Ezhumalai

Ezhumalai is a 2002 Indian Tamil-language action drama film directed by Arjun Sarja, who also plays the titular character. It also features an ensemble cast of Simran, Gajala, Mumtaj, Vijayakumar and Ashish Vidhyarthi. It is the remake of Telugu film Narasimha Naidu (2001), starring Nandamuri Balakrishna and Simran, who reprised her role in the Tamil version.[1]

Ezhumalai
Poster of Ezhumalai's 50th day celebration
Directed byArjun Sarja
Written byK. C. Thangam (Dialogues)
Arjun Sarja
Chinni Krishna (story)
Based onNarasimha Naidu
Produced byV. Ravichandran
S.Amaravathy
StarringArjun Sarja
Simran
Gajala
Mumtaj
Vijayakumar
Ashish Vidhyarthi
CinematographyK. S. Selvaraj
Edited byP. Sai Suresh
Music byMani Sharma
Production
company
Sri Venkateswara Production
Distributed byAascar Film
Release date
21 June 2002
Running time
167 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Ezhumalai was released on 21 June 2022 and became a commercial success at the box office. It was dubbed into Hindi as Main Hoon Rangbaaz and Simha Baludu in Telugu.[2][3]

Plot

A feud between two neighboring villages ensues, where Venkatachalam and Kalingarayan are rivals. Since Venkatachalam is peace-loving person, their village is suppressed under the toe of malice Kalingarayan. He squats the fields of their Lakshmi Narasimha temple. Looking ahead, Venkatachalam plans to build an army for which he orders to sacrifice a male child from a family, and accords his younger son Ezhumalai.

Years later, Anjali, the pampered daughter of a savage factionist Nagalingam, grows at her maternal uncle’s house. She is later inspired by Ezhumalai, who manages a dance school. Anjali joins as his student and develops feelings for him despite knowing that Ezhumalai is a widower with a son. However, Nagalingam fixes Anjali’s alliance with his nephew, who is the son of Kalingarayan. Anjali later declares her love for Ezhumalai. Knowing this, the bridegroom moves to take hold of Anjali. Ezhumalai and Anjali boards the same train when the bridegroom's henchmen chase after them. At that point, a furious Ezhumalai reveals himself, where the henchmen escape out of fear. Later, Ezhumalai learns about Anjali's identity and reveals his past.

Past: After forming an army, Ezhumalai grows up as a gallant, who warns Kalingarayan to be on terms. On the eve of the celebrations, Kalingarayan onrushes where Ezhumalai slays him. Being cognizant of it, Nagalingam pledges to destroy Ezhumalai and his family. Venkatachalam decides to search a bride for Ezhumalai. He selects Lakshmi, who is a genorous woman and sensitive to violence. Nevertheless, Venkatachalam conducts their marriage by concealing his son’s occupation, but Lakshmi realizes the fact and bends to his goodness. Later, Ezhumalai's 3 siblings arrive from abroad along with their families who are conceited and negligent. However, Ezhumalai endears and adulation them a lot, but they always snide at him.

Lakshmi fails to receive and retorts. Listening to this, Ezhumalai exiles her when she reaches her parents' house and gives birth to a boy. Later, Ezhumalai’s brothers are about to return without viewing the newborn baby and refuse to accompany them. While travelling, they are onslaught by Nagalingam’s men, but Ezhumalai secures his family keeping his life at risk, and safely sends off them. They realize his virtue and plead pardon after soul-searching. Simultaneously, Nagalingam attempts to kill Ezhumalai's son where Lakshmi is stabbed while guarding him. Before leaving her breath, she implores Ezhumalai to get rid of this climate which Venkatachalam also convinces him about the same.

Present: An enraged Nagalingam attacks Venkatachalam, but is struck seeing Ezhumalai (who has returned to his hometown). Ezhumalai hands over Anjali to him. During this, Ezhumalai's son spells his first words calling Anjali as his mother. Later, Venkatachalam initiates Ezhumalai to bring Anjali as a mother to his child. Anjali’s wedding arrangements are in progress, where Ezhumalai uproars Nagalingam fixing his match with Anjali and challenges him to block him. He cracks down on the day of the marriage, and perceives the presence of Anjali at the hospital, who has removed her uterus as a sacrifice not to have her progeny. At last, Ezhumalai finally Anjali wholeheartedly.

Cast

Soundtrack

Track listing

The songs are by Mani Sharma, with lyrics written by Vaali and Thamarai.[4]

No.SongSingersLyricsLength (m:ss)
1"Chillendru"S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, SujathaVaali05:21
2"Ella Malaiyilum"Karthik, K. S. Chithra05:28 Reused "Ninna Kutesinaddhi" from Narasimha Naidu
3"Lux Papa"S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Swarnalatha05:07 Reused "Lux papa" from Narasimha Naidu
4"Maina Kunjo"Shankar Mahadevan, Sujatha04:23 Reused "Abba Abba" from Narasimha Naidu
5"Un Punnagai"Mallikarjun, HariniThamarai04:34 Reused "Nee Navvula" from Aadi

Critical reception

Thiraipadam wrote that the film "itself is an age-old revenge tale that offers nothing new and so, the proceedings are predictable, most of the time."[5] The Hindu wrote "The screenplay is Arjun's. So is the direction. And the action hero thrills his fans with stunts aplenty. Yet fights alone, however well choreographed, cannot make a film watchable. You need a well-narrated story — something "Ezhumalai" lacks. Most of the time action waits for no reason and seems to need no logic."[6] Sify wrote that "the film caters strictly to the frontbenchers".[7]

References

  1. sify (24 June 2002). "Ezhumalai film review". Sify. Archived from the original on 1 May 2019.
  2. "Simha Baludu (2004)". Indiancine.ma. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  3. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Simha Baludu Full Length Telugu Movie || DVD Rip". YouTube.
  4. "Ezhumalai songs". JioSaavn. 31 December 2002. Archived from the original on 23 August 2019. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  5. "Ezhumalai - Tamil movie review". Thiraipadam.com. Archived from the original on 23 August 2019. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  6. Rangarajan, Malathi (28 June 2002). "Ezhumalai". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 10 February 2003.
  7. "Review: Ezhumalai (2002)". Sify. 24 June 2002. Archived from the original on 23 August 2019. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
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