Kalaignan

Kalaignan (transl.Artist) is a 1993 Indian Tamil-language thriller film directed by G. B. Vijay and produced by Ramkumar Ganesan. It stars Kamal Haasan and Bindiya while Sivaranjani, Sindhuja, Nirmalamma and Chi. Guru Dutt play supporting roles. The film was initially titled Indrajit, but was later retitled Kalaignan. The film opened in April 1993. The story was inspired by Arthur La Bern's novel Goodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square, which was adapted into a film by Alfred Hitchcock titled Frenzy.

Kalaignan
Theatrical release poster
Directed byG. B. Vijay
Produced byRamkumar Ganesan
Screenplay byG. B Vijay
Story byG. B Vijay
Based onGoodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square
by Arthur La Bern
Starring
Music byIlaiyaraaja
CinematographyJayanan Vincent
Edited byR. Mohanraj
Production
company
Release date
  • 14 April 1993 (1993-04-14)
Running time
143 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

The story revolves around a Tamil pop singer Inderjeet based in Bangalore who has a large female following. The movie opens with the death of a back-up dancer, Sandhya, in Inderjeet's group. Although the police suspect Inderjeet, they have no evidence linking him to the crime. Meanwhile, Sandhya's sister Divya arrives at her aunt Dr. Prabhavathy's house to find out the truth about Sandhya's death. She gets off on the wrong foot with Inderjeet. She talks to his manager, Dr. Harichandra Prasad, and other musicians who all have differing opinions about Sandhya.

While investigating, Divya stages an attack in a bar, getting Inderjeet to save her and takes her to his concert. At the end of the concert, Jennifer, a fan, gets on stage and kisses him. That night, Jennifer is killed by someone wearing Inderjeet's coat. With no better evidence, the police keep a closer eye on Inderjeet and warn Divya that Inderjeet is a possible suspect in Sandhya's death. Divya stages a kidnapping to test Inderjeet's knife skills (all the women murdered were skilfully cut by the murderer). But the next day, Inderjeet sees Divya with the bandaged kidnapper walking out of the hospital and realizes that she was faking her love.

He comes clean to her about Sandhya. She was an unstable substance abuser who had a thing for him, but he did not reciprocate. She had threatened to commit suicide if he did not reciprocate. He managed to save her and that was the last he had seen of her. The killer, who has pictures that look incriminating, has been blackmailing him into coming to the murder scenes just minutes after the murders. Divya believes him and falls for him.

In the course of a long cat-and-mouse sequence between the killer and Inderjeet, the killer is revealed to be Harichandra Prasad the manager, who attacks Dr. Prabhavathy but she survives. Inderjeet finds similar clothing in his closet, and later finds a secret room filled with photographs of the victims. The killer then kidnaps Divya and tells Inderjeet to come to an abandoned house with the photographs. His motive is revealed to be jealousy of the women who lusted after Inderjeet and ignored him.

In the course of a giant chase and fight scene, the killer is killed, Inderjeet's name is cleared, and everyone lives happily ever after.

Cast

Production

The film was initially titled Indrajit, but was later retitled Kalaignan.[1] G. B. Vijay was associate director for Prathap Pothan and worked with Kamal Haasan in 1989 film Vetri Vizha which was directed by Pothan and produced by Sivaji Productions.[2] Malayalam cinematographer Jayanan Vincent was in charge of the photography, while art-director Sabu Cyril designed disco-themed sets for songs in the film.[3] While filming an action sequence in a subway, Haasan's spine was struck by a speeding car; this resulted in a dislocated jaw, cracked nose and three fractures, but Haasan eventually recovered.[4] Farheen, also known as Bindiya, was offered the film around the same time as Baazigar, but refused that film to accept this.[5]

Soundtrack

Kalaignan
Soundtrack album by
Released1993
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length26:48
LanguageTamil
LabelPyramid
Aditya Music
External audio
Audio Jukebox on YouTube

The music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja and lyrics were written by Vaali.

No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Edekku Muddakanna"VaaliS. P. Balasubrahmanyam5:48
2."Kalaignan Kattu Kaval"VaaliS. P. Balasubramanyam5:37
3."Kokkarako Kozhi"VaaliKamal Haasan5:06
4."Dillu Baru Jaane"VaaliMano, Chithra5:40
5."Endhan Nenjil"VaaliK.J Yesudas, S.Janaki4:37
Total length:26:48

Release

The film was an average grosser at the box office. The Indian Express wrote "A mixture of Sakala Kala Vallavan and Sigappu Rojakkal, the director has used every trick in the book to make the film a slick presentation and goes overboard in the climax [..]".[6]

Shortly after the release of Kalaignan, Kamal Haasan's 1982 Hindi film Sanam Teri Kasam was dubbed and released in Tamil as Paadagan. Still images from his look in Kalaignan as a pop singer were used for the publicity of the dubbed film.[7] The director, G. B. Vijay, later moved away from directing feature films and apprenticed under Rajiv Menon as an ad film maker. He played a pivotal role in mentoring Gautham Menon, while he went on to write the dialogues for Minsara Kanavu (1997).[8]

References

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