Kaatrullavarai

Kaatrullavarai
Directed byRadha Bharathi
Written byRadha Bharathi
Produced byS. Suresh
StarringJai Akash
Pranathi
CinematographyKichas
Edited byLancy - Mohan
Music byBharani
Production
company
Sheeaasu Films
Release date
  • 1 July 2005 (2005-07-01)
Running time
140 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Kaatrullavarai (transl. As long as there is wind) is a 2005 Indian Tamil language romantic drama film directed by Radha Bharathi. The film stars Jai Akash and Pranathi, with Vadivelu, newcomer S. Suresh, newcomer Madhupriya, Rajesh, Rajeev, Kazan Khan and R. Sundarrajan playing supporting roles. The film, produced by S. Suresh, was released on 1 July 2005.

Plot

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Narmadha is one of the leading actresses of Tamil cinema while Bala is her car driver. Bala, who has a stutter, tries his best to protect Narmadha from danger but Narmadha hates the sight of him and doesn't miss a chance to scold him. In the meantime, the carefree young man "Burma" Bala, an ardent fan of Narmadha, wants to marry her. Thereafter, "Burma" Bala and Narmadha's maid Kausi fall in love with each other. After a new misunderstanding, Narmadha orders Bala to get out of her house. Her father Ramkumar then explains to her why Bala worked for them all along despite her insulting remarks.

A few years back, Bala was the son of the village chief and dreamt to become a playback singer. He then left his village and came to Chennai, nobody was ready to give him a chance to sing and all his attempts to become a singer failed. Meanwhile, Narmadha who was still studying in college got an opportunity to act as a heroine in a film. First reluctant, she accepts when she needed money for her mother's heart surgery. During the shooting of her first film, Narmadha and her father Ramkumar met Bala, they felt pity for him and decided to help him. Bala stayed in Narmadha's home and before the death of Narmadha's mother, Bala promised her to make her daughter Narmadha a successful actress. Bala and Narmadha eventually fell in love with each. Later, Narmadha's first film got negative reviews during the test screening, so the film's financier planned to kill Narmadha before its release to create publicity thus making it a blockbuster film. Bala who had listened to his conversation tried to save her from the goons. During the fight, Narmadha and Bala got injured in the head but they managed to escape and ended up in a mass marriage ceremony. Ramkumar who was with them agreed for the wedding and they got married. When Bala's father learned about the wedding, he gave Bala one of his properties and disowned his son. Later at the hospital, Narmadha had been diagnosed with selective amnesia (she didn't remember anything for the past two years) whereas Bala developed a stutter. To release Narmadha's first film, Bala sold his property and paid the film's producer. Upon release, Narmadha received acclaim for her acting by critics and audience alike but the film flopped and Bala lost all his money. However, Narmadha was flooded with offers to act in films. To save his daughter's acting career and her mother's dream, Ramkumar begged Bala to not disclose about their wedding at any moment and Bala began to work as her car driver.

Narmadha, who finally learns of Bala's sacrifices, decides to put an end to her acting career and to live with her husband Bala. Bala and Narmadha live happily ever after.

Cast

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Production

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Director Radha Bharathi who directed films such as Vaigasi Poranthachu (1990) and Kizhakke Varum Paattu (1993) made his return to Tamil cinema after a hiatus with Kaatrullavarai under the banner of Sheeaasu Films. Jai Akash was chosen to play the hero of the film and paired once again with actress Pranathi after Gurudeva (2005).[1] S. Suresh, the producer of the film played an important role and Madhupriya, a debutante acted opposite him, while Vadivelu handled the comedy. Kichas had cranked the camera whereas music was scored by music director Bharani.[2] Speaking about the film, the director said, "the film has a gripping story of an actress kidnapped by a few anti-socials with the hero stepping in to rescue her".[3]

Soundtrack

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Kaatrullavarai
Soundtrack album by
Released8 April 2005
Recorded2005
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length36:49
ProducerBharani
Bharani chronology
Meesai Madhavan
(2004)
Kaatrullavarai
(2005)
Thirudiya Idhayathai
(2005)

The film score and the soundtrack were composed by Bharani. The soundtrack features 8 tracks.[4][5]

Tracklist
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Aanvaasamum Penvaasamum"KabilanKarthik, K. S. Chithra4:44
2."Mazhaiyil Nanaindha (male 1)"YugabharathiKarthik4:42
3."Naa Unnai Nee Ennai"Pa. VijayKrishnaraj, B. Sumi4:00
4."Sevandhiye Sevandhiye"Kavi BhaskarHarish Raghavendra5:08
5."Mazhaiyil Nanaindha (female)"YugabharathiK. S. Chithra4:43
6."Unnai Nambithan"ChandrakanthiHarish Raghavendra, B. Sumi4:41
7."Mazhaiyil Nanaindha (male 2)"YugabharathiP. Jayachandran4:43
8."Rahala Kattungada"AnnamalaiTippu4:08
Total length:36:49

Reception

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A critic from Sify opined that "What happens when a star struck youngster and producer decides to play action heroes? Kaatrullavarai directed by veteran Radha Bharathi is a badly made film with no logic or storyline".[6] Balaji Balasubramaniam of bbthots.com wrote, "the film has an uncharismatic lead pair, weak cast, unreal characters, unbelievable situations, medical blunders, unfunny comedy, cheap item numbers and vulgar duets".[7] Indiaglitz said, "Jai Akash looks dull and weak while Pranathy lacks any screen presence. The newcomer Suresh does nothing to impress the audience. Vadivelu's comedy too doesn't work" and added, "nothing can save the movie as the director seems to have shot himself in the foot".[8] P. V. Sathish Kumar of nowrunning.com wrote, "Radha Bharathi's loosely coupled screenplay and hackneyed narration are responsible for not attracting the audience".[9]

References

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  1. ^ "Returning back". IndiaGlitz.com. 31 August 2004. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  2. ^ "Kaatrullavarai". Sify. Archived from the original on 4 September 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  3. ^ "Kaatrulla Varai Preview". IndiaGlitz.com. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  4. ^ "Kaatru Ullavarai (2005) - Bharani". MusicIndiaOnline. Archived from the original on 5 November 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  5. ^ "Kaatru Ullavarai Songs". mymazaa.com. 7 July 2005. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  6. ^ "Kaatrullavarai". Sify. 2 July 2005. Archived from the original on 20 February 2022.
  7. ^ Balaji Balasubramaniam. "KAATRULLAVARAI". bbthots.com. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  8. ^ "Kaatrulla Varai review. Kaatrulla Varai Tamil movie review, story, rating  - IndiaGlitz.com". IndiaGlitz.com. 4 July 2005. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  9. ^ P. V. Sathish Kumar (27 June 2005). "Katrullavarai review". nowrunning.com. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
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