Director: | Shivashanmughan |
Producer: | Tiruchi Gopalji |
Starring: | Prashanth Pooja |
Cinematography: | J. Sridhar |
Editing: | V. T. Vijayan |
Music: | Srikanth Deva |
Studio: | Thirumalai Creations |
Country: | India |
Language: | Tamil |
Thagapansamy is a 2006 Indian Tamil-language action film directed by Shivashanmughan and produced by Tiruchi Gopalji. The film stars Prashanth and Pooja, while Namitha, Karunas and Vincent Asokan played other supporting roles. Featuring music composed by Srikanth Deva, the film had a delayed release on 28 December 2006 after going through production problems.[1]
The film begins with Kathirvel (Prashanth), a do-gooder going all out to get water for his village. With monsoon repeatedly failing, his village reels under drought, and he runs from pillar to post to get a well dug in the village. He manages to bring Shanmugham (Mahadevan), a water-divining expert, to dig a well. Shanmugham, his wife, and daughter Marikozhundhu (Pooja) come to the village. Unfortunately, a freak mishap kills Shanmugham, and the villagers' search for water continues. To eke out their livelihood, all the villagers, led by Kadhirvel, decide to leave the village with a heavy heart to take up employment in a farmhouse in Rajasthan. Upon reaching the place, they come to know they have been taken as bonded labourers, and there is no way out but to work there tirelessly for the next three years. They undergo physical and mental torture from the greedy landlord Thakur Dass (Vincent Asokan) aided by his Marwadi sidekick (Pa. Ranjith). A silver lining in the cloud is Swapna (Namitha), Thakur's sister. She gets fascinated by Kadhirvel's heroics. The rest is how Kadhirvel fights for his men, helps them reach their village back without any danger and eventually marries Marikozhundhu.
The film was launched in July 2005 by Amudha Durairaj and her production house Deivanai Movies, who had previously made Thamizh (2002) with Prashanth in the lead role. The cast and crew were announced at the launch, though the film soon after went through a change of producer with Tiruchi Gopalji taking over.[2] Meera Jasmine had initially been signed by the production house to play the lead female role but backed out and Pooja was subsequently handed the role.[3] Director Pa. Ranjith worked as an assistant director in this film.[4] Prashanth worked for the film in 2005 simultaneously with several other projects, including ventures such as Venkatesh's Petrol and Ramesh Selvan's Runway, both of which were subsequently shelved.[5] By October 2005, it was reported that most of the film's shoot was over and that the team had shot scenes across Tiruchi, Karaikudi, Gingee, Thenkasi and Rajasthan.[6] Cinematographer Sridhar was injured in March 2006 at the shoot of the film, when he fell off a horse he had been sitting on.[7] One of the songs was shot at Gingee Fort with 80 dancers, 10 elephants and 20 horses.[8]
A website run by Indiaglitz.com was launched for the film in April 2006, coinciding with Prashanth's 33rd birthday.[9] The team then screened the completed film to then Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, M. Karunanidhi, at a special show at Four Frames Studios in June 2006.[10]
The soundtrack was composed by Srikanth Deva, with lyrics written by Shiva Shanmugam.[11] The soundtrack released on 15 December 2005, more than a year before the film had a theatrical release.
Song | Singer(s) | |
---|---|---|
"Paniyaram Suttu" | Udit Narayan, Malathy Lakshman | |
"Aariyamala" | Balaram, Sadhana Sargam | |
"Sangu Chakara" | Shankar Mahadevan | |
"Kadhal Muniva" | Anupama, Sathyan | |
"Aathi Sivanae" | Karunas, Chinna Ponnu, Shiva Shanmugam | |
"Semparuthi" (Bit) | Mukesh Mohamed | |
"Aararo Aariraro" | Mukesh Mohamed | |
"Puttukku" (Bit) | Ganga | |
"Porantha Manula" (Bit) | Mukesh Mohamed | |
"Mazhai Peiythu" | Baby Vaishali | |
"Irukangudi (Bit)" | Chinna Ponnu |
The film was scheduled to release after much delay on 22 December 2006 but was delayed by a day after Prashanth and Karunas held up the lab processing due to non-payment of their acting fees. The producer of the film, Tiruchi Gopalji was strapped for cash and could not pay the actors. After approaching producers’ council of Tamil Nadu for help, the issue was sorted out and the Chennai distribution rights of the movie were given to Karunas.[12] The film subsequently ran in smaller theatres and then was re-released on 28 December to larger screens, though was only able to have a below average run at the box office.[13] [14]
A critic from Sify noted that the film was "average" and claimed "the film starts on a promising note but the second half peters out into a mass masala. The decent first half has a good message and looks realistic but slowly down the lane the story loses track.".[15] Another critic from AllIndianSite.com gave the film a "good" verdict, revealing "directors who make their debut always attempt to prove themselves in their very first movie itself so as to stay in the hearts of the audience, and the director of this movie too has tried out something new."[16] Malini Mannath of Chennai Online wrote "It's a good theme the director has chosen and is well-intentioned. But with the treatment being superficial, it's like we are seeing the same commercial elements, maybe in a slightly different angle."[17] Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu wrote, "Shiva Shanmughan has shown that a strong story base combined with a smooth-flowing script is bound to touch the viewer. `Thagappansami' does".[18] Lajjavathi of Kalki felt the plot has been handled unnaturally which is a huge drawback of screenplay and also felt the director, who gave the dialogues naturally and elegantly, could have given a kudos if he had taken some new issue in hand.[19]