Uthama Puthiran (1940 film) explained

Uthama Puthiran
Director:T. R. Sundaram
Story:N. Mian
Screenplay:T. V. Swami
Starring:P. U. Chinnappa
M. V. Rajamma
Producer:Modern Theatres (Salem)
Music:G. Ramanathan
Cinematography:P. V. Krishna Iyer
Editing:P. P. Varghese
Runtime:212 minutes
Language:Tamil

Utthama Puthiran is the 1940 Tamil language film directed by T. R. Sundaram. P. U. Chinnappa, M. V. Rajamma, T. S. Balaiah played the lead roles. It was the first Tamil film in which the leading actor P. U. Chinnappa played a double role.

Production

Uthama Puthiran was adapted from the 1939 Hollywood film The Man in the Iron Mask, which was based on the 1847–1850 novel by the French adventure fiction maestro, Alexandre Dumas. The film was produced and directed by the Salem based movie mogul, T. R. Sundaram, it proved successful and established the singing star of the 1940s, P. U. Chinnappa. The film featured him in dual roles and thus made him a first Tamil actor to feature him double roles. The double action scenes of Chinnappa was shot by Bodo Gutschwager, a German technician. There was a sequence of the twins engaged in a duel while singing a duet, throwing challenges making it one of the rare scenes in Indian cinema.[1]

M. V. Rajamma, Kannada theatre and film actress, played the heroine.[2] Uthama Puthran was her second film with Chinnappa, the first being Yayathi (1938). T. S. Balaiah portrayed the negative role. The film had supporting cast featuring NSK, Mathuram, Kali N. Ratnam, and P. A. Periyanayaki.

Cast

Guest appearance

Soundtrack

The music was composed by G. Ramanathan[3] and the lyrics were penned by S. Velsamy.[4] Even though the British Indian government banned the Tamil rebel poet Bharati's work, Sundaram had the actor render the famous song "Senthamizh Naadenum Podhiniley" and got away with it.[5]

!No!Title!Singer(s)!Length
1Igamo UnadharulP. U. Chinnappa--
2Kalangamilla MadhiyaaP. U. Chinnappa--
3Senthamizh NaadenumP. U. Chinnappa--

Themes and influences

Uthama Puthiran adapted from Hollywood film The Man in the Iron Mask which was based on novel of same name notably became the first Tamil film to feature an actor in two roles. The story of identical twins was used often in Tamil cinema, and Dumas himself used it to write his famous The Corsican Brothers which was also adapted into Tamil.[6] The Gemini Studios version Apoorva Sagotharargal (1949) with M. K. Radha playing the twins was a box office hit. M. G. Ramachandran played the twins in a rehash of the film titled Neerum Neruppum.[7] The film was remade again in 1958 with Sivaji Ganesan.[8] Uthama Puthiran also was the inspiration behind Imsai Arasan 23 m Pulikesi, a 2006 historical comedy film starring comedian Vadivelu as the twins.[9]

External links

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2 May 2008 . Uthama Puthiran 1940 . .
  2. Web site: M. V. Rajamma, the favorite 'Amma' . Kalyanamalai.
  3. Book: Vamanan . Sangeetha Chakravarthi G. Ramanathan . December 2006 . Manivasagar Publishers . 1st . Chennai . 46 & 50 . ta . Vamanan.
  4. Book: Film News Anandan . Sadhanaigal Padaitha Thamizh Thiraipada Varalaru . 23 October 2004 . Sivakami Publishers . Chennai . ta . History of Landmark Tamil Films . Film News Anandan . dead . https://archive.today/20190716112839/http://www.lakshmansruthi.com/cineprofiles/1940-cinedetails2.asp . 16 July 2019.
  5. Web site: P U Chinnappa – Tamil film songs . 2020-03-17 . www.indian-heritage.org.
  6. Web site: 19 September 2006 . Uthama Puthiran — Making history with historicals . https://web.archive.org/web/20090715075331/http://www.indiaglitz.com/channels/tamil/article/25411.html . dead . 15 July 2009 . 2 May 2012 . IndiaGlitz.
  7. News: Guy . Randor . 17 March 2011 . A trailblazer . The Hindu . 9 April 2012.
  8. News: Guy . Randor . Randor Guy . 5 January 2013 . Blast from the Past: Uthama Puthran 1958 . . 14 February 2013.
  9. News: 14 July 2006 . Messages in a light vein — Imsai Arasan 23rd Pulikesi . . dead . 20 April 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060717114521/http://www.hindu.com/fr/2006/07/14/stories/2006071400010200.htm . 17 July 2006.