Vanaraja Karzan

Vanaraja Karzan (transl.Karzan, the Jungle King) is a 1938 Indian Tamil-language action film directed by Homi Wadia and Nari Ghadiali. The film stars John Cawas and K. R. Chellam in the lead roles. It is the first Tamil film based on the character Tarzan, the first Tamil film to be shot in forests, as well as the first South Indian jungle-based film. Vanaraja Karzan was released on 4 June 1938, and became a commercial success, besides receiving significant attention for Chellam wearing a revealing outfit. The Hindi version, Jungle King was released the following year.

Vanaraja Karzan
Poster
Directed byHomi Wadia
Nari Ghadiali
Screenplay byS. R. Krishnaswamy Iyengar
Story byJ. B. H. Wadia
StarringJohn Cawas
K. R. Chellam
Music by"Yanai" Anantharama Iyer
Vaithyanatha Iyer
CinematographyRustum Maybar
Bali Mistry
Production
company
Wadia Movitone
Madras United Artists Corporation
Release date
  • 4 June 1938 (1938-06-04)
Running time
160 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
Hindi

Plot

A man named Kulasekaran comes to the Vanarajapuram forest with his wife and little son Karzan to find the secret of Amirdharasam (elixir of life) after fighting with his father Veerasingam, who disapproved of his plan to be in the forest. After considerable efforts for several days, Kulasekaran finds the "Amirdharasam" secret, which he writes in a piece of paper and locks it inside a locket of Karzan's necklace. One day, Kulasekaran is killed by lions in the forest, and his wife also dies in the attack. Using a balloon, a tribal "Dada" escapes with the child and his dog Moti from there.

15 years pass. Dada, Moti and the child live in the forest. Karzan has grown close to animals and is uncivilised. Since he moves only with animals, he learns their language. Veerasingam, on learning of the death of his son, comes to the same forest with his adopted daughter Leela to find his grandson. On the way, Sabapathi, a man seeking the secret of Amirdharasam, joins him in their search expedition. A tribal group suddenly surrounds and attacks them, but Karzan appears and saves them. Sabapathi, noticing the locket which has the secret on Karzan's neck, tries to shoot him to obtain it. However, Leela and Veerasingam stop him.

The next day, Sabapathi shoots Dada in a fight and injures him. Karzan gets angry with this betrayal and kidnaps Leela as revenge. She struggles to escape from him, yet saves Dada by removing the bullet shot by Sabapathi. Karzan expresses his gratitude and affection, and she realises his innocence. Both fall in love; she teaches him how to speak like a man and they spend their time happily.

Veerasingam is sad that even his adopted daughter is lost. One day, tribals attack and kidnap Veerasingam and Sabapathi along with Leela and Moti to be sacrificed to their God Gorilla. Karzan, Dada and Moti save the expedition members from the tribals. Karzan impresses everyone with his valour. Moti jumps from a height of 100 feet to assist Karzan in his rescue effort. Now Veerasingam realises that Karzan is his long lost grandson and Leela's suitor. Sabapathi finds his secret in the locket and they return to civilisation to live happily.[1]

Production

Vanaraja Karzan was a collaborative venture between Wadia Movitone and the Madras United Artists Corporation.[2] Directed by Homi Wadia and Nari Ghadiali, it was the first Tamil film based on the character Tarzan,[3] with John Cawas cast in the role, renamed "Karzan" for the film. K. R. Chellam was cast as the female lead Leela, T. K. T. Chari as Veerasingam (the paternal grandfather of Karzan), and M. K. Venkatapathy as Sabapathi.[1] The story was written by J. B. H. Wadia, and the screenplay by S. R. Krishnaswamy Iyengar. Cinematography was handled by Rustum Maybar and Bali Mistry.[3] Vanaraja Karzan became the first South Indian "jungle" film,[4] as well as the first Tamil film to be shot in forests.[5] The film was also made in Hindi as Jungle King.[6][3]

Soundtrack

The music was composed by "Yanai" Anantharama Iyer and Vaithyanatha Iyer.[3]

Release and reception

Vanaraja Karzan was released on 4 June 1938,[3] and Jungle King was released the following year.[6] Apart from the former attaining commercial success,[4] it also gained significant attention for Chellam wearing a revealing outfit.[7]

gollark: No, that's in potatOS.
gollark: You can even conveniently do `x = assert(thing)`, because the return value of `assert` there is `thing`.
gollark: Maybe I could make a useful utility library out of the random code I copy between projects a lot, like `map`, `fread`, `fwrite`, `fetch` and all that.
gollark: Also an approximate cross-server TPS measuring thing, although that's something like 5 lines of code and really does not need a library much (unless I add rolling averages and stuff).
gollark: I also have a ridiculously gigantic DEFLATE thing tweaked slightly from jackmacwindows's port of some WoW developer's thing.

References

  1. Dhananjayan, G. (2011). The Best of Tamil Cinema. 1. Galatta Media. pp. 32–33.
  2. Pillai 2015, p. 89.
  3. Film News Anandan (23 October 2004). Sadhanaigal Padaitha Thamizh Thiraipada Varalaru [History of Landmark Tamil Films] (in Tamil). Chennai: Sivakami Publishers. Archived from the original on 3 September 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  4. Vijaykumar, B. (24 October 2010). "Vanamala-1951". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 3 September 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  5. நெல்பா (26 December 2011). "4 வருடம் ஓடிய படம்". Kungumam (in Tamil). Retrieved 14 July 2018.
  6. Pillai 2015, p. 33.
  7. Guy, Randor. "From Silents to Sivaji Ganesan!". Appusami. Retrieved 14 July 2018.

Bibliography

  • Pillai, Swarnavel Eswaran (2015). Madras Studios: Narrative, Genre, and Ideology in Tamil Cinema. India: SAGE Publications.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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