Thakara

Thakara is a 1979 Indian Malayalam-language drama film directed by Bharathan and written by Padmarajan. It stars Prathap Pothan, Surekha, Nedumudi Venu and K. G. Menon in pivotal roles. The film was a breakthrough in the career of Bharathan and Venu. It was remade in Tamil as Aavarampoo (1992).[1]

Thakara
Poster
Directed byBharathan
Produced byV. V. Babu
Written byP. Padmarajan
StarringPrathap Pothan
Surekha
Nedumudi Venu
K. G. Menon
Music byM. G. Radhakrishnan
(Songs)
Johnson
(Background score)
CinematographyAshok Kumar
Edited byN. P. Suresh
Production
company
Jovial Films
Distributed bySagarika Release
Release date
  • 28 September 1979 (1979-09-28)
CountryIndia
LanguageMalayalam

Plot

Thakara (Prathap Pothan) is an orphan. He is mentally immature, but clean hearted. He has a close relationship with Subhashini (Surekha), the dream girl of the village. Thakara was betrayed by the words of Chellappanashari (Nedumudi Venu) and indulges in a physical relationship with Subhashini. Subhashini's father Mathu Mooppan (K. G. Menon) finds out their relation and beats Thakara unconscious. Thakara, fully filled with revenge on Mooppan, runs away. Once he earns enough money to buy a knife, he returns and kills Mooppan. Subhashini refuses to go with Thakara, who proposes to her after killing her father. With no way to escape, Thakara finds his end in front of a running train.

Cast

Production

Initially, writer Padmarajan chose Bharat Gopy for the role of Maathu Mooppan, but he declined the offer saying he is not interested in doing "commercial films". Later, they had a discussion on the matter a day before the shooting of Padmarajan's Peruvazhiyambalam on which Gopy agreed to act on his insistence, after that meeting Gopy changed his views and began appearing in mainstream films as well. In his book Abhinayam Anubhavam published in 1994, Gopy recalls that, it was Padmarajan, who is younger than me, made me realise that there is no commercial or art film, but only good and bad films.[2]

Soundtrack

The music was composed by M. G. Radhakrishnan and the lyrics were written by Poovachal Khader.

No.SongSingersLyricsLength (m:ss)
1"Kudayolam Bhoomi"K. J. Yesudas, S. JanakiPoovachal Khader
2"Mouname"S. JanakiPoovachal Khader

References



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