Five Tamil films woo a romantic audience
Feb 20, 2006 Chitra PrakashThe five films that capture the flavour of romance are "Dishyum", "Idhaya Thirudan", "Amritham", "Poi", and "Kalaba Kadhalan".
"Dishyum" (Tamilised 'dishoom' - the sound of a blow connecting) is about a boxing bout between two hearts. The title also refers to the fact that the hero (Jeeva) is a boorish stuntman who hits it off with a well-educated heroine (Sandhya).
"Idhaya Thirudan" is also about opposites - actors Jayam Ravi and Kamna Jethmalani attracting each other. The heroine is a granddaughter of eminent lawyer and politician Ram Jethmalani.
"Amritham" is about an orthodox Brahmin girl - Navya Nair of "Azhagiya Theeye" fame - being transformed into a modern empowered eve by hero Ganesh.
The message of "Poi" (lie), say the advertisements, is that "love is a sweet lie". The film, which represents a comeback bid by pioneering director K. Balachander, has Uday Kiran and former beauty queen Vimala in the lead.
"Kalaba Kadhalan" is about a computer engineer (Arya), representing today's urban youth in IT-savvy Tamil Nadu, and his girl (Renuka Menon).
"Kalvanin Kadhali", which borrows the title of an old film featuring Shivaji Ganesan and Bhanumathi and is based on a popular novel by 'Kalki' Krishnamurthy, is a borderline case.
The film, starring S.J. Suryah and Nayantara, is more a torrid affair than a tender romance. Its original title - "36-28-36" - suggests the character of its content.
Violent action dominates the rest of February's fare for Tamil film audiences. Two of the films - "Chithiram Pesudhadi" and "Madrasi" - depict the underworld.
The month's releases include two movies with unusual themes - "Kodambakkam" about the Tamil tinsel-town, and the curiously titled "June R" about three women in a strange relationship.
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Kalaba Kadhalan
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