A. M. Rathnam
A. M. Rathnam | |
---|---|
Born | Arani Muni Ratnam |
Occupations |
|
Children | Jyothi Krishna Ravi Krishna |
Awards | Filmfare Awards South |
Honours | Kalaimamani 2018 |
A. M. Rathnam is an Indian film producer, lyricist, screenwriter, and director known for his works in Telugu and Tamil cinema.[1][2] Under Sri Surya Movies Entertainment, a movie production house he owns in Hyderabad, he has produced blockbusters in Telugu such as Karthavyam (1990), Peddarikam (1992), Sneham Kosam (1999), and Kushi (2001).[3] He ventured into Tamil cinema in 1996 with the blockbuster Indian, which was India's Official Entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards. He then produced films such as Kushi, Run, Boys, Enakku 20 Unakku 18, Dhool, Ghilli, 7G Rainbow Colony, Arrambam, Yennai Arindhaal and Vedalam.[4]
Personal life
[edit]Rathnam was born in Buchireddypalem of Nellore district in Andhra Pradesh. Rathnam has two sons, director and actor Jyothi Krishna and actor Ravi Krishna. Jyothi Krishna's directorial debut Enakku 20 Unakku 18 and its Telugu version, as well as Ravi Krishna's first four films, that also include Jyothi Krishna's second directorial venture Kedi, were all produced by Rathnam himself.[citation needed][5]
In 2012, he built a temple for Shirdi Sai Baba at his office in Valasaravakkam.[1][6]
Career
[edit]Ratnam started his career as a make-up man for superstar actress Vijayashanti. Being the Executive Producer for the actress, he produced his first film Karthavyam, in 1990. Vijayashanti won the National Award for the Best Actress for this film. He made films with Kamal Haasan, Vijay, Ajith Kumar, Chiranjeevi, Vikram and many other actors. He later began producing films in Tamil and Hindi as well, dubbing and releasing several films in other languages. He went on to finance Shankar's Indian, which earned him the Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil and was later submitted by India for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, Nayak: The Real Hero and Sneham Kosam starring Chiranjeevi.
Rathnam produced the Tamil romance film Kushi, starring Vijay and its same-titled Telugu remake the following year, starring Pawan Kalyan, both of which were directed by S. J. Surya and became highly successful.[7] Later, he produced two more films, Ghilli and Sivakasi starring Vijay. Both Ghilli and Sivakasi were highly successful at the box office. During the early 1990s, he directed two films Peddarikam and Sankalpam in Telugu.[7] He has also written the screenplay for the film Naaga.[8] Later, he changed the name of his production company from Sri Surya Movies Entertainment to Shri Sai Raam Creations, which is now headed by S. Aishwarya. He had done three films with Ajith Kumar such as Arrambam, Yennai Arindhaal and Vedalam, all of which were huge successes.
Awards
[edit]- Filmfare Award for Best Film - Telugu – Karthavyam (1990) [9]
- Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil – Indian (1996)[10]
- Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil – Natpukkaga (1998)
- Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film (First Prize) – Indian (1996)
- Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film (First Prize) – Natpukkaga (1998)
Others
Filmography
[edit]- Producer
Year | Film | Language | Notes | Production Company |
---|---|---|---|---|
1990 | Karthavyam | Telugu | Filmfare Award for Best Film - Telugu | Sri Surya Movies |
1992 | Peddarikam | Also Screenplay & Direction; Remake of Godfather | ||
1993 | Aasayam | |||
1994 | Tejasvini | Hindi | Chandra-Surya Movies Pvt. Ltd | |
1995 | Sankalpam | Telugu | Also Screenplay & Direction; Remake of Mithunam | Surya Chitra |
1996 | Indian | Tamil | Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil Cinema Express Award for Best Film – Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as Bharateeyudu |
Sri Surya Movies |
1998 | Natpukkaga | Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil | ||
Ellame En Pondattithaan | ||||
1999 | Sneham Kosam | Telugu | Remake of Natpukkaga | |
Kadhalar Dhinam | Tamil | Dubbed into Hindi as Dil Hi Dil Mein and Telugu as Premikula Roju | ||
2000 | Kushi | |||
2001 | Khushi | Telugu | Remake of Kushi | |
Nayak: The Real Hero | Hindi | Remake of Mudhalvan | ||
2002 | Run | Tamil | Dubbed into Telugu with the same title | |
2003 | Dhool | |||
Naaga | Telugu | Also Screenplay | ||
Boys | Tamil | Dubbed into Telugu as same title | ||
Enakku 20 Unakku 18 | Bilingual in Telugu as Nee Manasu Naaku Telusu | |||
2004 | Kovil | |||
Ghilli | Remake of Okkadu | |||
7G Rainbow Colony | Bilingual in Telugu as 7G Brundavan Colony[11] | |||
2005 | Ponniyin Selvan | |||
Sivakasi | ||||
2006 | Bangaram | Telugu | ||
Kedi | Tamil | 25th Film | ||
Dharmapuri | ||||
2008 | Bheemaa | |||
2013 | Arrambam | Sri Sathya Sai Movies | ||
2015 | Yennai Arindhaal | Sri Sai Raam Creations | ||
Vedalam | ||||
2017 | Karuppan | |||
Oxygen | Telugu | Also screenplay | ||
2025 | Hari Hara Veera Mallu † | Mega Surya Production |
- Distributor
- Vyjayanthi IPS (1990, Tamil dubbed version)
- Gentleman (1993, Telugu dubbed version)
- Premikudu (1994, Telugu dubbed version)
- Bombayi (1995, Telugu dubbed version)
- The King (1995, Tamil dubbed version)
- Bharathiyudu (1996, Telugu dubbed version)
- Premalekha (1996, Telugu dubbed version)
- Unnaiye Kalyanam Pannikiren (1996, Tamil dubbed version)
- Arunachalam (1997, Telugu dubbed version)
- Ullaasam (1997, Telugu dubbed version)
- Jeans (1998, Telugu dubbed version)
- Narasimha (1999, Telugu dubbed version)
- Premikula Roju (1999, Telugu dubbed version)
- Oke Okkadu (1999, Telugu dubbed version)
- Priyuralu Pilichindi (2000, Telugu dubbed version)
- Run (2002, Telugu dubbed version)
- Boys (2003, Telugu dubbed version)
- Sukran (2005, Tamil Nadu release)
- Muddula Koduku (2005, Telugu dubbed version)
- Jaadu (2006, Telugu dubbed version)
- Bheemaa (2008, Telugu dubbed version)
- Lyricist
- Jeans - Telugu version
- Boys - Telugu version
- Naaga - Entha Chinna Muddu, Macarina, Oka Konte, Megham Karigenu
References
[edit]- ^ a b V Lakshmi (5 May 2012). "A M Rathnam builds temple". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ palPalani (29 September 2011). "Ajith-Vishnuvardhan-A.M Rathnam project confirmed". Southdreamz.com. Archived from the original on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "A.m. Rathnam photos, videos, latest news, A.m. Rathnam wallpapers". ApunKaChoice.com. Archived from the original on 26 June 2012. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ S. R. Ashok Kumar (20 July 2012). "Arts / Cinema : Showbitz: Lean and mean". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 3 February 2013. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ "Video : Producer A.M.Rathnam Speaks About Ajith Kumar". Star Ajith. 11 June 2012. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ "Ajith at Ratnam's Sai Baba temple". Sify. 7 May 2012. Archived from the original on 31 May 2014. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ a b "Telugu Cinema Etc". Idlebrain.com. 12 June 2001. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ "Telugu Cinema – Review – Naaga – NTR, Sadaf, Jennifer, Raghuvaran, Rajan P Dev, Rambha – AM Ratnam". Idlebrain.com. 10 January 2003. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ^ http:// Refer Filmfare Magazine August 1991, 38th filmfare awards south
- ^ "Kamal wins 17th Film fare award for role in Indian". The Economic Times. 9 July 1997. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011.
- ^ "'7-G Rainbow Colony is my story'". www.rediff.com. Retrieved 11 July 2021.