Vallakottai (film)

Vallakottai is a 2010 Indian Tamil-language superhero film directed by A. Venkatesh. A remake of the 2007 Malayalam film Mayavi,[1] the film features Arjun and Haripriya in the lead roles, while Ashish Vidyarthi, Ganja Karuppu, Sathyan, Suresh, Livingston, Vincent Asokan and Prem play supporting roles. The music was composed by Dhina, and the film released on 5 November 2010.[2]

Vallakottai
Theatrical release poster
Directed byA. Venkatesh
Produced byT. D. Raja
Written byRafi-Mecartin
StarringArjun
Haripriya
Ashish Vidyarthi
Ganja Karuppu
Sathyan
Music byDhina
CinematographyAnji
Edited byKay Kay
Release date
  • 5 November 2010 (2010-11-05)
Running time
135 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

Vayuputhran aka Muthuvel (Arjun) comes out of prison with a promise to his jailmate Bala (Prem) that he would take care of his ailing brother Sathish, who is about to undergo a surgery. After visiting Sathish in the hospital, Muthu goes to Vallakottai (from where he gets an assignment) to earn money. His job is to surrender for the murder of Eswarapandian (Suresh), the jameen of Vallakottai, which is to be committed by Eswarapandian's archrivals: Nachiyar (Ashish Vidyarthi) and his brother Sethupathi (Vincent Asokan). At Vallakottai, Muthu meets Anjali (Haripriya) and Veera Sangili (Ganja Karuppu). As scenes unfold, he falls for Anjali and comes to know that Eswarapandian is harmless and that Nachiyar is the one who is to be punished. Even as acting as a servant of Nachiyar, Muthu wears different getups in the name of Vayuputhran and teaches a lesson or two to the baddies. In the meantime, Bala gets released from prison, and what follows is a twist.

Cast

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by Dhina and features seven tracks, the lyrics of which were written by Thabu Shankar, Kambar, and Karunakaran.[3]

Vallakottai
Soundtrack album by
Released10 September 2010
GenreFeature film soundtrack
ProducerDhina
Dhina chronology
Gowravargal
(2010)
Vallakottai
(2010)
Seedan
(2011)

Critical reception

Indiaglitz wrote "To sum it up, Vallakottai starts on a brisk note, loses fizzle as it progresses and ends as damp squib."[4] Behindwoods wrote "Vallakottai takes a plot that has already seen huge success and tries to recreate the same magic. But perhaps director A Venkathesh should have taken into account varied regional tastes and the vast difference in styles between the lead performers and appropriately tweaked the script. Nevertheless, Vallakottai is not a total let down; it does have its moments, the portions of action, the instances of laughter and a central plot that is not altogether predictable. But, more care in adaptation to the regional milieu could have made it much more entertaining."[5]

References


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