Diwan (film)

Diwan is a 2003 Indian Tamil-language film starring Sarathkumar, Kiran, Vadivelu. It was directed by Surya Prakash, who previously directed Maayi with Sarathkumar. S. A. Rajkumar composed the music. This film had an average run at the box office. The film was dubbed and released in Telugu as Rudra Simham.[1]

Diwan
Directed bySurya Prakash
Produced byP. L. Thenappan
Written bySuryaprakash
StarringSarath Kumar
Kiran Rathod
Vadivelu
Sriman
Jaya Prakash Reddy
Sharmili
Anandaraj
Manorama
Music byS. A. Rajkumar
CinematographyVijay C. Chakravarthy
Edited byK. Thanigachalam
Production
company
Sri Raja Lakshmi Film Pvt. Ltd.
Release date
22 August 2003
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

Raghavan (Sarathkumar) and Velu (Vadivelu) work as cooks in a non-veg hotel. Raghavan loves Geetha (Kiran) who is the daughter of a rich man (Vijayan), but her father is against this love and insults him as a poor man. Raghavan challenges that he will be rich in a year. There is a subplot in the story, for Meenakshi (Sharmili), a daughter from a rich family; she is the apple of the eye of the family. Meenakshi ran home with her lover Raju, who worked as a driver to her house. He tells that his friend Dinesh will help them. However, Raju escaped because he had a bad dream where he is killed by her family as if it will happen in reality. Due to that he vanishes. Raghavan understands her plight and helps her.

Suddenly he comes to a place where all call him "Duraisingam". Raghavan does not know who Duraisingam is. Manorama explains to him that Raghavan is the grandson of Duraisingam. The flashback is Duraisingam (Sarathkumar again) is a do-gooder who helps poor people, and he has a clash with Kaathavaraayan (Jaya Prakash Reddy), a big rowdy. Duraisingam could not kill him because he promised to his wife that she will never become a widow. In the clash, Duraisingam's two sons are killed, and the baby (the son of Duraisinggam's older son) is lost. The baby happens to be Raghavan. Duraisingam surrenders himself to the police. After the flashback, Raghavan visits the jail only to know that Duraisingam had died a few years back. Kaathavarayan kidnaps Raghavan and Meenakshi. Meenakshi's father and relatives bash Raghavan but leave him after knowing the truth. Raghavan leaves Kathavarayan and says that he should live as a reformed man. Meenakshi marries the groom selected by her parents, and Raghavan unites with Geetha.

Cast

Production

After directing Telugu film Bharatasimha Reddy with Rajasekhar, Surya Prakash announced his fourth directorial titled "Diwaan" with Sarathkumar collaborating with him for second time after Maayi.

Shooting for the film commenced at Chennai and neighbouring areas. In this film, the actor reportedly has done yet another risky scene without the help of a double. He had to climb a high-rise building using a rope hanging from the roof. A stunt scene was shot on "grandpa" Sharat Kumar and about 20 stuntmen. A romantic scene and a song was picturised at the Besant Nagar Beach in Chennai, where Sharat and Kiran took part. A few songs were also shot at exotic locations in New Zealand.[2]

Soundtrack

SongSinger(s)Lyrics
"Ayyayyo"Tippu, SujathaPa. Vijay
"Gundu Pakkara"Shankar Mahadevan
"Konjam Konjama"Karthik, Anuradha Sriram
"Oru Thaalaattu"Harish RaghavendraNa. Muthukumar
"Paarthathile"S. A. Rajkumar, SathyaS. A. Rajkumar

Reviews

The film received mixed reviews.[3] Lollu express criticized the film comparing it to Lion King.[4] Thiraipadam.com wrote:"Diwaan boasts of one of the most shoddy screenplays and atrocious editing in recent times. The movie has a lot of things going on, which is usually a good thing since it contributes to the pace of the movie. But the director fails to keep a rein on things and the movie soon spirals out of his control. There are just too many loose ends and unanswered questions".[5]

References

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhKga2n5NvI
  2. Diwan Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  3. "Review: Diwan". BizHat.com. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  4. ""Diwan" New Tamil Movie Review". Archived from the original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  5. Balaji Balasubramaniam. "Movie Review: Diwan". Retrieved 10 November 2013.
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