Sudhandhiram | |
Director: | Raj Kapoor |
Screenplay: | Raj Kapoor |
Story: | Anjum Rajabali |
Producer: | K. R. Gangadharan |
Cinematography: | M. V. Panneerselvam |
Music: | S. A. Rajkumar |
Studio: | KRG Movies |
Runtime: | 146 minutes |
Country: | India |
Language: | Tamil |
Sudhandhiram is a 2000 Indian Tamil-language crime action film directed by Raj Kapoor and produced by K. R. Gangadharan. The film stars Arjun and Rambha while Raghuvaran, Radhika and Sharat Saxena play supporting roles.[1] It is a remake of the Hindi film Ghulam (1998) which itself is based on the 1954 American film On the Waterfront.
Vishwa is a goonda and an aspiring boxing champion. He does the typical goonda jobs (like scaring a batsman of the local cricket club to make sure he becomes out) for Sopraj, the local dada. He is usually bailed out by a lawyer Padmini, who believes that there is still good in him and he just needs to be given another chance. Sopraj is aiming to build a colony in the area after vacating the people already living there. Vishwa's brother Raghu, is an accountant on Sopraj's payroll. Love blossoms between Vishwa and Divya, the girlfriend of the head of a local gang. When a social worker Vikram intrudes in the affairs of Sopraj, he asks Vishwa to bring Vikram to him. Vishwa does so thinking that Sopraj is just going to talk some sense into him but Sopraj brutally kills him instead. This makes Vishwa turn over a new leaf. Though his love for his brother prevents him initially, he finally decides to turn approver against Sopraj.
Soundtrack was composed by S. A. Rajkumar and lyrics were written by Kalaikumar.[2]
Song | Singers | Length | |
---|---|---|---|
Coco Cola | 04:07 | ||
Ennanamo Matram | 05:01 | ||
Konjam Chillunu | 04:07 | ||
Mazhai Mazhai | Hariharan, Sujatha | 04:43 | |
Varthai Illamal | 05:00 |
Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu wrote, "With a rough, rugged and unkempt look, Arjun does make an impression, but not the kind he created with Mudhalvan. It is mainly because there is not enough clarity in the characterisation", and appreciated Vivek's comedy for limited double entendres, "terrific sense of timing and well conceived humour".[3] Krishna Chidambaram of Kalki wrote the biggest downfall after the biggest success is the little devil that haunts Arjun for so long, it has continued even after Mudhalvan.[4] Malini Mannath of Chennai Online wrote "The film is a remake of that successful Hindi film 'Ghulam'. No doubt, it had a well-crafted screenplay and a racy narrative style. But the maker while producing a faithful copy of the screenplay has forgotten that the original's success was also due to other factors".[5]
The film became a commercial failure and prompted a legal tussle between Arjun and Gangadharan soon after regarding non-payment as per contract.[6] Owing to the success of Mudhalvan in Telugu, the film's dubbing rights were bought in advance of the original release and a Telugu version titled Bose was released alongside the Tamil film.[7]