Kannadi Maaligai

Kannadi Maaligai (transl.Mansion of mirrors) is a 1962 Indian Tamil-language action film directed by Sami-Mahesh and produced by T. R. Radharani under Rani Productions. Radharani also stars as the female lead along with M. R. Radha, S. A. Ashokan, V. Nagaiah, S. D. Subbulakshmi and A. K. Mohan.[1]

Kannadi Maaligai
Directed bySami-Mahesh
Produced byT. R. Radharani
Written bySami
StarringT. R. Radharani
M. R. Radha
S. A. Ashokan
V. Nagaiah
S. D. Subbulakshmi
A. K. Mohan
Production
company
Rani Productions
Release date
1962
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

Karunakaran, a wealthy zamindar and his wife lead an unhappy life, thinking of their lost daughter. Karunakaran's manager Ratnam saves Rani, a woman working in Karunakaran's tea estate, from a hooded man who is thought to have supernatural powers. Ratnam gives her protection, the two fall in love, and she delivers his daughter who is stolen from her soon after. Ratnam indulges in many criminal activities with his friend Manohar, and soon abandons Rani. Enraged, Rani becomes a masculine vigilante and begins targeting criminals like Ratnam, who tries to marry another wealthy woman.

Rani is befriended by a group of sympathetic tribal people who give her protection. After a series of murders and robberies, Ratnam and Manohar frame the masked leader of the gang (Rani) for the crimes. Rani decides that she herself will expose the criminals and eventually realises that Manohar is the hooded man who attacked her in the estate, that the other member of the gang is actually Ratnam, and that she is the lost daughter of Karunakaran. She also succeeds in locating her own missing daughter, while Ratnam and Manohar are exposed of their crimes.

Cast

Production

M. R. Radha was paid 60,000 (equivalent to 4.1 million or US$58,000 in 2019) for acting in the film. T. R. Saroja (sister of the film's producer and lead actress T. R. Radharani) also featured in a prominent role. Sami, one half of the director duo Sami-Mahesh, worked as screenwriter. The film was in black and white, and shot mostly in Hogenakkal by cinematographer Chitti Babu.[1] Another shooting location was Gobichettipalayam.[2]

Reception

Film historian Randor Guy praised Kannaadi Maaligai for its storyline, the cast performances and the cinematography, but noted that it was not successful as it was expected to be. The film's Telugu-dubbed version Addala Meda was not successful.[1]

gollark: I see. I suppose this takes slightly less time than copy-paste.
gollark: I once (well, actually three times) used gdb.
gollark: I don't see how an SQL runner thing is better than a terminal which can run `sqlite3` or `psql` or `deploy_bees_against_any_database_ever`.
gollark: Not that I *use* a linter, of course.
gollark: I mean, for git I have a CLI, for SQL I also have a CLI, for linting I have various VSC extensions, for running I have a terminal, I don't know how to use debuggers.]

References

  1. Guy, Randor (14 June 2014). "Kannadi Maaligai (1962)". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 18 January 2017. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  2. "Gobichettipalayam - a 'paradise' for cinema directors". The Times of India. 7 March 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.