Sullan

Sullan is a 2004 Indian Tamil-language action masala film written and directed by Ramana. It stars Dhanush, along with Sindhu Tolani, Manivannan, Pasupathy and Easwari Rao among others. The film was composed by Vidyasagar. The film was opened to negative reviews from the film critics and audience. It was later dubbed in Telugu as Mourya.[1]

Sullan
Poster
Directed byRamana
Produced bySalem A. Chandrasekaran
Written byRamana
StarringDhanush
Sindhu Tolani
Manivannan
Pasupathy
Music byVidyasagar
CinematographyN. Raghav
Edited bySuresh Urs
Production
company
Sri Saravanaa Creations
Distributed bySri Saravanaa Creations
Release date
  • 23 July 2004 (2004-07-23)
Running time
140 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

Subramani (Dhanush), known as Sullan among his friends, is the son of Mani (Manivannan), a corporation garbage lorry driver. A first-year college student, his only objective in life is to have fun with his friends. He falls in love with Kavya (Sindhu Tolani). Soori (Pasupathy) is a moneylender who charges atrocious rates and then goes after those who fail to pay him back. When Soori's actions start to affect Sullan's family and friends, he strikes back.

Cast

Soundtrack

Sullan
Soundtrack album by
Released14 May 2004
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelHit Musics
Bayshore
Divo
Think Music

Soundtrack was composed by Vidyasagar and lyrics written by Arivumathi, Pa. Vijay, Kabilan, Na. Muthukumar and Yugabharathi.[2][3] The music received mixed reviews.[4][5]

Song TitleSingersLyrics
"Kavidhai Iravu"K. S. Chitra, KarthikYugabharathi
"Sandakozhi"Shankar MahadevanNa. Muthukumar
"Yaaro Nee"Hariharan, Sujatha MohanKabilan
"Adho Varaa"Harini, Pushpavanam KuppusamyPa. Vijay
"Kilu Kiluppana"Adnan Sami, Premji Amaran, Pop ShaliniPa. Vijay
"Siragu MulaithaMadhu BalakrishnanArivumathi

Critical reception

Indiaglitz wrote "weak screenplay and poor characterization makes '[Sullan]', a big disappointment".[6] Sify wrote "Ramana's narrative and script are absurd and his attempt to make Dhanush a superstar material has failed miserably. Sullan is all sound and no fury".[7] B. Balaji wrote "With such over-the-top situations and graphics-filled stunts, the fight sequences in Sullaan look like they belong in a cartoon!".[8] Chennai Online wrote "Director Ramana, who gave a success with his debut film 'Thirumalai', seems to lose control over his script, characters and artistes from the early scenes itself. The whole scenario being crass and loud, subtlety seems to be the last thing on the director's mind."[9]

References


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