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Aranmanai Kaavalan

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Aranmanai Kaavalan
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySelva Vinayagam
Screenplay bySelva Vinayagam
Story byArul
Produced by
  • K. Muralidharan
  • V. Swaminathan
  • G. Venugopal
Starring
CinematographyB. Balamurugan
Edited byP. Venkateswara Rao
Music byDeva
Production
company
Release date
  • 25 February 1994 (1994-02-25)
Running time
145 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Aranmanai Kaavalan (transl. Protector of the Palace) is a 1994 Indian Tamil-language action drama film directed by Selva Vinayagam and produced by Lakshmi Movie Makers. The film stars R. Sarathkumar and Sivaranjani. It was released on 25 February 1994.

Plot

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Sakthi and his best-friend Thangamani are taxi-drivers in Mumbai. Sakthi fights for the Tamil community against the local rowdies who want to expel them from their area. The Tamil Association of Mumbai prepares the 25th-anniversary function, so the association's presidents invite the pillars of the association. Still, only one person does not respond for the invitation : Karpagavalli, the wife of the late founder Sandanapandian. The presidents go to Karpagavalli's village Pasumpon to invite her, but they are driven out from the village. In fact, Karpagavalli and her three relatives, one of who is Uma, are held prisoners by the heartless Duraipandi in his palace. Under pressure, Duraipandi finally lets Karpagavalli go to the function in Mumbai. In the meantime, the police officers force the Tamil community to leave their place, but they refuse. So the police officers kidnap and rape the young girls under the influence of the ruthless Amara Settu. Sakthi turns berserk, and he kills all the police officers and Amara Settu who created conflicts between the Tamil people and Hindi people. Therefore, Sakthi becomes a hero for the community, and they ask him to flee instead of surrendering. By chance, Sakthi and Thangamani take the same train as Karpagavalli. Karpagavalli asks them to come to her village, and she compels Sakthi to become the palace's protector. Later, Sakthi and Thangamani try to leave the village, but Karpagavalli stops them. In the process, Karpagavalli was heavily wounded by Duraipandi's henchmen.

In the past, Sandanapandian was the village chief and was a respected man. While his uncle (Mohan Natarajan), Duraipandi's father, was a womaniser and was hated by the villagers, his uncle was jealous of Sandanapandian. One day, he behaved badly with school girls, so Sandanapandian forced him to beg forgiveness from the girl at the village court. After this humiliation, Duraipandi's father committed suicide. Duraipandi killed all the men of Sandanapandian's family, including Sandanapandian. Later, Duraipandi's mother self-immolated. Since that day, Duraipandi sequesters Karpagavalli, Uma and her family.

After telling her poignant past, Karpagavalli dies on Sakthi's knees. So Sakthi challenges the villain Duraipandi to prepare Uma's wedding. Meanwhile, Uma falls in love with Sakthi. What transpires subsequent forms the rest of the story.

Cast

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Production

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Aranmanai Kaavalan is the first film produced by Lakshmi Movie Makers.[1][2]

Soundtrack

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The music was composed by Deva, with lyrics written by Vairamuthu.[3]

Song Singer(s) Duration
"Aranmanai Deepam" Sangeetha Sajith 1:36
"Ketti Melam" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Chorus 4:27
"Manushankala" Deva, R. Sarathkumar 6:57
"Oorukke Nallavan" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, K. S. Chithra, Chorus 4:39
"Raja Kumaran" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, K. S. Chithra 4:54
"Santhana Pandi" Chorus 1:08

Release and reception

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Aranmanai Kaavalan was released on 25 February 1994, alongside another Sarathkumar starrer Captain.[4] Malini Mannath of The Indian Express gave the film a positive review and said "a fairly engrossing entertainer, despite flaws, Aranmanai Kaavalan has an engaging screenplay, neat treatment and suspense that keeps the viewers on tenterhooks".[5] K. N. Vijiyan of New Straits Times called the film "slightly better than other average Sarath movies".[6] Thulasi of Kalki panned the story as predictable, humour being unfunny and dismissed Deva's music as repetitive and concluded the review saying Sarathkumar seemer to be working by calculating one film a month; it was fine if it did not go wrong and make producers run away.[7]

References

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  1. ^ "Friends and fisticuffs". Tamil Star. Archived from the original on 30 December 2002. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  2. ^ "Kamal Haasan's Anbe Sivam and Vijay's Bagavathi producer loses battle against COVID-19". The Times of India. 10 August 2020. Archived from the original on 21 September 2020. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  3. ^ "Aranmanai Kavalan". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 7 March 2019. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  4. ^ Divya (15 September 2023). "ஒரே நாளில் வெளியான நடிகர்களின் இரண்டு திரைப்படங்கள்!!". News4 Tamil (in Tamil). Archived from the original on 30 April 2024. Retrieved 30 April 2024.
  5. ^ Mannath, Malini (25 February 1994). "What a surprise!". The Indian Express. p. 6. Archived from the original on 30 April 2024. Retrieved 30 April 2024 – via Google News Archive.
  6. ^ Vijiyan, K. (19 March 1994). "Predictable, just like those cowboy flicks". New Straits Times. p. 13. Archived from the original on 30 April 2024. Retrieved 30 April 2024 – via Google News Archive.
  7. ^ துளசி (20 March 1994). "அரண்மனைக் காவலன்". Kalki (in Tamil). p. 35. Archived from the original on 17 February 2023. Retrieved 14 February 2023 – via Internet Archive.
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