Veerapandiyan

Veerapandiyan
Poster
Directed byKarthik Raghunath
Written byDurai
Produced byDurai
StarringSivaji Ganesan
Vijayakanth
Radhika
Jaishankar
CinematographyAshok Choudhri
Edited byS. A. Murugesh
Music byShankar–Ganesh
Production
company
Prakash Pictures
Release date
  • 14 April 1987 (1987-04-14)
Running time
138 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Veerapandiyan (transl. Brave warrior) is a 1987 Indian Tamil-language masala film, directed by Karthik Raghunath and produced by Durai. The film stars Sivaji Ganesan, Vijayakanth, Radhika and Jaishankar. It was released on 14 April 1987.[1][2]

Plot

Ranjith (Ranjeet) plots to steal the temple jewels in the town of Manimangalam with the help of the temple's dharmagatha (V. K. Ramasamy) and townsman Nanjappa (Radha Ravi). Their initial attempt is foiled by Manimaaran (Vijayakanth), the son of the periya pannaiyar, Dharmalingam (V. S. Raghavan) and Nanjappa's nephew. The trio are forced to wait until the next year when the temple festival takes place again to attempt to steal the jewels. Pandiyan (Sivaji Ganesan) is the village president and lives in Manimangalam with his sister Meenatchi (Radhika). He was engaged to marry Gowri (Sumithra) but he called off the wedding when he learned his horoscope dictates his wife would die prematurely. Gowri has refused to marry anyone else and remains a major part of Pandian and Meena's lives. Pandian also has a long-standing feud with Dharmalingam that started when he won the post of village president. Manimaaran and Pandian both inadvertently continually foil the plans of the trio to further their plans to learn more about the temple. The police also become interested and send police officer Shankar (Jaishankar) undercover to the town. He secretly works to protect Pandian and Manimaaran from falling victim to the trio. More problems arise when Meena and Manimaaran fall in love however. Pandian is willing to give his blessings if Dharmalingam will agree to the marriage but the latter refuses. Manimaaran and Meena marry regardless and Nanjappa uses the conflict to his advantage. As the temple festival nears, he kills Dharmalingam and frames Pandian to sow discord between the two in hopes of keeping both distracted. Pandian and Manimaaran must deal with the fallout from Nanjappa's plan and prevent the theft of the temple jewels.

Cast

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by Shankar–Ganesh.[3]

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Chittu Kuruvi"VairamuthuMalaysia Vasudevan, K. S. Chithra 
2."Muthumani"VaaliVani Jairam, K. S. Chithra 
3."Andayila"VaaliVani Jairam 
4."Thavum Kiliye"VairamuthuMalaysia Vasudevan, S. P. Sailaja 
5."Malaiya"Gangai AmaranK. S. Chithra 

Reception

On 5 May 1987, The Indian Express wrote "Veerapandiyan despite being a potpourri of elements sacred and mandatory to the masala genre is within its rather constructed ambit, a fair sample of all that is good, bad, and mediocre in commercial Tamil cinema."[4]

References

  1. ^ "261-270". nadigarthilagam.com. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2023.
  2. ^ "நட்சத்திர படப் பட்டியல்". Cinema Express (in Tamil). 1 December 2002. pp. 41–43. Archived from the original on 2 February 2024. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  3. ^ "Veerapandiyan Tamil FIlm LP VInyl Record by Shankar Ganesh". Macsendisk. Archived from the original on 6 February 2023. Retrieved 19 August 2023.
  4. ^ Krishnaswamy, V. (1 May 1987). "Potpourri". The Indian Express. p. 12. Retrieved 17 December 2018 – via Google News Archive.

External links

  • Veerapandiyan at IMDb
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Veerapandiyan&oldid=1221340281"