Udhavikku Varalaamaa

Udhavikku Varalaamaa (transl.May I come for help?) is a 1998 Indian Tamil-language comedy film directed by Gokula Krishnan.[1] The film stars Karthik, Devayani, Sangeetha and Anju Aravind, with Janagaraj, Pandiyan, Vadivukkarasi, Manivannan, Kovai Sarala and Jai Ganesh playing supporting roles. It was released on 16 January 1998 and became a failure at box-office. This was Gokula Krishna's last film as director and continued as dialogue writer before his death in 2008 and also was his last collaboration with Karthik after Poovarasan and Muthu Kaalai.

Udhavikku Varalaamaa
Poster
Directed byGokula Krishnan
Screenplay byGokula Krishnan
Story byG. Kavitha
Produced byM. Gafar
Starring
CinematographyJayanan Vincent
Edited byK.R. Gowri Shankar
T.R. Sekar
Music bySirpy
Production
company
Taaj International
Release date
16 January 1998
Running time
150 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

Muthurasu has come to the city to earn money to finance his mother's operation and asks for ideas from his friend Annamalai. To rent a place owned by a Brahmin couple, Muthurasu transforms himself into a Brahmin Pichumani and also falls in love with Mythili, the couple's daughter. Getting a job at a company owned by a devout Muslim makes him put on the garb of Hussein, a Muslim. Things get more complicated when an unsafe situation makes him take on the role of Pastor James, a Christian and Stella, his secretary in the office where he works as Hussein, falls in love with him.

Cast

Soundtrack

The music was composed by Sirpy, with lyrics written by Palani Bharathi.[2]

SongSinger(s)Duration
"Thottu Thottu"Mano, Swarnalatha4:23
"Ennodu Edho"Mano, Sujatha Mohan4:06
"Salakku Salakku"Mano, Swarnalatha4:54
"Neethan Neethan"Deva4:16
"Singapore"Krishna Raj, Devie Neithiyar4:00

Reception

Arvind of Indolink criticised the film and lead actor Karthik: "Karthik should spit out whatever he has in his mouth before delivering the dialogues. His mannerisms are also getting on people's nerves."[3] A reviewer from Screen called the film "a total farce which taxes the patience of the viewers", noting it was a "washout" at the box office.[4]

References

  1. "Udhavikku varalama ( 1998 )". Cinesouth. Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 26 October 2011.
  2. "Udhavikku Varalaamaa". JioSaavn. 3 February 2018. Archived from the original on 18 February 2023. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  3. "Mammootty's Marumalarchi tops". Screen. 7 February 1998. Archived from the original on 15 February 2008. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
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