Rojavin Raja
Rojavin Raja ("King of Roses") is a 1976 Indian Tamil film, directed by K. Vijayan and produced by N. V. Ramasamy. The film stars Sivaji Ganesan, Vanisri, A. V. M. Rajan and Cho in lead roles. The film had musical score by M. S. Viswanathan.[1][2][3][4]
Rojavin Raja | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Directed by | K. Vijayan |
Produced by | N. V. Ramasamy |
Written by | A. Veerappan |
Starring | Sivaji Ganesan Vanisri A. V. M. Rajan Major Sundarrajan Srikanth R. S. Manohar S. Varalakshmi Kumari Rukmini Sukumari V. K. Ramasamy Cho Suruli Rajan Manorama |
Music by | M. S. Viswanathan |
Cinematography | M. Kannappa |
Edited by | B. Kanthasamy |
Distributed by | N. V. R. Pictures |
Release date |
|
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Plot
Raja (Sivaji Ganesan) is the poor son of a teacher and a college student. Gopal (A. V. M. Rajan) is his rich best friend that often helps him financially. Janaki (Vanisri) is the only child of a rich man and falls in love with Raja. Her father (Major Sundararajan) objects as Raja is poor and arranges her marriage with Gopal. Raja is stuck between the wanting to be with the woman he loves and his best friend's happiness.
Cast
- Sivaji Ganesan as Raja
- Vanisri as Janaki
- A. V. M. Rajan as Gopal (Raja's Friend)
- Major Sundarrajan as Natarajan (Janaki's Father)
- Srikanth as Thiyagu (Raja's Friend)
- R. S. Manohar as Singapur Rasappa (Smuggler Enemy Role)
- S. Varalakshmi as (Gopal's Mother)
- Kumari Rukmani as Visalam (Raja's Mother)
- Sukumari as Amirtham (Janaki's Mother)
- V. K. Ramasamy
- Cho as Jambu (Raja's Friend)
- Suruli Rajan
- Manorama
- Neelu as (College professor)
- C.I.D Sakunthala as Nirmala (Raja's Friend)
- Senthamarai as (Singapur Rasappa's Assistant)
Soundtrack
The music was composed by M. S. Viswanathan.[5]
No. | Song | Singers | Lyrics | Length (m:ss) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Alankaaram" | T. M. Soundararajan, P. Susheela | Puratchidasan | 03:11 |
2 | "Janaganin Mahalai" | P. Susheela | 03:23 | |
3 | "Naalai Nee Mannavan" | T. M. Soundararajan | 03.10 | |
4 | "Odikkonde Iruppen" | T. M. Soundararajan | 03:18 | |
5 | "Rojavin Raja" | T. M. Soundararajan, P. Susheela | 03:04 |
gollark: Examples of use:```You are like 3 (three) apioforms.What even is an apioform?Alright, apioforms.Ideatic chronoapioforms in meta-ubqvian space.That idea is isomorphic to 34 apioforms!games and other programs that are apioformic to run on linux or openbds.It graphs apioform concentration (including retroactively) over time.anyway "lyric make macron" would make a fine sequel to beware apioforms and "fixing ewo" yesapioforms are form-suffixed apios```
gollark: > Derived from the Latin "apis" (bee) and "forma" (figure), "apioform" can be used as an insult, compliment, random placeholder, or for any purpose whatsoever. Mostly used in the context of esoteric programming languages, somehow. The word can be expanded by inserting or prepending prefixes such as "cryo", "pyro", "chrono", "contra" or "meta", e.g. "cryoapiocontraform", to convey additional meaning. An older form was "apiohazard", for hazardous apioforms, but this has fallen out of use.
gollark: An apioform is most accurately described as an apioform with apioformic characteristics.
gollark: Anime but in the category of endofunctors WHEN?
gollark: Oh dëär.
References
- "Rojavin Raja". filmibeat.com. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
- "Rojavin Raja". spicyonion.com. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
- "Rojavin Raja". gomolo.com. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
- "Rojavin Raja". nadigarthilagam.com. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
- "Rojavin Raja Songs". raaga.com. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.