Kanave Kalayadhe | |
Director: | V. Gowthaman |
Producer: | Sivasakthi Pandian |
Starring: | Murali Simran |
Cinematography: | Thangar Bachan |
Editing: | B. Lenin V. T. Vijayan |
Music: | Deva |
Studio: | Sivasakthi Movie Makers |
Runtime: | 160 minutes |
Country: | India |
Language: | Tamil |
Kanave Kalayadhe is a 1999 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film directed by V. Gowthaman in his debut. The film stars Murali and Simran, the latter in dual roles. The score and soundtrack were composed by Deva. It was produced by Sivasakthi Movie Makers. The film was released on 6 August 1999.[1]
Anand and Amritha are lovers living in Chandigarh, Punjab. While Amrita is a Punjabi, Anand is a Tamilian. To seek the approval of Amritha's parents for their marriage, Anand goes to Amritha's home in Punjab. However, before they can unite, Amritha and her family die in a bomb blast. Unable to bear the separation, Anand goes into depression. His friends take him to Chennai with the hope that he will start life afresh. There, life throws a googly at him when he sees Saradha, Amritha's lookalike. After the initial hiccups, Anand and Saradha decide to get married. But at this point, Anand learns that Shekhar, Sharada's old lover, is still waiting for her. The film ends with Anand uniting Shekar and Saradha.
Kanave Kalayadhe is the directorial debut of Gowthaman.[2] The film was shot in locations including the Golden Temple in Amritsar, Jallianwala Bagh, the Rock Garden of Chandigarh, the Wagah border and Ananthpur Sahib. Shooting coincided with the celebrations of the 300th anniversary of the founding of the Khalsa Panth.[3]
The songs in Kanave Kalayadhe are composed by Deva.[4]
Song | Singers | Lyrics | Length | |
---|---|---|---|---|
"Kannil Unnai" | 05:58 | |||
"Dilli Thaandi" | 05:17 | |||
"Kannodu Kannodu" | P. Unni Krishnan, Mahanadi Shobana | 05:28 | ||
"Poosu Manjal" | 05:38 | |||
"Poosu Manjal" | 05:41 | |||
"Vaanguda 420 Beeda" | Sabesh, Deva | Ponniyin Selvan | 05:27 |
D. S. Ramanujam of The Hindu wrote, "[''Kanave Kalayadhe''] is replete with emotional twists handled with taste and refinement by debutant director V. Gouthaman. The lead pair, Murali and Simran lend enough depth in their portrayals. The good pace the director works out in the first half through his screenplay".[5] K. P. S. of Kalki called it an old fashioned love story but praised the acting of Murali and Simran, Deva's music and Thangar Bachan's cinematography.[6]