Kangalal Kaidhu Sei (transl. Arrest Me with Your Eyes) is a 2004 Indian Tamil-language romantic psychological thriller film co-written by Sujatha and directed by Bharathiraja. It stars Vaseegaran and marks Priyamani's debut in Tamil cinema. It also marks the only Tamil film appearance of the Sri Lankan actor Sanath Gunathilake. The film revolves around a young, wealthy kleptomaniac's quest to find the love of his dreams in a young woman who is tasked to retrieve a stolen diamond from him.
Kangalal Kaidhu Sei | |
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Directed by | Bharathiraja |
Written by | Sujatha (Dialogues) |
Story by | S. Premnath |
Produced by | K. Muralitharan V. Swaminathan |
Starring | Vaseegaran Priyamani |
Cinematography | B. Kannan |
Edited by | K. Pazhanivel |
Music by | A. R. Rahman |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
The cinematography was done by B. Kannan, while editing was done by K. Pazhanivel. The music was scored by A. R. Rahman, marking his fifth and final collaboration with Bharathiraja. Kangalal Kaidhu Sei was released on 20 February 2004, and became a box office failure.
Plot
editJohn Vaseegaran, also called "Vasee", is a young man who ranks as the 5th richest man in India and 30th in the world. In business, his major rival is Pratap, who was earlier a rival to Vasee's parents. The plot opens in a graveyard where his parents' funeral takes place. Vasee is not disturbed by the demise of his parents as he has not been showered with any affection by them. Instead they spent their attention only on developing their business and making money. A lady attending the funeral expresses her condolence to Vasee and leaves. While getting into her car she finds that her diamond ring is missing and starts shouting. Pratap, who is also present there, hears her. Vasee quietly takes out the ring from his pocket and puts it back there.
Soon, Vasee, at the age of 21, inherits the property of his parents and becomes the chairman of 42 companies. However he is unhappy in his life and yearns for motherly affection. Besides, he is also a kleptomaniac. He consults his family doctor for a solution. The doctor instructs him to find love, which makes him dream of a loving, maternal figure named "Cinderella" based on the fairytale character of the same name.
Vidhya, a young woman working in a shopping mall run by Pratap, sees Vasee stealing a crystal from the shopping mall. Later, a diamond exhibition is organised, and Pratap is exhibiting his special diamond with 16 reflecting faces, which is worth ₹10 crore. This diamond is under the responsibility of Vidhya. She notices Vasee at the exhibition and becomes alert. Shortly afterwards, Vasee steals the diamond in spite of tight security and leaves. Vidhya is questioned by police and charged with theft. Under interrogation Vidhya remembers Vasee's presence and relates the old incident of crystal theft. She immediately understands that Vasee is the thief and tells the police, but the police do not believe her as he is a wealthy man. But Pratap believes her as he remembers the diamond ring theft in the graveyard. In fact, Pratap himself once lost a golden wristlet while shaking Vasee's hand.
As per Pratap's plan, Vidhya enters Vasee's home as his personal secretary. Vasee asks her to dress in modern attire, and she does so. He sees his dream girl Cinderella in Vidhya and starts developing love for her, but she is not interested in him. Meanwhile, Vidhya searches for the diamond and spots it in a big fish tank. Soon, she is asked to accompany Vasee to the airport from which he is to take a plane for attending a meeting. Vidhya suddenly disappears when she notices Vasee's doctor. Soon, Vasee too rushes home when informed by the doctor that Vidhya and a police officer named Premkumar met him for an inquiry about Vasee. At home, he sees the broken fish tank and understands that Vidhya took the diamond. Vidhya is happy as she is relieved from the first charge, but is soon charged again for theft.
The diamond taken from Vasee by Vidhya is not the original one, but a fake made from crystal. Pratap demands Vidhya to have an illicit relation with him in return for her discharge from the case. Vidhya rushes to Vasee and pleads him to give back the diamond as it destroys her future and life. She expresses that she cannot be in love with him or marry him. Then Premkumar arrives, reveals to Vasee that he is Vidhya's fiancé and threatens to get him caught and jailed. However Vidhya undergoes torture under police custody for her second charge and Premkumar is rendered powerless in proving Vidhya's innocence. Then Vasee bails Vidhya from police custody and demands her to be his Cinderella for five days in Switzerland as a punishment for attacking him psychologically with love as a weapon. He assures no physical contact but only love. Vidhya initially refuses, but due to the pressure from Premkumar to save his position, she agrees to go with Vasee.
At the Swiss airport, Vidhya bumps into an Interpol officer who introduces himself as Kailash. Vasee takes her to his Swiss residence and introduces her to all of his friends, teachers, etc. Then he and Vidhya poses for photographs. That night Vidhya has a nightmare of Vasee misbehaving with her. The next day, she breaks one of the photographs out of frustration. Later that day, Vasee sees Vidhya talking to Kailash from a distance. When he enters, he sees the broken pieces of the photograph. Vasee confronts Vidhya and screams at her that it is his family photo and that she has no rights to break it. The next day, Kailash finds Vasee alone at a church talking to himself. Later he is similarly spotted alone on a hilltop. Likewise on the fourth day, he is seen talking to himself on a boat on Lake Thun. Kailash quickly informs the officers in India and in Switzerland. They immediately rush to Vasee's home to rescue Vidhya. But they find only the dead bodies of Vasee and Vidhya dressed in groom and bride costumes. They also find Pratap's diamond placed on Vidhya's coffin. Vasee actually slapped Vidhya on the day that she broke the photograph. Unexpectedly, she died by dashing into a heavy stone, after which, Vasee dressed Vidhya's body in a bridal gown and preserved her in a coffin. As soon as the cops arrive during the fifth day, Vasee, dressed in a bridegroom's suit, shoots himself with his golden gun. The cops also see a note on the top of Vidhya's coffin, in which Vasee instructs the authorities to spend his property in the name of Cinderella Trust to help the poor and needy.
Cast
edit- Vaseegaran as John Vaseegaran
- Priyamani as Vidhya/Cinderella
- Sanath Gunathilake as Pratap
- Akash as Premkumar
- Mayilsamy as Barber
- Chitra Lakshmanan as Subramaniam
- S. Premnath as James
- Theni Murugan as Vanadurai
- V. Swaminathan as Kailash
- B. Kannan as John Vaseegaran's family friend
- G. K. as Director general of police
- Laxmi Rattan as Dominic Louis Mariadas
- Ilavarasu as John Vaseegaran's servant (uncredited role)[1]
Production
editBharathiraja had initially selected Rathi Arumugam to play the lead role, but she was later dropped from the project.[2] Priyamani, who worked as a model for various advertisements, was subsequently selected for the role after a series of screen tests and the film marked her debut in Tamil cinema.[3] Vaseegaran from Palladam, whose birth name is Fazal Ahmed, also worked as a model before being selected for his role through screen tests. He was given the screen name Vaseegaran when he made his debut in this film.[4] Both Vaseegaran and Priyamani were positively reviewed for their respective performances in the film.[3][4]
The climax scene was shot in Switzerland and so were a couple of songs. One of the songs was picturised at the airport, where Vaseegaran and Priyamani took part. Earlier, a 36 days' shooting schedule was held at Sri Lanka. After this the unit shifted to locations in Chennai and Ooty.[5]
Soundtrack
editThe soundtrack was composed by A. R. Rahman and includes an introductory speech by Bharathiraja. The soundtrack got critical acclaim and immediate praise.[6]
Song | Singer(s) | Lyrics | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
"Azhagiya Cinderella" | Hariharan | Pa. Vijay | 4:58 |
"Anarkali" | Karthik, Chitra Sivaraman, Kadhir, Murtuza Khan | Pa. Vijay | 6:47 |
"Aaha Thamizamma" | A. R. Reihana, Mathangi Jagdish, Blaaze | Kabilan | 5:21 |
"Theekuruvi" | Johnson, Harini, Mukesh Mohamed | Thenmozhi | 4:32 |
"Ennuyir Thozhiyae" | Unni Menon, Chinmayee | Pa. Vijay | 5:55 |
Reception
editMalini Mannath of Chennai Online wrote that "If a little more of the thought and energy spent on making the frills attractive, had been spent on the structuring of the script, perhaps K K S would have turned out to be an engaging thriller".[7] A critic from Sify wrote that "What happens when veteran directors in search of box-office gold moves away from their traditional mooring to a new genre? It will only spell disaster, as in the case of Bharathiraaja and his new thriller Kangalal Kaithu Sei".[8] Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu wrote that "Kangalal ... has many Bharatiraaja touches. But does it have the skilled master's magic of the past?"[9]
References
edit- ^ Kangalal Kaidhu Sei (motion picture) (in Tamil). Lakshmi Movie Makers. 2004. Event occurs at 37:22.
- ^ Rasika (23 July 2002). "Nothing is certain". Chennai Online. Archived from the original on 2 January 2003. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ^ a b Rozario, Rayan (22 December 2003). "Graceful debut". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 19 January 2004. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ^ a b Allirajan, M. (22 March 2004). "CHARMING hero". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 24 January 2005. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ^ Mannath, Malini (15 December 2003). "Kangalal Kaidhu Sei". Chennai Online. Archived from the original on 24 December 2003. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ^ K.P. (15 January 2004). "Chords & Notes". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 30 January 2022. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
- ^ Mannath, Malini (1 March 2004). "Kangalal Kaidhu Sei". Chennai Online. Archived from the original on 4 December 2004. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ^ "Kangalal Kaithu Sei". Sify. Archived from the original on 29 May 2014. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ^ Rangarajan, Malathi (27 February 2004). "Kangalal Kaidhu Sei". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 1 May 2004. Retrieved 30 January 2022.