Musthaffaa
Musthaffaa | |
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Directed by | R. Aravindraj |
Written by | K. Prasanna |
Produced by | P. G. Shrikanth |
Starring |
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Cinematography | K. Rajpreeth |
Edited by | R. T. Annadurai |
Music by | Vidyasagar |
Production company | S.G.S. Cinearts International |
Release date |
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Running time | 140 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Musthaffaa is a 1996 Tamil action drama film directed by R. Aravindraj. The film features Napoleon and Ranjitha in the lead roles, with Goundamani, Mansoor Ali Khan, K. Prasanna, Lakshmi, Kazan Khan, Alex, Sooriya, Rajeshkumar, Babloo Prithiveeraj, Ganeshkar and Charmila playing supporting roles. The film, produced by P. G. Shrikanth, had musical score by Vidyasagar and was released on 16 February 1996. The film was later remade into Hindi as Ghulam-E-Mustafa (1997) starring Nana Patekar and Raveena Tandon in the lead roles and was also remade in Bengali as Rehmat Ali (2010) with Mithun Chakraborty.[1][2][3][4]
Plot
Musthaffaa (Napoleon) is the trusted henchman of the godfather Periyavar (Sooriya). When politicians need help, they notify Periyavar and Musthaffaa in turn solves the problem with his sidekick Chellappa (Goundamani). Musthaffaa considers Periyavar as his own father and he calls him Vappa (father in Tamil Muslim) whilst he considers Chellappa as his own elder brother.
In the meantime, Sundaresan (K. Prasanna) is appointed as an office worker in a government office and he has persistently refused bribes. Being from a middle class orthodox Brahmin family, Sundaresan lives his sick wife Bhagyalakshmi (Lakshmi), his daughter Lalitha (Charmila) and his son Ramkumar (Ganeshkar). His daughter falls in love with Lakshmanan (Babloo Prithiveeraj) while his son wants to become an engineer. So Lakshmanan's father asks them a huge dowry for the wedding and the engineer school principal asks them a huge amount to enrol their son. Without enough revenue, they refuses both proposals. Knowing their problems, Musthaffaa pressures Sundaresan to sign some contracts without examining them in exchange of bribes but they still refuse.
Abba shares enmity with Kaalaiya (Mansoor Ali Khan) which wants to kill Periyavar. Meanwhile, a dancer Kavita (Ranjitha), who works in Kaalaiya's dance club, is saved by Musthaffaa from Kaalaiya's henchmen. Thanks to Musthaffaa, Kavita becomes a Bharata Natyam teacher. Kavita develops a soft corner for Musthaffaa and they finally decide to get married. In the meantime, Bhagyalakshmi's asthma has worsened and she is admitted to the hospital. To treat her, Sundaresan must disburse a huge amount. The next day, the vigilance officer Rajaram (Kazan Khan) clothes as a civilian, tries to corrupt the officers but only Sundaresan accepts. Sundaresan is subsequently arrested for corruption.
Kaalaiya plans to kill Periyavar so his son puts a bomb in his car. Unfortunately, Kavita gets killed in the car blast before their wedding. Thereafter, Musthaffaa turns berserk and kills Kaalaiya's son. Musthaffaa decides to become a good man so he helps Sundaresan's family and decides to live with them. Thereby, Periyavar becomes upset over Musthaffaa's decision. First, the relationship between Musthaffaa and Sundaresan's family was very tense but later they lived together in total harmony respecting their customs.
During the Legislative Assembly election, the violence is in full swing between the ruling party and the opposition party. Periyavar, on the side of the ruling party, cannot control it without Musthaffaa while Kaalaiya, on the side of the opposition party, is gaining in power with Rajaram's aid. So Musthaffaa decides to take this last job to finance dowry for Lalitha's wedding, to finance Ramkumar's education, to give again Sundaresan's job and to treat Bhagyalakshmi's asthma. Finally, Musthaffaa kills Kaalaiya and the ruling party wins the election. The minister Sathyanathan (Prathapachandran) congrats him for his work, as for Musthaffaa, he requests the minister to deal the problems peacefully but it does not please Sathyanathan. During Lalitha's wedding, Musthaffaa is arrested by the police, as a transformed person, he accepts the sentence. There, in a twist of fate, Periyavar's henchman shoots Musthaffaa in the back and he died in Periyavar's arms. Periyavar orders it because of fear of reprisal and self-interest. In turn, Chellappa in tears shoots Periyavar and Chellappa is immediately arrested.
Cast
- Napoleon as Musthaffaa
- Ranjitha as Kavitha
- Goundamani as Chellappa
- Mansoor Ali Khan as Kaalaiya
- K. Prasanna as Sundaresan
- Lakshmi as Bhagyalakshmi
- Kazan Khan as Rajaram
- Alex
- Sooriya as Vappa/Periyavar
- Rajeshkumar as Kaalaiya's son
- Babloo Prithiveeraj as Lakshmanan
- Ganeshkar as Ramkumar
- Charmila as Lalitha
- Suryakanth
- Prathapachandran as Sathyanathan
- Kumarimuthu
- T. S. Raghavendra as Lakshmanan's father
- Vaithi
- Swaminathan
- Murali Kumar
- Janaki as Kavitha's mother
- P. R. Varalakshmi as Lakshmanan's mother
- Mythili
- Jayamani
Soundtrack
Untitled | |
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The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composer Vidyasagar. The soundtrack, released in 1996, features 5 tracks with lyrics written by Vairamuthu.
Track | Song | Singer(s) | Duration |
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1 | 'Kadhalar Mattum' | Mano, Swarnalatha | 4:33 |
2 | 'Kalapu Mayile' | Mano, Malgudi Subha, Vidyasagar | 4:22 |
3 | 'Kannukkum Kannukkum' | Hariharan, Sadhana Sargam | 4:51 |
4 | 'Vallavanda Vallavanda' | Mano, Chorus | 2:49 |
5 | 'Vaya Mappillai' | Sadhana Sargam | 4:31 |
Production
K. Prasanna had written Musthaffaa as a serial in the weekly magazine Ananda Vikatan and had also staged it as a drama. Impressed by the story, the producer P. G. Shrikanth decides to make into a film. The experienced director R. Aravindraj, who directed cult films such as Oomai Vizhigal and Uzhavan Magan, was selected to direct the film while Vidyasagar composed the musical score. Napoleon accepted to play the title role. Napoleon has acted in P. G. Shrikanth's previous venture Seevalaperi Pandi which was a blockbuster and was a turning point in his career.[5][6]
Reception
K. Vijayan of New Straits Times praised the actor Napoleon and said : "whatever inadequacies Musthaffaa had in the first half is redeemed in the second half".[6]
Remakes
Musthaffaa (1996) (Tamil) |
Ghulam-E-Mustafa (1997) (Hindi) |
Rehmat Ali (2010) (Bengali) |
Napoleon Duraisamy | Nana Patekar | Mithun Chakraborty |
Ranjitha | Raveena Tandon | Rituparna Sengupta |
Sooriya | Paresh Rawal | Rajatava Dutta |
References
- ^ "Musthapa (1996) Tamil Movie". spicyonion.com. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ "Filmography of musthafa". cinesouth.com. Archived from the original on 10 February 2005. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ "Find Tamil Movie Musthafa". jointscene.com. Archived from the original on 28 April 2012. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ "Cinema Profile". actornapoleon.com. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ "Napoleon in 'Pallikondapuram'". indiaglitz.com. 12 June 2008. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ a b K. Vijayan (9 March 1996). "The perfect role for 'anti-hero' Napoleon". The Indian Express: 25. Retrieved 13 December 2014.