Senthamizh Selvan
Senthamizh Selvan (transl. Pure Tamil rich man) is a 1994 Indian Tamil-language action drama film, written and directed by Manoj Kumar. The film stars Prashanth and Madhoo , while music was given by M. S. Viswanathan and Ilaiyaraaja as a team.[1][2]
Senthamizh Selvan | |
---|---|
![]() Poster | |
Directed by | Manoj Kumar |
Written by | Manoj Kumar Sivaram Gandhi (dialogues) |
Produced by | M. S. V. Murali |
Starring | Prashanth Madhoo |
Cinematography | Lakshmi Balan |
Edited by | Cedric Mani |
Music by | M. S. Viswanathan Ilaiyaraaja |
Production company | Shree Vijayalakshmi Movieland |
Release date |
|
Running time | 140 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Plot
Vijay Bhoopathy and Sundarapandian have been friends. Bhoopathy is an atheist, while Sundarapandian is a temple priest. Bhoopathy's son Selvan and Sundarapandian's daughter Vaidegi fall in love with each other. Muthukalai is Vijayakumar's brother-in-law. His daughter Meenakshi is also madly in love and vows to marry Selvan. Against their families' wishes, Prashanth and Madhoo elope. Ever since, the two families hate each other, later Bhoopathy is murdered in front of his wife Janaki, who becomes mentally sick of the shock. Selvan comes to the village, announces that he is the son of Bhoopathy and trying to treat his mentally affected mother. Sundarapandian tries to kill Selvan to claim the huge property left by Prashanth's father. How Selvan saves the mother, property and how he marries Madhoo forms the rest of the story.
Cast
- Prashanth as Selvan
- Madhoo as Vaidegi
- Sivaranjani as Meenakshi
- Sujatha as Janaki
- Vijayakumar as Zamindar Vijay Bhoopathy
- Mohan Natrajan as Sundarapandian
- Chandrasekhar as Muthukalai
- Shanmugasundaram as Shanmugasundaram
- Senthil as Vellaichamy
- Charle
Soundtrack
The songs were composed by M. S. Viswanathan, while Orchestration and BGM were composed by Ilaiyaraaja, with lyrics written by Vaali.[3]
Song | Singer(s) |
---|---|
"Rathiri Pozhuthu" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, K. S. Chithra |
"Thaikulame" | K. S. Chithra |
"Pattu Esa Pattu" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam |
"Odunga Kalaikala" | M. Vasu |
"Kuyile Ilaman" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam |
"Machan Ennai" | Swarnalatha |
"Koodu Enge" | S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, K. S. Chithra |
Reception
K. Vijiyan of New Straits Times criticised the film for its abundance of songs, adding, "I have lost count of the numerous movies where one man reigns over a village using violence and there seems to be no law or order. Sadly, [Senthamizh Selvan] is another film in this genre, with nothing much to make it memorable or outstanding".[2] Indolink wrote "Manoj Kumar fails in all three departments -Screenplay, dialogues and direction. Skip it!".[4] Thulasi of Kalki wrote except for cinematography and art direction, the film has nothing else to talk about.[5]
References
- "டோடோவின் ரஃப் நோட்டு — Tamil Kavithai -- தமிழ் கவிதைகள் - நூற்று கணக்கில்!".
- Vijiyan, K. (3 September 1994). "One song break too many leads to audience walk out". New Straits Times. p. 16.
- "Senthamizh Selvan". JioSaavn. 12 August 1994. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
- "Sentamizh Selvan". Indolink. Archived from the original on 7 June 1997. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- "செந்தமிழ் செல்வன்". Kalki (in Tamil). 11 September 1994. p. 57.