Suriya Paarvai | |
Director: | Jagan |
Producer: | Sreenivas Prasad |
Cinematography: | K. Prasad |
Editing: | Sai Prasad Babu Raj |
Music: | S. A. Rajkumar |
Studio: | Moturi Creations |
Runtime: | 140 minutes |
Country: | India |
Language: | Tamil |
Suriya Paarvai is a 1999 Indian Tamil-language action crime film directed by Jagan in his directorial debut. The film stars Arjun and newcomer Pooja. It was released on 14 January 1999.[1] The film is an unauthorised remake of the 1994 French film .[2]
Vijay is a hitman who works for Sundaramoorthy. He kills anybody for a price, other than women and children, and he lives alone in an apartment. Pooja, a young girl, studies in a boarding school and comes to her father's house for the holiday. Between her abusive father, selfish stepmother and an arrogant step-aunt, Pooja feels rather badly, but she treasures her lovely little brother Dinesh. Pooja tries to befriend Vijay, but Vijay is not interested. Her father is a drug smuggler. One day, a corrupt police officer Jayanth, kills Pooja's family, including her brother. Vijay decides to accommodate Pooja, and Pooja compels him to teach her his skills as a hitman. What transpires later forms the crux of the story.
The film's story and screenplay were written by Arjun's assistant Jagan, who also made his directorial debut.[3] Pooja Priyanka, daughter of actress Subhashini and niece of Jayasudha, was cast in the lead role opposite Arjun, while she was still at school.[4]
The soundtrack was composed by S. A. Rajkumar, with lyrics written by Palani Bharathi.[5]
Reviewing the Telugu version Hello Friend, a critic from The Hindu wrote, "Though the storyline is thin, the chock-n-block fisticuffs and slam-bang shoot-outs, along with the riveting performances by Arjun and Raghuvaran, keep you hooked onto a cinematic roller-coaster action ride. By hardly leaving any room for sentiment, it is quite obvious that Director Jagan seems to be influenced by the Hollywood action flicks. Even the action scenes are canned in that typical Hollywood style."[6] Reviewing the same version, Griddaluru Gopalrao of Zamin Ryot wrote that the director Jagan enhanced the scope of the story with action scenes and song scenes to make the film appealing to the audience.[7] The Tamil film was released in Malaysia under the title Kaavalan . K. N. Vijiyan of New Straits Times, reviewing this version, called the story subpar but believed it would satisfy Arjun fans.[8]