Varalaru | |
Director: | K. S. Ravikumar |
Producer: | S. S. Chakravarthy |
Screenplay: | K. S. Ravikumar |
Story: | R. K. Celluloids Unit |
Starring: | Ajith Kumar Asin Kaniha |
Music: | A. R. Rahman |
Cinematography: | P.C. Sreeram Priyan Arthur A. Wilson S. Murthy K. Prasad |
Editing: | K. Thanigachalam |
Studio: | NIC Arts |
Distributor: | Film Fabricators |
Runtime: | 166 minutes |
Country: | India |
Language: | Tamil |
Budget: | 12 crore[1] |
Gross: | 25 crore[2] [3] |
Varalaru: History Of Godfather, or simply known as Varalaru, is a 2006 Indian Tamil-language action-drama film written and directed by K. S. Ravikumar, and produced by S. S. Chakravarthy under the banner NIC Arts. The film stars Ajith Kumar in a triple role as a father and his twin sons alongside Asin, Ramesh Khanna, Suman Setty, Kanika, Sujatha and M. S. Baskar in supporting roles. The film's soundtrack and background score were composed by A. R. Rahman. The film ran for 215 days and became a blockbuster at the box office.[4] Prior to its release, the film was known by the title Godfather, but following the Government of Tamil Nadu's motion to exempt tax on films titled in Tamil in 2006, the film's title was reverted to Varalaru.
After two years of production, the film was released on 20 October 2006 on the eve of Diwali, and emerged as the highest grosser of the year.[5] [6] The film has been remade in Kannada, titled Godfather, in Burmese as Nat Khat Mhar Tae Tite Pwal, and in Odia as Tu Mo Dehara Chhai.
Shivashankar, a crippled multi-millionaire, sends his spoilt son Vishnu to Thottapuram to help the poor. Vishnu does not want to go, but a local pizza restaurateur convinces Vishnu and his friends that the village is one big brothel. Thottapuram is a sacred village and the restaurateur had purposefully deceived Vishnu and his friends. Also Divya and her collegemates are visiting the village for their social activity course to improve the villagers' health and hygiene. A large building is reserved for him and the girls are asked to stay in the poor families' houses.
Vishnu and his friends arrive and start to woo the girls, whom they mistake for Thottapuram's prostitutes. When Divya discovers their plan, she and her friends decide to teach Vishnu and his friends a lesson.
Vishnu and his friends are wooed by Divya and the other girls. They are led to separate rooms where the girls inject a serum that makes them itch all over. They leave, screaming and scratching. Vishnu tells Divya to leave her profession and offers to save her honour by marrying her in the village temple the next day. Divya does not come, but Vishnu and his friends happen to see her leaving on a bus bearing the name of the girls' college, revealing that they have been duped. But, Divya is guilt ridden when she sees him holding a mangala sutra and realising he really got ready to marry her.
Depressed and feeling cheated, Vishnu returns home, where Shivshankar discovers that his son has fallen in love. Under his influence, Vishnu and Divya get engaged. Everything goes well until one night, Vishnu goes to Divya's house in a drunken state. Her family prevents him from talking to her. This eventually leads to a fight. Vishnu then goes to Divya's cousin's house to meet Divya and apologises for his behaviour, but attempts to rape Divya's cousin which horrifies Divya. The same night, Vishnu tries to kill Shivashankar, but is stopped by Ko Thandam, Sivashankar's P.A., who got stabbed by Vishnu. Disappointed with Vishnu's behaviour, Shivashankar sends him to a psychiatrist.
It is then revealed that Jeeva, Vishnu's identical twin, had assumed Vishnu's identity, took money from the bank, got drunk and went to Divya's place and attempted to rape her cousin. Jeeva hates Shivashankar for abandoning him and his mentally-challenged mother Gayathri. Later, Divya manages to sneak into Vishnu's room in the hospital and believes his explanation that he is innocent. She leaves and shortly afterwards, Jeeva appears, smuggles Vishnu out of the hospital, takes over his identity and goes to kill Shivashankar. The father realises that it is not his son after he gets a call from the Vishnu and gets out of his wheelchair to defend himself, much to Jeeva's surprise. Vishnu arrives at the scene, surprised that his father is able to walk and demands an explanation.
Shivashankar tells him that he was a Bharatanatyam dancer who behaved effeminately due to dancing and the upbringing by his mother, whom he loved dearly. His mother had arranged for Shivashankar to marry Gayathri, who was her friend's daughter. He agreed but Gayathri rejected Shivashankar for being effeminate and insulted him in front of the wedding guests. Unable to bear the embarrassment, Shivashankar's mother died on the spot. Enraged, Shivashankar raped Gayathri, who became pregnant. The doctor refused to perform an abortion, leading to Vishnu's birth. Shivashankar took Vishnu from Gayathri, saying the child would be the only hope of his life. But, unknown to Sivashankar, right after he left Gayathri gave birth to the baby's twin, Jeeva.
Jeeva escapes and threatens to kill Shivashankar at Vishnu's and Divya's wedding. Shivashankar fights with Vishnu and attempts to stop him. Jeeva points a gun at Shivashankar and reveals that he is also Shivashankar's son and the reason for why he came to kill Shivashankar. Jeeva's grandmother tells them that Gayathri actually became insane when baby Jeeva was about to get hit by a lorry. Jeeva realises his mistake. He wants Shivashankar to shoot him, but a police officer mistakenly thinks that Jeeva is pointing the gun at Shivashankar. He fires at Jeeva, but Shivashankar intervenes and gets shot in the attack. Jeeva accepts Shivashankar's apology and gets arrested.
Weeks later, Gayathri does not accept food from anyone, until Vishnu comes as Jeeva and feeds her. The film ends with Vishnu telling her that Shivashankar is the godfather of family.
As per director R. Sundarrajan, Varalarus original base story was scripted by him for Kamal Haasan under the Sivaji Productions banner. This did not happen, however, due to Kamal Haasan's unwillingness to work with Sundarrajan as he did not like the script. He felt it would portray him as womaniser.
In late 1999, K. S. Ravikumar narrated two scripts to Kamal Haasan. One was about a transgender incorporating three roles titled Madana and a comedy script Thenali. He was impressed with both but turned the offer down due to his conflicting schedule at the time.Rajinikanth had agreed to do the story titled Madana if Kamal opts out.[7] Ravikumar was forced to pull out of a project titled Jaggubhai which he had written and begun directing and consequently signed on Ajith Kumar, who had just opted out of A. R. Murugadoss's action film, Mirattal. Later, the project shifted to the hands of NIC Arts (from Sri Surya Movies) due to a higher budget.[8] The filming of Godfather began in November 2004, with Ravikumar initially announcing a release date of April 2005.[9] [10] Asin was added to the film after Jyothika walked out of the project, while A. R. Rahman was signed on as music composer to the film to be produced by S. S. Chakravarthy. Early reports suggested that one of Ajith's roles in the film would be an eunuch or a transgender,[11] but his role turned out to be that of an effeminate classical dancer.[12] Shooting progressed from November 2004 till the end of the year.
In January 2005, it was announced that the film was put on hold due to financial problems, initiating a long delay in the production of the film.[13] The film also faced problems, after the government banned scenes involving excessive smoking in films.[14] Furthermore, in mid-2005, Ajith fell out with the producer, who had made several films with him in the past and stated that the pair would never work together again.[15] The had led to Ajith taking a forced sabbatical, with his market being at a low following the failure of his previous film Ji.[16] Ravi Kumar tried to get in R. B. Choudary and his banner of Super Good Movies to finish the movie but to avail.[17]
Chakravarthy avoided trouble by claiming he would finish the film by 15 June 2005 and signed a contract in March with the Tamil Nadu Producers Committee, who wanted to resolve the problem. The film restarted in April 2005, with a 10-day shoot in Ooty including a song, with Ravikumar revealing that further shots would be filmed in Hyderabad, and then in Canada, and that the film would be ready for release by 22 July 2005. P. C. Sreeram opted out of the film after his dates clashed with his work in Kanda Naal Mudhal and was replaced by Priyan. Actress Meena, who was supposed to do play Gayatri, also opted out due a conflicting schedule. Devayani was also considered for the role but she refused as she did not want to scold Ajith[18] and after unfruitful discussion with Simran, Kanika was signed.[19] Problems arose in mid-2005, when Asin could not allot dates for the film due to her work in Ghajini, Majaa and Sivakasi.[20] However, by 15 June, thirty five days' work was still required and Ajith was forced to leave the project to begin work on Bala's Naan Kadavul as per the signed contract.[21] Chakravarthy later reported Ajith for the delays and before further problems occurred, L. Suresh of Ananda Pictures, a leading Chennai based distributor, intervened and solved the existing problems by providing an interest-free loan.[22] Subsequently, the film became trouble free but took more than a year to finish the remaining portions and only released in October 2006 as Ajith prioritised completing Paramasivan and Thirupathi. Meanwhile, the title Godfather was reverted to Varalaru (Biography) after the state government gave an order to grant entertainment tax exemption to movies titled in Tamil.[23]
Varalaaru | |
Type: | soundtrack |
Artist: | A. R. Rahman |
Released: | 27 September 2006 |
Recorded: | 2005–2006 |
Genre: | Feature film soundtrack |
Length: | 48:07 |
Language: | Tamil |
Label: | Star Music |
Producer: | A. R. Rahman |
Prev Title: | Sillunu Oru Kaadhal |
Prev Year: | 2006 |
Next Title: | Guru |
Next Year: | 2007 |
The film's soundtrack and background score were composed by A. R. Rahman, marking his fourth collaboration with Ravikumar after Muthu (1995), Padayappa (1999), Thenali (2000) and third with Ajith Kumar after Pavithra (1994) and Kandukondain Kandukondain (2000). He finished composing all the songs for the film by December 2004. The soundtrack features nine songs, with lyrics written by Vairamuthu.[24] The song "Ilamai" features a remix version, and "Innisai" features a reprise and an extended version of the song which is used in the film. The album was released on 27 September 2006.
The film released on 20 October 2006, during the Diwali season alongside Silambarasan's Vallavan, S. P. Jananathan's E, Saran's Vattaram and Sarath Kumar's Thalaimagan,[25] and emerged as the biggest hit of the year.[26] [27] Varalaru opened in over 300 screens worldwide including 25 screens in Chennai district. It ran for 210 days, becoming highest grossing Tamil film of 2006 and also went on to become Ajith Kumar's biggest grosser until the release of his 2007 film, Billa.[28]
The critic from The Hindu gave a verdict that the film "scores in pace and performance!" and mentioned that "Ajith's skills as a performer have been appreciably honed and efficiently used" and that it is a "milestone in Ajith's cinema efforts, the film has the potential to propel its hero into a higher league in stardom", while describing Asin as "lustrous and sails through her role smoothly", while Kanika "gets more scope, which she makes good use of".[29] Rediff.com also gave the film a positive review claiming that "Varalaaru is undoubtedly the only must-watch release this Diwali. Watch it for a display of all the elements of Ajith's versatility and range of emotions".[30] The reviewer from Behindwoods praised the film saying "the narration and an implausible screenplay succeed in entertaining the masses", with the critic from Indiaglitz.com citing that "Varalaru will make history. Ajith's work will certainly uplift to it being a ultimate legend".[31] Sify wrote "Try and try till you exceed all limits, seems to be director K.S.Ravikumar’s mantra. His Varalaaru has a wafer-thin story and is tackily executed. Though the film offers little in the way of surprise or newness, what makes it watchable is Ajit and his triple role".[32] Lajjavathi of Kalki praised the performance of Ajith in triple roles, Kanika's acting and Rahman's music but panned the placement of songs and was critical of certain scenes and concluded saying its definitely ascent to Ajith.[33] Ajith subsequently won the Filmfare Award for Best Actor – Tamil for 2006 for his triple role performance.
The movie was unofficially remade in 2015 in Burmese as Nat Khat Mhar Tae Tite Pwal and in Odia as Tu Mo Dehara Chhai.[34]
In 2012, cinematographer Sethu Sriram opted to remake the film in Kannada under the original title, Godfather.