Minsara Kanna

Minsara Kanna is a 1999 Indian Tamil-language romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by K. S. Ravikumar. The film features Vijay and Monica Castelino in the lead roles, while an ensemble supporting cast includes Kushboo, Rambha, Manivannan, Mansoor Ali Khan, R. Sundarrajan, Karan and Kovai Sarala. The film's title was derived from the song of the same name in Padayappa, which was also directed by Ravi.

Minsara Kanna
Theatrical release poster
Directed byK. S. Ravikumar
Produced byK. R. Gangadharan
Bhaumik Gondaliya
Written byK. S. Ravikumar
Story byK. S Ravikumar
StarringVijay
Monica Castelino
Rambha
Kushboo
Music byDeva
CinematographyAshok Rajan
Edited byK. Thanigachalam
Production
company
K. R. G Movies International
Release date
9 September 1999
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Kushboo appeared as one of the main lead actress of the film. The story is about how Vijay enters her house and developing his romance towards Monica, Kushboo's sister.[1][2] The music is composed by Deva. The film released on 9 September 1999 and become average hit.

Plot

Indra Devi (Kushboo), the elder sister of Ishwarya (Monica Castelino), is a rich and arrogant entrepreneur. Priya (Rambha) is her personal assistant. All three of them live in Udhagamandalam (Ooty). Kannan (Vijay) is the only son of a multi-billionaire Devanathan (Manivannan), and has fallen in love with Ishwarya after meeting her in Germany. But after hearing about Indra Devi’s over protective nature towards Ishwarya, Kannan comes to India with his family to somehow convince her under the guise of being a bodyguard to Indra’s family. His younger brother Vetri (Mahendran) works as a servant boy, and his sister serves as a cook for Indra Devi's family. Meanwhile, Indra Devi has a rival Vedhachalam (Mansoor Ali Khan), who is determined to get his son Ashok (Karan) married to Ishwarya. Priya falls in love with Kannan for his good nature, but later gives it to Ishwarya after knowing Kannan and Ishwarya's story and the purpose of their visit to India. It is revealed that Indra hates men because her lover Indra Kumar (B. H. Tharun Kumar) refused to marry her after her face was disfigured in a fire accident. She has since worked hard, educated her sister and has grown wealthy and has done plastic surgery to restore her face. Kannan's family waits for Indra Devi's permission for her sister's marriage, but she agrees to Vedhachalam’s marriage proposal for his son Ashok, but Ashok realizes that Ishwarya loves Kannan and unites them despite the opposition from Vedhachalam. Indra Devi is disappointed and in a fit of rage she tries to commit suicide, but Kannan stops her and says that Ishwarya will die of guilt if she loses Indra for him. He leaves them alone and returns to Germany. In their residence, to everyone's surprise, Indra Devi and Ishwarya appear. Indra has a change of heart and wholeheartedly accepts Kannan as her sister's life partner for his good nature, though he pretended to be a servant. Indra is also united with her lover who has realized his mistakes.

Cast

Production

Following the success of Padayappa (1999), producer K. R. Gangadharan signed on K. S. Ravikumar to direct a film and was insistent that the title should be Minsara Kanna, after the popular song from Ravikumar's earlier film. The story and script of the film was then subsequently worked on by Ravikumar and co-written by M. A. Kennedy, who had previously worked in the film Pistha.[3] The film was launched in March 1999 at the Kavithalaya Studio, with Rajinikanth, Vijay, Ravikumar and K. Balachandar attending the inaugural event and the filming began in May 1999. The film saw the first and only collaboration to date between K. S. Ravikumar and Vijay, with the actor mentioning he was delighted with the pace and commitment that the director injected into production.[4] It was initially reported that Vijay would play a dual role but this proved to be untrue. For female lead Simran approached by Vijay, but the actress refused the offer due to the role has not much importance than the second lead and the antagonist which is played by Kushboo, then newface Monicka got the opportunity to make her debut. Furthermore, Isha Koppikar and Meena were linked to play the second lead in the film before Rambha was confirmed.[5]

Shooting took place in and around Ooty, ECR in Chennai,some scenes were shot in Germany where other few scenes were shot in Interlaken which is located in Switzerland, with two songs being canned in the Alps area.[6][7]

Release

The film was awarded with pure 'U' certificate by the CBFC. The satellite rights of the film were purchased by Sun TV. The film opened to average reviews, with the critic of Indolink.com claiming the film "jogs along easily before becoming enmeshed in sentiments and cinematic cliches which make the last part of the movie all but watchable".[8] The New Indian Express criticized Vijay's performance claiming "greatest actor", and that "film drags on aimlessly" though praised Deva's soundtrack.[9] Deccan Herald also gave the film a negative review labelling that Vijay "is painful to watch and even worse to listen to", labelling it is "an exercise in how to waste a good movie".[10]


Soundtrack

Minsara Kanna
Soundtrack album by
Deva
Released1999
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelBayshore
Deva chronology
Nenjinile
(1999)
Minsara Kanna
(1999)
Khushi
(2000)

The soundtrack of the film was composed by Deva, was well received by the audience. The lyrics were written by Vaali, Kalaikumar, Na. Muthukumar.

SongSingersLyrics
Oodha Oodha Hariharan, Harini Vaali
Boy Frienda Mano, Sujatha Mohan Vaali
Un Per Solla Sujatha Mohan Na. Muthukumar
Un Per Solla (duet) Hariharan, Sujatha Mohan Na. Muthukumar
Theemukka S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Chitra Vaali
Oh Uncle Mano Kalaikumar
gollark: Why write maintainable code if you could write cryptic incomprehensible code for job security?
gollark: ```haskellmain = putStrLn "Hello, world!"```
gollark: I'm at the point of knowing the syntax and basic libraries and stuff, but I have no idea how to write useful code.
gollark: Also monads, which are burritos, oranges in a radioactive spacesuit, and also `Monad m => (a -> m b) -> m a -> m b`.
gollark: I find it very hard to reason about code which frequently ends up chopping up infinite lists.

References

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