Antha Ezhu Naatkal

Antha Ezhu Naatkal (pronounced [an̪da eːɻu n̪aːʈkaɭ] transl.Those Seven Days) is a 1981 Tamil language film. Directed by and starring K. Bhagyaraj, the film follows the life and ambitions of the hero, Palakkad Madhavan played by K. Bhagyaraj and his sidekick Gopi (child actor Khaja Sharif).

Antha Ezhu Naatkal
Theatrical release poster
Directed byK. Bhagyaraj
Produced byT. G. Thyagarajan
M.Nachiappan
P. S. Jayaraman
Written byK. Bhagyaraj
StarringK. Bhagyaraj
Ambika
Khaja Sharif
Music byM. S. Viswanathan
CinematographyP. Ganesh Pandian
Edited byR. Bhaskaran
Production
company
Srini Creations
Sathya Jyothi Films
Release date
  • 26 October 1981 (1981-10-26)
[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

The movie was a great hit and very well received by the public.[2] It was remade in Telugu as Radha Kalyanam,[3] in Hindi as Woh Saat Din,[4] and in Kannada as Love Maadi Nodu.[5]

Plot

Vasanthi (Ambika) and Dr. Anand (Rajesh) marry. On their first night, Vasanthi poisons herself and is saved by Dr. Anand. He then inquires about her past. Vasanthi narrates her flashback. Palakkad Madhavan (Bhagyaraj), a poor Brahmin, naive, honest, aspiring music director comes to Madras and stays for rent on top of Vasanthi's house. He is unable to pay the rent of 30 Rs after the first month and even unable to eat on some days. Vasanthi who stays below develops feelings for him and helps him through his assistant Gopi. Gopi is a kid wise beyond his age who has the knack of surviving in a city. Madhavan initially refuses Vasanthi's advances fearing her family and his financial inability to support her but eventually accepts her love. While their love is blossoming, Vasanthi's parents get a proposal for Vasanthi from a wealthy widower who wants to marry a middle-class lady who would take care of his daughter and be a good daughter-in-law to his ailing mother. Vasanthi's grandfather and mother decide to marry her to the doctor. Vasanthi refuses the proposal and decides to marry Madhavan at a temple the next day. Her family and other people from her neighbourhood beat up Madhavan and force Vasanthi into a marriage with Dr. Anand. She explains to Dr. Anand that she is unable to change her heart and accept him as her husband.

Hearing of Vasanthi's past, Dr. Anand decides that she should reunite with her lover and he will help her. He asks her to stay in his house for a week as his terminally ill mother is counting her last days. Vasanthi agrees to this while Anand is looking for Madhavan in Kerala and in Madras. During her seven-day stay with Dr. Anand, she starts interacting with him, his mother, his daughter. Dr. Anand chances on Madhavan and Gopi at an empty roadside shop and lies to him that he is a producer scouting for a music director. He hires Madhavan and narrates the story of the movie he is producing (Madhavan's story but instead of musician, the hero is an artist). The innocent Madhavan fails to notice this and composes tunes for Dr. Anand. After his mother dies and Madhavan asks Dr. Anand to tell him the climax so he can compose his tune, Dr. Anand brings Madhavan to take Vasanthi. But Vasanthi refuses to go as removing her nuptial string is against tradition and decides to stay with Dr. Anand. Madhavan advises Dr. Anand "my lover can become your wife but your wife can never become my lover. That is our culture".

Cast

Production

The story of Antha Ezhu Naatkal was inspired by the life of veteran comedian Chandrababu.[6] The film was produced by T. G. Thyagarajan for Sathya Jyothi Films and Srini Creations.[7] Chandrababu's real-life marriage had failed after his wife revealed to him that she was in love with someone similar to Rajesh's character in the story.[6]

Soundtrack

The music was composed by M. S. Viswanathan.

No.SongSingersLyricsLength (m:ss)
1"Enni Irundhadhu"Malaysia Vasudevan, Vani JayaramVairamuthu4:42
2"Kavithai Arangerum"Jayachandran, S. JanakiKuruvikkarambai Shanmugam4:37
3"Sapthaswara"Jayachandran, S. Janaki4:48
4"Swararaaga"Jayachandran, Vani JayaramKannadasan4:24
5"Thendraladhu Unnidathil"Jayachandran, S. Janaki4:52

Reception

Reviewing the film for Ananda Vikatan, Rajesh rated the film 58 out of 100.[8]

gollark: Neat.
gollark: Oh, so you're doing software stuff for them and also designing... retail-y hardware a bit?
gollark: Well, I have somewhat working backups, so probably "wipe server, reinstall from USB stick, reload important stuff but probably keep external network access down for a bit".
gollark: I mostly just try and keep software up to date, shove sandboxes on network-facing services, and hope vulnerability-scanning botnets or something don't catch up fast enough.
gollark: Probably high, especially since all of it's written in unsafe C for some reason.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved 23 May 2018.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Pillai, Sreedhar (15 February 1984). "K. Bhagyaraj; The reigning king in the world of Madras film Hollywood". India Today. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  3. Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (1998) [1994]. Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema (PDF). Oxford University Press. p. 55. ISBN 0-19-563579-5.
  4. Jeshi, K. (25 December 2010). "Of wit and humour". The Hindu. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  5. "Black & White Photographs From The Cinema Resource Centre Archives (I)". The Cinema Resource Centre (TCRC). 6 April 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  6. Raman, Mohan (18 June 2016). "Mandapam to moviedom". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  7. "A saga of success". The Hindu. 15 September 2006. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
  8. Rajesh (31 October 1981). "அந்த 7 நாட்கள் : சினிமா விமர்சனம்". Ananda Vikatan (in Tamil).
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