Padhavi Paduthum Paadu
Padhavi Paduthum Paadu | |
---|---|
Directed by | C. Ramalingam |
Written by | Thuglak Sathya (dialogues) |
Screenplay by | C. Ramalingam |
Story by | Thuglak Sathya |
Produced by | G. Moorthy |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | P. S. Selvam |
Edited by | Mohan Subbu |
Music by | Gandhidasan |
Production company | GM Movies |
Release date |
|
Running time | 135 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Padhavi Paduthum Paadu (English: Strains caused by the position) is a 2005 Tamil political satire film directed by C. Ramalingam. The film features Ranjith and Anamika in lead roles, with Ravichandran, Pyramid Natarajan, Manivannan, Vasu Vikram, Rajesh, Raj Kapoor, T. P. Gajendran, Alex and Pandu playing supporting roles. The film, produced by G. Moorthy, had musical score by Gandhidasan and was released on 3 June 2005.[1][2]
Plot
Malayappan (Ranjith) is a notorious brigand, living in the forest, who kidnaps the former Chief Minister Tamizharasan (Ravichandran) and demands a huge ransom to the government. The current Chief Minister Veerabhadran (Pyramid Natarajan) in any case is glad that his arch-political rival and leader of the opposition has been kidnapped by Malayappan. Veerabhadran declares to the media that he will not negotiate with Malayappan and he will not give a single penny to the brigand. Malayappan realizes that he made a mistake by kidnapping the wrong person. Therefore, the cunning Tamizharasan suggests that Malayappan kidnap Veerabhadran's daughter and Malayappan follows his advice. Veerabhadran, who now wants to save his daughter at any cost, sends the popular news reporter Muthuvel (Vasu Vikram) to negotiate with the brigand in the forest. Thereafter, Malayappan releases Veerabhadran's daughter and a video of him killing Tamizharasan.
Following the fiasco, the governor of Tamil Nadu dismissed the current state government and Veerabhadran lost his Chief Minister post. Malayappan even gets a general amnesty and receives a government bungalow. Tamizharasan is indeed alive and that video of him being killed was a sham. Malayappan, who was hiding in the forests so far, is hailed by the people of Tamil Nadu. Thus Malayappan forms a political party after seeing his growing popularity. According to the survey, Malayappan has a good probability to become the new Chief Minister. Veerabhadran and Tamizharasan's party members then join Malayappan's party. In the end, the brigand cum politician Malayappan wins the election by a huge margin and becomes the new Chief Minister. In the meantime, Malayappan gets married to his lover Ponni (Anamika). Unlike the former Chief Ministers, Malayappan wants to help the people and starts his fight against corruption. What transpires next forms the crux of the story.
Cast
- Ranjith as Malayappan
- Anamika as Ponni
- Ravichandran as Tamizharasan
- Pyramid Natarajan as Veerabhadran
- Manivannan as Marudhanayagam
- Vasu Vikram as Muthuvel
- Rajesh as Manivasagam
- Raj Kapoor as Raja
- T. P. Gajendran
- Alex
- Pandu
- Auditor Sridhar as Seetharaman
- Nellai Siva
- Sempuli Jagan as Sengali
- Chelladurai as Swamy
- Tirupur Ramasamy
- Nambirajan
- Abhinayashree
Production
C. Ramalingam, a one-time associate of director K. Bhagyaraj, made his directorial debut with Padhavi Paduthum Paadu. He said, "though it is about Veerappan, it's no serious stuff. It's a political spoof certain to draw humour in the theatre". The movie was shot in Chennai, Tiruvannamalai, Sathyamangalam and Anthiyur forest areas where the brigand Veerappan lived.[3]
Soundtrack
Untitled | |
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The film score and the soundtrack were composed by film composer Gandhidasan. The soundtrack, released in 2005, features 4 tracks with lyrics written by P. Vijay and Kabilan.
Track | Song | Singer(s) | Duration |
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1 | 'Intha Kaadu' | Tippu | 2:56 |
2 | 'Anthari Sunthari' | Malathy Lakshman, Manikka Vinayagam | 4:17 |
3 | 'Arasiyale' | Gangai Amaran, Mohan | 2:12 |
4 | 'Rendu' | Prasanna, Saindhavi | 1:10 |
Reception
The film received negative reviews from critics with a critic stating, "it turns out to be a good political satire that lays bare the politics of the land. It just doesn't realise that too much of a good thing can end up being bad too. Some judicious editing and better marketing might have improved its fortunes at the box-office".[4] Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu wrote, "Veerappan would probably do a somersault in his grave if he sees himself portrayed as a gullible nincompoop on the one hand and an honest Minister on the other. And all these without an iota of finesse".[5] Sify said, " a disappointing venture as screenplay and direction goes haywire as the dialogue writer and director does far too much political pontification" and labelled the film as avoidable.[6] Indiaglitz wrote, "that is tantamount to practising for the Olympics marathon by jogging in the park. Satire needs punch and power. But that is sadly missing in this. Padhavi Paduthum Paadu, in that sense, misses the wood for trees".[7]
References
- ^ "Padhavi Paduthum Paadu (2005)". gomolo.com. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
- ^ "Find Tamil Movie Padhavi Paduthum Padu". jointscene.com. Archived from the original on 7 June 2010. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Tamil Padhavi Paduthum Paadu Movie Preview". indiaglitz.com. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
- ^ "PADHAVI PADUTHUM PAADU". bbthots.com. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
- ^ Malathi Rangarajan (10 June 2005). "Crude to the core". The Hindu. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
- ^ "Padhavi Paduthum Paadu". Sify. 5 June 2005. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
- ^ "Padhavi Paduthum Paadu review". indiaglitz.com. 4 June 2005. Retrieved 18 December 2017.