Anjala (film)

Anjala

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Thangam Saravanan
Produced by Dhilip Subbarayan
Written by Thangam Saravanan
Starring Vimal
Nandita
Pasupathy
Music by Gopi Sunder
Cinematography Ravi Kannan
Edited by Praveen K. L.
Production
company
Distributed by Auraa Cinemas
Release dates
12 February 2016
Country India
Language Tamil

Anjala is an 2016 Tamil film directed by Thangam Saravanan and produced by Dhilip Subbarayan. Vimal and Nandita feature in the leading roles, while Gopi Sunder composes the film's music.[1]

Cast

Special appearances in Promotional song by :

Production

Produced by stunt choreographer Dhilip Subbarayan, Anjala began production in December 2013 with Vimal, Nanditha and Pasupathi in the cast. The film's cinematography will be handled by Ravi Kannan, editing by Praveen-Srikanth and music by Gopi Sundar. Dhilip’s father Super Subbarayan will handle the action segments of Anjala.[2] The film experienced production delays and was later finalised to release during February 2016.

Soundtrack

Anjala
Soundtrack album by Gopi Sundar
Genre Feature film soundtrack
Language Tamil
Producer Gopi Sundar
Gopi Sundar chronology
Anjala
(2015)
Bangalore Naatkal
(2016)

The film's music and soundtrack was composed by Gopi Sundar. The soundtrack features five songs, the lyrics for which are written by Na Muthukumar, Yugabharati, Gangai Amaran, Yegathasi and Lalithanand. Behindwoods rated the album 2.75 out of 5 and called it "Anjala is a decent fun album that stays honest to its folksy aroma!".[3]

Track listing
No. TitleLyricsSinger(s) Length
1. "Nakkalu Maama"  Na. MuthukumarNanda, Santosh Hariharan, Pooja AV, Sai, Azhagesan, Tamil & Muthu Chamy 5:12
2. "Kanjadai"  YugabharathiV. V. Prassanna, Vandana Srinivasan 4:54
3. "Yaarai Ketpadhu"  Na. MuthukumarGangai Amaren 4:50
4. "Ayyankuli"  YegadesiMukesh, Tamil, Thala Muthu, Raaja, Karuppan & Pichai Arasan 4.47
5. "Tea Podu"  LalithanandDeva 4:26

Critical reception

Times of India rated the film 3 out of 5 and wrote "Anjala is an uneven film, with filmmaking that is hardly remarkable and a script that lacks finesse and focus. Yet, the film makes it clear right in the initial scenes that it is more interested in going after our emotions."[4] The Hindu wrote "The foundation on which Anjala is built, is wonderful. But alas. If only the ambition of the makers was to create something more substantial."[5] Behindwoods wrote "In a nutshell, Anjala might remind you of a similar spot that might have existed in your town too, but it does not drive you to go back there although that may have been the intention of the director."[6] Hindustan Times wrote "As much as the theme of Anjala may be unique, the film’s scripting and treatment leave a lot to be desired."[7] Moviecrow wrote "Anjala is an honest attempt with an excellent intent. But intent alone never suffices".[8] Silverscreen wrote "A fascinating plot, marred with unnecessary elements like an insipid romance, some crass comedy, and the juvenile treatment of the screenplay leaves us with one overriding thought."[9]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.