Vijayakumari (film)

Vijayakumari is a 1950 Indian Tamil language film directed by A. S. A. Sami.[2] The film featured K. R. Ramaswamy and T. R. Rajakumari in the lead roles.[1]

Vijayakumari
Tamilவிஜயகுமாரி
Directed byA. S. A. Sami
Produced byM. Somasundaram
Written byDialogues
A. S. A. Sami
Screenplay byA. S. A. Sami
Story byA. S. A. Sami
StarringK. R. Ramaswamy
T. R. Rajakumari
Serukulathur Sama
T. S. Balaiah
Kumari Kamala
P. K. Saraswathi
M. N. Nambiar
Music byC. R. Subburaman
CinematographyMasthan,
W. R. Subba Rao
Art:
A. K. Sekar
Edited byD. Durairaj
Production
company
Release date
  • 18 March 1950 (1950-03-18) (India)
[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

This is the story of a young man who works to bring changes in the society destroying corruption and superstitious beliefs. The story is set in a kingdom that had a wily minister. The princess falls in love with the young man, but the minister has ideas to marry the princess to his son. The young man and his sister are tormented by the minister.[3]

Cast

List adapted from The Hindu article.[3]

Production

This is a historical film, but almost like a folklore film, produced by M. Somasundaram under the banner Jupiter Pictures. After the success of Velaikkaari, the producer encouraged A. S. A. Sami to bring out another film with a similar theme. Sami created the character of a young man with revolutionary ideas and the same hero K. R. Ramaswamy was featured in the role.

Soundtrack

Music was composed by C. R. Subburaman, while the lyrics were penned by Udumalai Narayana Kavi.[1] The film had 14 songs, some of them of Western style. The dance song Laalu Laalu written by K. D. Santhanam and rendered by Vyjayanthimala became popular.[3]

No.SongSinger/sLyricsDuration (m:ss)
1"Laalu Laalu"A. P. KomalaK. D. Santhanam02:39
2"Geethaanandham Perinbam"M. L. Vasanthakumari & P. Leela04:59
3"Vaa Vavvaa Kittey Vaa Vavvaa"A. P. Komala & Pulimoottai Ramasamy03:14
3""A. L. Raghavan
4"Pandrimalai Panimamalai"A. P. Komala & K. V. Janaki

Reception

In spite of the reformist theme, the film did not do well because of its complicated story. Film historian Randor Guy wrote in 2009 that the film is remembered for "the western-style dances by Vyjayanthimala and Lalitha-Padmini, catchy western tunes and good production values."[3]

gollark: I guess it's possible that even one which doesn't know about parties might accidentally be biased due to (hypothetically, I don't know if this is true) one party being popular in low-density areas and the other in high-density, or really any other difference in locations.
gollark: You don't actually need simple shapes very badly as long as you have an algorithm which is not likely to be biased.
gollark: Okay, rearrange the states so they're square.
gollark: A simple if slightly inaccurate way would be some kind of binary space partitioning thing, where (pretending the US is a perfect square) you just repeatedly divide it in half (alternatingly vertically/horizontally), but stop dividing a particular subregion when population goes below some target number.
gollark: The more complex the algorithm the more people might try and manipulate it. The obvious* solution is to just split up the country by latitude/longitude grid squares.

References

  1. 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 28 March 2017.
  2. Ashish Rajadhyaksha & Paul Willemen. Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema (PDF). Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1998. p. 654.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  3. Guy, Randor (5 November 2009). "Blast from the past: Vijayakumari (1950)". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 28 March 2017. Retrieved 28 March 2017.

Vijayakumari on IMDb

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.