Thooku Medai

Thooku Medai (transl.Gallows) is a 1982 Tamil-language Indian feature film directed by Amirtham and written by M. Karunanidhi. The film stars Chandrasekhar and Menaka in the lead roles. It is an adaptation of Karunanidhi's play of the same name.

Thooku Medai
Poster
Directed byAmirtham
Produced bySri Appan Films
Screenplay byM. Karunanidhi
Based onThooku Medai
by M. Karunanidhi
StarringChandrasekhar
Menaka
Music byShankar Ganesh
Release date
1982
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Cast

Production

Thooku Medai was a film adaptation of the controversial stage play of same name written by M. Karunanidhi who had scripted the film version too.[1]

Soundtrack

Soundtrack was composed by Shankar Ganesh.[2][3]

  • Aayiram Piraigal – Vani Jayaram
  • Iniyoru Thollaiyum – T. M. Soundarrajan
  • Kudi Uyara – T. M. Soundarrajan
  • Kurinji Malar – P. Jayachandran, Vani Jayaram

Controversy

Karunanidhi was displeased with censor board for reducing 500 feet of the film which contained his dialogues "focussed on the long search from Madurai to Tiruchendur".[4]

Reception

The film failed commercially.[5]

gollark: But it can represent stuff so it sounds *roughly* right at surprisingly low bitrates.
gollark: Dynamic Filter Pulse Width Modulation, it's some weird custom codec.
gollark: I made a program which uses ffmpeg and LionRay (WAV→DFPWM encoder) to convert a bunch of music to DFPWM for tape use, and adds metadata so you can select tracks on a tape.
gollark: You can download 32 minutes of (low-quality) music onto that!
gollark: A superior minecraft tape.

References

  1. Shekar, Anjana (8 August 2018). "How Karunanidhi the playwright gave birth to Karunanidhi the politician". The News Minute. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
  2. "Thookku Medai songs". Friendstamilmp3.com. Archived from the original on 17 September 2019. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
  3. "Thookumedai (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) – EP". Apple Music. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  4. Pratap, Anita (23–29 May 1982). "Producers protest against unjustified censorship". Sunday. Vol. 9 no. 49.
  5. Laul, Brian (16 January 1983). "Where Cinema Is Politics and Politics Is Cinema". The Illustrated Weekly of India. p. 19.


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