Jallikattu Kaalai
Jallikattu Kaalai (transl. The Jallikattu Bull) is a 1994 Indian Tamil film, directed by Manivasagam, starring Prabhu and Kanaka. The film, produced by K. Balu, has musical score by Deva and was a Diwali release.[1][2][3]
Jallikattu Kaalai | |
---|---|
Poster | |
Directed by | Manivasagam |
Produced by | K. Balu |
Written by | Manivasagam K. C. Thangam (dialogues) |
Starring | |
Music by | Deva |
Cinematography | R. Raghunatha Reddy |
Edited by | L. Kesavan |
Production company | K. B. Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 161 mins |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Plot
Gopalakrishnan works in a mill owned by Sundara Gounder. Radha, Sundara Gounder's daughter, returns to the village after her studies and falls in love with Gopalakrishnan. Loose Gounder is a vicious landlord who has raped many women.
When Sundara Gounder knows about his daughter's love, Sundara Gounder arranges her marriage in a hurry, to a fraud. Before the marriage, her fiancé makes a deal with Loose Gounder: Loose Gounder can spend one night with Radha and can do whatever he wants. Gopalakrishnan then stops the marriage and the fraud is arrested by the police. Sundara Gounder apologises to Gopalakrishnan and Radha marries her lover Gopalakrishnan.
Loose Gounder, who cannot digest that his plan failed, kills one of Gopalakrishnan's calves and the first night is therefore cancelled. One night, Radha sees her husband Gopalakrishnan having a conversation with the flower seller Poovatha. When Radha asks her to explain what happened, Poovatha lies to her that she had sexual intercourse with her husband Gopalakrishnan prior to their marriage.
At their first night, Gopalakrishnan clarifies that Poovatha had lied, but Radha does not believe him and Gopalakrishnan challenges her to prove her wrong right away. Poovatha was actually forced to lie because Loose Gounder raped her in the past and he had promised Poovatha to marry her. Thereafter, Loose Gounder kills Poovatha in her house and at that time, Gopalakrishnan comes to her house. Radha, who secretly followed him after the quarrel, believes that Gopalakrishnan killed Poovatha.
Gopalakrishnan eventually finds the culprit, but in the meantime, Loose Gounder kidnaps him and his wife. The film ends with Loose Gounder being killed by Gopalakrishnan's cow, the mother of the killed calf.
Cast
- Prabhu as Gopalakrishnan
- Kanaka as Radha
- Anandaraj as a Loose Gounder
- Shenbagam as Poovatha
- Goundamani as Arusamy, Gopalakrishnan's uncle
- Senthil as Punnakku
- Manorama as Subbulakshmi, Gopalakrishnan's mother
- Malaysia Vasudevan as Sundara Gounder, Radha's father
- Suryakanth
- Prasanna Kumar as Astrologer
- Shoban
- Sangeetha as Radha's mother
- Ragasudha
- Shakeela as Pushpavanam
- Karuppu Subbiah
- Pasi Narayanan
- Thiruppur Ramasamy
- Chitraguptan
Soundtrack
Jallikattu Kaalai | |
---|---|
Soundtrack album by Deva | |
Released | 1994 |
Recorded | 1994 |
Genre | Feature film soundtrack |
Producer | Deva |
The film score and the soundtrack were composed by Deva. The soundtrack, released in 1994, has five tracks, with lyrics written by Kalidasan.[4]
Track | Song | Singer(s) | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
1 | "Aanakili" | Mano, Swarnalatha | 6:14 |
2 | "Nadaya Ithu Nadaya" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam | 5:13 |
3 | "Nimmathi Enna Vilai" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam | 5:08 |
4 | "Sirumalli Poove" | Mano, K. S. Chithra | 5:04 |
5 | "Thookanakuruvi" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, K. S. Chithra | 4:57 |
Critical reception
K. Vijiyan of the New Straits Times described it as "tedious" and wrote that "it did not live up to expectations".[5] The Indian Express wrote, "Its the oft-repeated story [..] The situations are routine and scenes cliched."[6]
References
- "filmography of jallikattu kaalai". Cinesouth. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- "Find Tamil Movie Jallikattu Kaalai". Joint Scene. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- "Jallikattu Kaalai". popcorn.oneindia. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- "Find Tamil Movie Jallikattu Kaalai". Joint Scene. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- Vijiyan, K (19 November 1994). "Another tedious boy-meets-girl tale". New Straits Times. p. 27.
- "Run-of-the-(oil)-mill". The Indian Express. 4 November 1994. p. 6.