Thamizh Padam

Tamil padam
Directed by C. S. Amudhan
Produced by Dayanidhi Azhagiri
Written by C. S. Amudhan
K. Chandru
Starring Shiva
Disha Pandey
Paravai Muniyamma
Music by Kannan
Cinematography Nirav Shah
Edited by T. S. Suresh
Production
company
Distributed by Y NOT Studios
Release dates
  • 29 January 2010 (2010-01-29)
Running time
120 minutes
Country Puliyampatti
Language Tamil
Budget 35 million (US$520,000)[1]
Box office 100 million

Thamizh Padam English: Tamil Film) is a 2010 Indian Tamil language parody film written and directed by C. S. Amudhan, in his directorial debut. The film stars Shiva and Disha Pandey in the lead roles. The film's plot parodies contemporary commercial films in Tamil cinema, mocking the stereotypical scenes.[2][3] The film was distributed by Dhayanidhi Alagiri's Cloud Nine Movies, and it was released on 29 January 2010 and won critical acclaim and commercial success at the box office. The film was later remade to Telugu as Sudigadu.

Plot

The story opens in a village where male infanticide is predominant, and all male babies are required to be killed immediately after birth (inspired by Karuththamma). One such baby is headed for such a fate, until he "speaks" to his caretaker-grandmother (Paravai Muniyamma) and asks to be sent to Chennai on a goods train, where he plans to grow into a hero. The old woman complies, and takes the baby, named Shiva, to Chennai and raises him herself, living in the city's poorer section.

On growing into manhood, Shiva (Shiva) gains a reputation by beating up extortionists and saving a rape victim; soon he is glorified as a mass hero. He manages to defeat gangster Devaraj with a clever exchange of puns and a costumed associate. He spends his time hanging out, drinking and playing carrom with his gang of friends, composed of Nakul (M. S. Bhaskar), Bharath (Venniradai Moorthy) and Siddharth (Manobala).

Shiva runs into a headstrong girl named Priya (Disha Pandey) whom he falls in love with. After learning of her hatred for men, he realizes that she has dedicated her life to classical dance, and learns Bharathanatyam over the course of a night; and performs an exaggerated dance sequence for her (Replicating dance move in Kadhalan). She reciprocates his feelings, and the two start a relationship. Shiva is then challenged by Priya's rich and powerful father Kodeeswaran, who refuses to give his daughter to a poor man. Shiva swears to become a billionaire, and promptly does so, during the course of a 2:50 minute song.

Kodeeswaran accepts Shiva as a suitor, and fixes his engagement to Priya. During the ceremony, Shiva hears a passing comment that he does not know his own father. Offended, he travels to his birthplace Cinemapatti village, accompanied by Bharath, to learn his roots. After encountering a host of Tamil-cinema stereotypes of several decades ago, he succeeds in uniting with his family when a woman (revealed to be Shiva's father's concubine) leads him to his father, mother and sister. He finds them when they sing their "family song" (the Michael Learns to Rock number, "Someday").[4]

All the while, Shiva has been targeting and killing several criminals in secret; he kills female gangster Swarna (the character from Dhool) by making her slip over a banana peel; makes another big-time crook laugh to death (in Anniyan style); tortures a drug dealer to suicide by continuous failed attempts on his life (inspired by Apoorva Sagodharargal); and kills his final victim with the bad odour of his sock. The police discover that he is the killer, and it is revealed that Shiva is actually an undercover officer and was killing the criminals under direct orders from not only the Commissioner, but also from the President of the United States.

The ganglord who commandeered the slain criminals, a mysterious person simply called "D", organises the kidnapping of Priya, and has Shiva beaten up. Shiva recovers, saves his beloved by fighting off thugs using exaggerated stunts, and comes face to face with "D", revealed to be his grandmother. She explains that she did it to increase the fame of her grandson, and a heartbroken Shiva is forced to arrest her.

At the trial, Shiva accidentally kills an assassin who targets his grandmother, and is put on trial himself. He is saved, however, when a man who had helped him in Cinemapatti earlier testifies that Shiva was a victim of circumstance. Both Shiva and "D" are pardoned, and Shiva who has been promoted to DGP, unites happily with Priya, his family and friends.

Cast

Release

The satellite rights of the film were sold to Kalaignar. The film was given a "U" certificate by the Indian Censor Board.

Reception

The film had a wide expectation based on the viral marketing campaign that the producers undertook with popular film stills being parodied as a part of the promotion strategy. This film released along with Goa and it was a box office success.[5] The film garnered very best ratings on the user ratings.[6]

Soundtrack

Thamizh Padam
Soundtrack album by Kannan
Genre Feature film soundtrack
Label Think Music
Junglee Music
Producer Kannan
Kannan chronology
Thamizh Padam
(2010)
Chaplin Saamandhi
(2011)

The film's soundtrack was composed by debutant Kannan and it was received well by the critics. The soundtrack contains five songs.

Tracklist
No. TitleLyricsSinger(s) / Notes Length
1. "Kuthu Vilakku"  ThiyaguUjjaini Mukherjee / An item number focusing on Kasthuri  
2. "O Maha Zeeya"   Hariharan, Swetha Mohan / A romantic duet featuring Shiva and Disha Pandey with gibberish words  
3. "Oru Sooravali"  K. ChandruShankar Mahadevan / Depicts Shiva's transformation into a billionaire.  
4. "Pacha Manja"  K. ChandruMukesh and chorus  
5. "Theme Music"      

List of notable spoofs

Films

People

Others

References

  1. "The new darlings of Kollywood". Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  2. "Tamil Padam - Tamil Movie Trailer - Tamil Padam | Shiva | Cloud Nine Movies | Dayanidhi Alagiri - Behindwoods.com". Videos.behindwoods.com. Retrieved 2012-08-05.
  3. "A 'Tamil Padam' on Tamil films - Tamil Movie News". IndiaGlitz. 2009-08-25. Retrieved 2012-08-05.
  4. "Thamizh Padam - Aatha Naan Paasayiten!". IndiaGlitz. 2010-01-28. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  5. "Chennai Box Office - Feb 5 to 7". Sify.com. 2010-02-09. Retrieved 2012-08-05.
  6. "Claps & Boos". Clapsandboos.com. Retrieved 2012-08-05.

External links

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