Udhaya

For the Tamil actor, see Udhaya (actor).
Udhaya
Directed by Azhagam Perumal
Produced by Pyramid Natarajan
Written by Sujatha
(dialogue)
Screenplay by Azhagam Perumal
Story by Azhagam Perumal
Starring Vijay
Simran
Nassar
Vivek
Music by A. R. Rahman (Songs)
Pravin Mani (Background Score)
Cinematography Priyan
Edited by Raja Mohammed
Production
company
Release dates
26 March 2004
Running time
133 minutes
Language Tamil

Udhaya is a 2004 Tamil drama thriller film directed by Azhagam Perumal. The film featured Vijay and Simran in the lead roles, while Vivek, Nassar and Rajesh play other supporting roles.

Plot

Udhayakumaran aka Udhaya(Vijay) is a college student who is doing research on atomic physics. Soon he is selected to study at Cambridge University due to the papers he has submitted on his research. However he declines and his teacher gives him the job of another teacher who is on leave. There he meets a student Vasanthi (Simran) and soon they fall in love. But later on he comes to know that she is engaged to be married. As he can't see his lover married off to someone else he moves to Chennai and finds a job as a reporter at a magazine with the help of Basheer (Vivek). He tries to fight for social change during which Basheer gets killed. He unknowingly gets to know a group of unsavoury characters who introduce him to their boss Dhananjay Veeran(Nassar) who poses as a person fighting for the people. They all promise to help him in his goals. Dhananjay asks Udhaya for a weapon to help break the granite rocks to save labour. Udhaya gives him a bomb that he had discovered during his research. However Dhananjay had other plans and uses it to cause a train to explode thereby killing many people. They frame him up. That night Udhaya is arrested by the police (Thalaivasal Vijay) and is accused of the bomb blast for which he was not responsible. Udhayakumar tries to fight his way out but in vain. In the process his father Muthuswamypillai(Rajesh) dies of heart attack on seeing his son in jail, himself being a retired constable. When Udhaya comes to his village to see his dead father Vasanthi tells him that his boss is not helping at all. While they are returning, the police jeep gets stuck in mud. So Udhaya, finding an opportunity, then cuts his handcuffs using one of the guns left behind by the police. He then sees Dhananjay Veeran and Niranjan discussing a plot to bomb a school bus and realises that Dhananjay is behind all this. He goes to the spot where one bus catches fire and Udhaya saves the children. Dhananjay arrives and seeing Udhaya attempts to shoot him but Udhaya stops him. Udhaya beats him up and throws him into the burning bus. The police arrests Udhaya despite the children's protests to not arrest him. He is taken to court where he is proven to not be guilty and is released. The film ends with Udhaya embracing Vasanthi.

Cast

Production

Azhagam Perumal, an assistant to director Mani Ratnam in the 1990s, made his directorial debut with the project.[1] Simran was signed on to be a part of the film and the team began shoot as early as November 1998, with former Chief Election Commissioner of India, T. N. Seshan, also said to portray a key role.[2][3] An item number was shot in 2000 with Vijay and Sophia Haque for the film.[4]

The film's delay led to Azhagam Perumal being labelled by the media as an "unlucky director", also as his first film Mudhal Mudhalaaga starring Arvind Swamy and Karisma Kapoor had also failed to take off. He however signed on to direct Dumm Dumm Dumm, a film produced by Mani Ratnam, which became a box office success.[5]

Simran briefly announced her retirement from films after her marriage in December 2002 with producer Natarajan filing a case against the actress for failure to participate in shoot.[6] As the film finally geared up for release in the summer of 2004, trade pundits were insistent that despite the presence of Vijay's other big budget film, Ghilli, time should be allotted to publicise Udhaya too. Eventually the films released a month apart.[7]

Release

The film was a failure at box office.[8]

Music

Udhaya
Soundtrack album by A.R. Rahman
Released 2004
Recorded Panchathan Record Inn
Genre Film soundtrack
Length 28:02
Label Sa Re Ga Ma
Producer A.R. Rahman
A.R. Rahman chronology
Tehzeeb
(2003)
Udhaya
(2004)
Lakeer – Forbidden Lines
(2004)

The soundtrack for the film was composed by A.R. Rahman. The soundtrack received positive reviews, particularly the songs Udhaya Udhaya and Pookum Malarai. One of the songs had lyrics written by famous Tamil director, composer and lyricist Gangai Amaran. This film also marked the second song sung by Hindi singer Sukhwinder Singh in Tamil, after the song Lucky Lucky in the movie Ratchagan.[9]

Song Singer(s) Lyrics
Pookum Malarai Hariharan Pazhani Bharathi
Udhaya Udhaya Hariharan, Sadhana Sargam Arivumathi
Thiruvallikeni Rani Sukhwinder Singh, Karthik Gangai Amaran
Enna Enna Shankar Mahadevan, Gopika Poornima Ilayakamban
Anjanam S.P.Balasubramanyam, S. Janaki Pazhani Bharathi, A. M. Rathnam

References

  1. "rediff.com, Movies: 'I'm jealous of Mani Ratnam!'". Rediff. 2001-04-24. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  2. http://chandrag.tripod.com/nov98/
  3. "Rediff On The NeT, Movies: Gossip from the southern film industry". Rediff. 1999-08-16. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  4. "TFM Old News Items". Tfmpage.com. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  5. ""We Rise fast, fall fast": Jyothika". Cinematoday2.itgo.com. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20031211070915/http://www.chennaionline.com/reeltalk/12reeltalk9th.asp
  7. "In a fix". The Hindu. 2004-03-29. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  8. HostOnNet.com. "BizHat.com - Udaya Review. Vijay, Simran, Vivek, Nassar". Movies.bizhat.com. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  9. "Different tunes". The Hindu. 2003-02-24. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
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