Oru Kaidhiyin Diary
Oru Kaidhiyin Diary (transl. A Prisoner's Diary) is a 1985 Tamil-language action thriller film directed by P. Bharathiraja and written by K. Bhagyaraj. The film stars Kamal Haasan. It was high financially successful and completed 175 day run in theatres become silver jubille film, and was remade in Hindi as Aakhree Raasta (1986), directed by K. Bhagyaraj.
Oru Kaidhiyin Diary | |
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Poster | |
Directed by | P. Bharathiraja |
Produced by | Chandraleela Bharathiraja |
Screenplay by | P. Bharathiraja |
Story by | K. Bhagyaraj |
Starring | |
Music by | Ilaiyaraaja |
Cinematography | B. Kannan |
Edited by | V. Rajagopal |
Production company | Janani Art Creations |
Distributed by | Janani Art Creations |
Release date |
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Running time | 152 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Summary
David tries to escape from prison, but is caught and gets his sentence increased multi-fold as a result. He gets released from prison after 22 long years and visits his dear friend Velapan. The flashback shows that David and Rosy were married and had a happy life. David is politically active in the grassroots movement and introduces his wife and newborn son to the leader of his party, the powerful politician Suryaprakasam, whom David trusted and for whom he had a high regard. The child is named James, with Suryaprakasam's blessings. However, Suryaprakasam is an evil man and was smitten by Rosy, when he saw her. He concocts a dastardly plan; he organises a political protest that obstructs oncoming rail traffic with David as the leader, knowing David will get arrested; thereby allowing him access to Rosy.
Suryaprakasam succeeds in his evil plan. Rosy then comes to him for help in getting David released. Suryaprakasam manipulates her child away from her and then attempts to disrobe her, but Rosy escapes. However, Suryaprakasam was prepared—his sidekick threatens to harm James unless she submits—Rosy was forced to submit and come back—Suryaprakasam then rapes her violently with his henchmen's help. Shamed and humiliated, Rosy then commits suicide by hanging herself and leaves her husband a handwritten note with the details. Meanwhile, Velapan bails out David. David, who is proud to have gone to jail for Suryaprakasam's protest, comes home singing his praises (with Velapan sobbing as he knows what happened to Rosy), until he sees Rosy hanging dead and reads her note. Upset, David confronts Suryaprakasam at his birthday function and makes a scene. Inspector Viswanathan and Dr. Unnikrishnan pretend to help David but are actually Suryaprakasam's friends. They successfully manipulate Rosy's note away from David and destroy it, thereby the entire evidence of the crime, laughing all the while at the hapless David.
The trio then frame David for Rosy's murder, lie in court and easily win the case. David gets sentenced to prison for killing his wife. He leaves his only son with his close friend Velappan, who promises to raise David's son as a hardened thug, who will help David avenge Rosy's humiliation and death, and David's wrongful imprisonment. Upon release from prison, David sees that Velapan is a changed man, no longer engages in questionable activities, educated David's son and raised him in a righteous way. David's son James is now called "Shankar" and is a well-respected and courageous police inspector. David is upset at this news, knows he cannot count on Velapan and his own son, and vows his revenge against the trio who framed him by himself, without anyone's help.
David comes to a church and confesses to the priest that he would kill 3 people, without naming them or himself. The priest informs this to the police, who publish the news in the press and try in vain to capture the unknown would-be killer. David starts his revenge; he tricks his way into Police Headquarters by posing as a priest who knows about the would-be killer and victims, and insists that he will only discuss matter with the now Superintendent (SP) Viswanathan. He succeeds in entering SP Viswanathan's office, identifies himself and reminds the SP of his horrific betrayal and at gunpoint makes him call his friend, Dr. Unnikrishnan. He then sets up a Rube Goldbergian contraption—a hanging trap, tied to the office door. Dr. Unnikrishnan comes to the SP's office as planned; when he opens the door, SP Viswantahan is hanged and kicks out in the throes of death, watched by the aghast Dr. Unni Krishnan. David then escapes from the pursuing police led by Inspector Shankar. Unfortunately, David left clues in a tape-recorded conversation at SP Viswanathan's office and Inspector Shankar investigates and identifies the other two victims as Dr. Unnikrishnan and Suryaprakasam. Undaunted, David then kills Dr. Unnikrishnan too with a telescopic rifle, despite strong police protection and escapes again. David is supported by Sharadha, the love of Shankar, who knows about and sympathises with his revenge and wife's rape. The climax shows David killing his last target, Suryaprakasam, and how Shankar has to do his duty of shooting his father.
Cast
- Kamal Haasan as David and James alias CID Inspector Shankar
- Revathi as Sharadha
- Radha as Rosy
- Janagaraj as Velappan
- Malaysia Vasudevan as Suryaprakasam the Politician
- Vijayan as Dr. Unnikrishnan
- Vinu Chakravarthy – Inspector and S. P. Viswanathan
Production
Kamal and Bharathiraaja initially began production on a film titled Top Takkar. After 5,000 feet (1,500 m) was canned, the film was shelved as Bharathiraaja felt it was becoming too similar to his and Kamal's earlier film Sigappu Rojakkal (1978), and decided to collaborate with Kamal on a different film, which eventually became Oru Kaidhiyin Diary.[1] The makeup for Kamal was provided by Michael Westmore.[2]
Soundtrack
Oru Kaidhiyin Diary | |||||
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Film score by | |||||
Genre | Feature film soundtrack | ||||
Length | 17:36 | ||||
Language | Tamil | ||||
Label | Echo | ||||
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The music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja with lyrics by Vairamuthu.[3] The song "ABC Nee Vasi" is set in the carnatic raga known as Mohanam.[4] The song "Ponmaane" is set in Sivaranjani raga.[5]
No. | Title | Lyrics | Singer(s) | Length |
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1. | "ABC Nee Vasi" | Vairamuthu | K. J. Yesudas, Vani Jairam | 4:01 |
2. | "Ithu Rosa Poovu" | Vairamuthu | Vani Jairam, Gangai Amaran & Chorus | 4:30 |
3. | "Naan Thaan Sooran" | Vairamuthu | S. P. Balasubramanyam, Vani Jairam & Chorus | 4:31 |
4. | "Ponmane Kovam Yeno" | Vairamuthu | Unni Menon, Uma Ramanan | 4:34 |
Total length: | 17:36 |
Remake
Oru Kaidhiyin Diary was remade in Hindi as Aakhree Raasta (1986), directed by K. Bhagyaraj starring Amitabh Bachchan, Sridevi, Jayapradha and Anupam Kher. The Hindi version was highly successful too.[6] Despite having a dubbed version in Telugu titled Khaidi Veta, this film was remade in Telugu as Marana Homam, starring Krishnam Raju.[7]
References
- Raman, Mohan V. (8 July 2016). "எதிர்வினை: ஒரு கதையின் டைரி!" [Reaction: A Story's Diary!]. The Hindu Tamil. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
- Haasan, Kamal (20 October 2012). "'Of course Velu Nayakan doesn't dance'". The Hindu. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
- "Oru Kaidhiyin Diary (1985)". Raaga.com. Archived from the original on 22 December 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
- Sundararaman (2007) [2005]. Raga Chintamani: A Guide to Carnatic Ragas Through Tamil Film Music (2nd ed.). Pichhamal Chintamani. p. 121.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Mani, Charulatha (28 September 2012). "Sivaranjani for pathos". The Hindu. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- Jeshi, K. (25 December 2010). "Of wit and humour". The Hindu. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
- https://cinemacinemacinemasite.wordpress.com/2016/08/21/popular-subject-of-80s/