. The surprise element is that Ashok is Siddharth's brother-in-law. Ashok's wife is Siddharth's long-lost sister. Now the brother-sister sentiment comes into play. Finally, the story ends with Ashok being shot dead by Siddharth in the court premises. The police opens fire and bystanders form a human wall and get shot at. Siddharth tells the TV crew about how his mission has spread to the masses.
Cast
- Arjun as Siddharth
- Lara Dutta as Lara
- Vivek
- S. Ve. Shekher as Lara's father
- P. Vasu
- Abitha
- Uma
- Bose Venkat
- Vaiyapuri
- Ajay Rathnam
- Mahanadi Shankar
- Dhamu
- Riya Sen as Bar Dancer in item song (Iruvadhu Vayasu)
- Perarasu as reporter (uncredited)
- Villains
- Anandaraj as Advocate
- Karan as Prakash
- Charan Raj as the man who pleads for the killer
- Nassar as Military Officer
- Devan
- Raghuvaran as Ashok Mehta (Siddharth's brother-in-law)
- M. N. Nambiar
- Ponnambalam
- Delhi Ganesh
- Mansoor Ali Khan
- Rajan P. Dev
- Manivannan
Production
After the success of Vallarasu Maharajan was supposed to direct Vijaykanth in another project but later got dropped and Maharajan went on to remake Vallarasu in Hindi as Indian with Sunny Deol.[1] Meanwhile, Maharajan announced his next project Arasatchi with Arjun playing the lead role. Miss Universe 2000 Lara Dutta made her acting debut in Tamil with this film.[2] The film boasts of 14 villains played by Raghuvaran, Karan, Anandaraj, Nassar, M. N. Nambiar, Ponnambalam, Delhi Ganesh, Mansoor Ali Khan, Devan, Rajan P. Dev, and Manivannan among others. Uma, Abitha, Vindhya and P. Vasu play crucial roles in the film.
The filming was held at Le Royal Meridian Hotel, Chennai and the songs were picturised at locations in London, New Zealand and Canada.[3]
The movie was completed in 2003 but got delayed due to financial problems and finally released in 2004,[4] in between production delays Maharajan finished Anjaneya with Ajith.
Release
The satellite rights of the film were secured by Raj TV. The film was given an "A" certificate by the Indian Censor Board. Before release, poster featuring tagline "When Justice Fails" created controversy which caused a lawyer to file a case citing that the film would portray lawyers in bad light. After one week, case was finally won.[5][6]
Soundtrack
Arasatchi | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 2004 | |||
Genre | Feature film soundtrack | |||
Label | New Music | |||
Harris Jayaraj chronology | ||||
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The soundtrack and background score was composed by Harris Jayaraj. Lyrics written by Na. Muthukumar, Thamarai, Viveka & Snehan.[7]
Song title | Singers |
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"Arakonathhil" | Sunitha Sarathy |
"Buddhan" | Karthik |
"Ippadiyae" | Shankar Mahadevan, Swarnalatha, Sunitha Sarathy |
"Iruvathu Vayasu" | Harini, Febi Mani |
"Kozha Kozha" | Sriram, Srilekha Parthasarathy |
"Mughalai Mughalai" | Harish Raghavendra, Harini |
References
- ^ https://cinematoday2.itgo.com/666Hot%20News%20Just%20for%20U.htm Archived 19 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "A long wait". The Hindu. 17 July 2003. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20030920115501/http://www.chennaionline.com/location/arasatchi.asp
- ^ http://www.indiaglitz.com/channels/tamil/article/9897.html
- ^ http://www.indiaglitz.com/channels/tamil/article/10575.html
- ^ http://www.indiaglitz.com/channels/tamil/article/10522.html
- ^ "A Tamil entertainment ezine presenting interesting contents and useful services". Nilacharal. Retrieved 1 December 2016.