Aaytha Ezhuthu

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Aayutha Ezhuthu
Aaythaezhuthutitle.jpg
Directed by Mani Ratnam
Produced by Mani Ratnam
G. Srinivasan
Written by Sujatha (Dialogues )
Screenplay by Mani Ratnam
Starring Suriya
Madhavan
Siddharth
Bharathiraja
Trisha Krishnan
Meera Jasmine
Esha Deol
Music by A. R. Rahman
Cinematography Ravi K. Chandran
Edited by A. Sreekar Prasad
Production
company
Release dates
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  • 21 May 2004 (2004-05-21)
Running time
155 minutes
Country India
Language Tamil

Aayitha Ezhuthu (Tamil: ஆய்த எழுத்து, English: Three dots) is a 2004 Indian Tamil political film written and directed by Mani Ratnam. It stars Suriya, Madhavan and Siddharth in the lead roles, with Trisha Krishnan, Meera Jasmine, and Esha Deol as the female leads and Bharathiraja in a pivotal role. The film's score and soundtrack was composed by A. R. Rahman, while Ravi K. Chandran was cinematographer and Sreekar Prasad was editor. The title of the movie is taken from the name of a Tamil letter, - three dots corresponding to the film's three different personalities from completely different strata of society. The film was simultaneously shot in Hindi as Yuva with an entirely different cast barring Deol, while a dubbed version in Telugu was also released. Produced by Ratnam's home banner of Madras Talkies, Aaytha Ezhuthu released in May 2004 to mostly positive reviews but didn't do well at the box office.

Plot

Inba (Madhavan) grew up to be a goon, as his brother had left him to fend for himself and he had no option of earning. He loves, marries, and abuses his wife, Sashi (Meera Jasmine). Michael Vasanth (Suriya Sivakumar) is an influential student leader who wants politicians like Selvanayagam (Bharathiraja) to keep away from college elections. Michael is in love with his neighbour Geetha (Esha Deol) who lives with her parents. And then there is Arjun Balakrishnan (Siddharth), carefree and spoiled son of an IAS officer. He wants to relocate to the U.S. for a better future. He falls in love with Meera (Trisha Krishnan), whom he just met. One day, Meera and Arjun get into a quarrel on the road and Meera gets into an auto. Arjun hitches a ride from Michael, who is riding in the same direction, to catch up with Meera. Suddenly, Michael is shot but Arjun saves him. After talking to Michael, Arjun changes his mind and wants to be a politician. Selvanayagam is worried when he hears news of students standing in the election. He uses every possible resource to get them out of Politics. Firstly he provides scholarship to study at a prestigious foreign university to Michael. When Michael refuses the bribe, he orders his goon Inba to take control. Inba beats some students but faces very strong retaliation from Michael and other students. He kidnaps Arjun and other candidates. However, they manage to escape with the help of Inba's ally, Dilli (Sriman). Inba follows Arjun and beats him up. While running, Arjun manages to call Michael for help. He comes to rescue Arjun at Napier Bridge. Then Inba is handed to the police. Michael wins the four seats he and his college mates have contested for. Sashi leaves for her hometown while Inba remains in prison hoping not to get the capital punishment. Michael, Arjun and two friends enter into politics.

Cast

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Production

A Still of Napier Bridge where the film shot

The film began pre-production in early 2003 in a typical manner adapted by the director, Mani Ratnam, who keeps his projects under wraps until completion.[1] The director chose to make two different versions of the film as he did not want the film to be dubbed, explaining that the essence of the script would be lost if they had done so.[2] The project was named Aayitha Ezhuthu after the last letter of the Tamil alphabet, which is denoted by three dots in a triangle and the director revealed that the film was about three individuals.[1] Early reports indicated that the film would be based on the 2000 neorealist Mexican film, Amores perros by Alejandro González Iñárritu, but eventually only the idea of hyperlink cinema was common in both films. However, Mani Ratnam revealed that the film was closer to Akira Kurosawa's 1950 Japanese film Rashomon as both films dealt with a cause-effect and a third-view.[1]

Suriya, who made his debut in the 1997 Mani Ratnam production Nerukku Ner, revealed that he agreed "blindly" to star in the film without even listening to the story or his character. The actor revealed in an interview about Mani Ratnam's choice that "when the master calls for the student you just say “yes”."[3] Suriya stated that his character was based on a real person from Andhra Pradesh George Reddy and to prepare, he read a lot of books and collected a lot of information before the shoot.[4] Madhavan was signed on to appear in Mani Ratnam's fourth successive project after playing the lead roles in his Alaipayuthey (2000) and Kannathil Muthamittal (2002) as well as his 2001 production, Dumm Dumm Dumm. The actor bulked up and sported a shaven look for the first time in his career to resemble his character of a ruffian. Initially actor Vikram was considered to do the role of Madhavan, but unable to sign in due to his other commitments. For a third lead role, Mani Ratnam called Srikanth and requested him to audition for the project in December 2002. The actor had scored back-to-back successes in his first two films, Roja Koottam and April Madhathil, and was subsequently selected to be a part of the film. However, the actor soon after suffered an injury and was unable to commit to the dates Mani Ratnam suggested.[5][6] Shaam was next approached for the role of Arjun, but date clashes with Iyarkai, meant that he was unable to sign the project.[7] Karthi, the brother of Suriya, was then offered the role but declined the offer to make his debut and worked as an assistant director on the film because he wanted to become a film director and preferred directing to acting.[8] Siddharth, who had previously apprenticed as an assistant director under Mani Ratnam in Kannathil Muthamittal before his making his acting debut in Shankar's Boys, was subsequently signed on for the film. Prior to release, Siddharth felt he was cast as he "looked, talked and behaved like Arjun" and mentioned that the sync sound technique used worked in favour of him as he was an experienced theatre actor.[9] Veteran director Bharathiraja was signed on to play a politician in the film, while Sriman and Janagaraj were given supporting roles. Leading Kannada actor Sudeep was also initially slated to form a part of the cast after meeting Mani Ratnam for the script discussion, but was ultimately discarded from the film.[10] Krishna and Suchitra, a singer and radio jockey, also were chosen to play the roles of student leaders in the film.

Malayalam actress Meera Jasmine was signed on to play a slum dweller in the film portraying Madhavan's wife and it was reported that she spent hours perfecting her Tamil for the film, trying to get rid of her native Malayalam accent to adapt to the sound sync technique used.[1] Relative newcomer Trisha Krishnan was also signed on to play a youngster in the film and dubbed for her own voice for the first time.[1] Initially Simran was signed on to play the roles of Geetanjali in both versions, but opted out after she began to have problems speaking Tamil as the sound for the film was recorded live.[11] Esha Deol, daughter of actress Hema Malini, was then selected to play the role in the Tamil version of the film after Suhasini enquired whether she could speak Tamil. After finishing her work in Aayitha Ezhuthu, Deol was signed on for the Hindi version of the film too after Simran also opted out of that role and thus Deol became the only common leading actor between the versions.[12] To prepare for her role, Deol worked on certain pronunciations of Iyer Tamil with Mani Ratnam's assistant Kannan mentoring her progress. It was also reported that actress Nadhiya had signed the film and would make a comeback to films after a ten-year sabbatical, but did not eventually form a part of the final cast.[13]

The director initially opted against using songs in the film, but wanted to create an album with A. R. Rahman for the project. However after the songs were recorded, Mani Ratnam had a change of heart and chose to include them. For the art direction in the film, Sabu Cyril studied each character in depth, giving them a distinct colour, mood and background to suit their temperament. For Michael's house in the film, Cyril followed the arrangement in his own house and used some his own photographs for decorations. He also expressed that he had great difficulty in re-creating the streets of Kolkata for the Hindi version of the film in Chennai.[14] G. Ramesh was selected to be the hairdresser for the three lead actors in the film.[15]

The scene filmed at Napier Bridge in Chennai was canned in early December 2003, causing severe traffic and congestion in the area.[16] Mani Ratnam began the Tamil version after Vivek Oberoi suffered an injury during the making of Yuva, giving him time to extract more out his actors in the Tamil version.[1] Production work for the film began in September 2003, with the technical crew who were mostly from the Tamil film industry including the production house were part of the Hindi version and were retained for the Tamil scenes.[17] The Tamil version finished subsequently much earlier than the Hindi version.[18]

Reviews

Aaytha Ezhuthu received an A certificate from CBFC due to some glamour content and strong theme. Indiaglitz wrote: "Worth watching".[19] Nowrunning rated 4 out of 5.[20] Sify wrote: "Aayitha Ezhuthu is a bold and daring move by Mani Ratnam to change the staid style of our commercial cinema".[21] Hindu wrote: "Every frame of Madras Talkies' "Aayudha Ezhuthu" bears the Mani Ratnam stamp and that's what matters. If silence and secrecy can stoke up interest, it has. And again, if the stature of a director can hype up a project, it has".[22]

Soundtrack

Aayitha Ezhuthu
AayithaEzhuthu-Tamil-Film-AlbumArt.jpg
Soundtrack album by A. R. Rahman
Released 2004 (India)
Recorded Panchathan Record Inn
Genre World Music
Label Sony BMG
Sa Re Ga Ma
Producer A.R. Rahman
A. R. Rahman chronology
Yuva
(2004)Yuva2004
Aayitha Ezhuthu
(2004)
New
(2004)New2004

All lyrics written by Vairamuthu, all music composed by A. R. Rahman.

Track listing
No. Title Singer(s) Length
1. "Hey Goodbye Nanba"   Sunitha Sarathy, Shankar Mahadevan, Lucky Ali, Karthik 04:57
2. "Sandakkozhi"   Madhushree, A. R. Rahman 04:53
3. "Nenjam Ellam"   Adnan Sami, Sujatha Mohan 05:21
4. "Dol Dol" (Lyrics: Blaaze) Blaaze, featuring ethnic vocals by Shahin Badar 03:55
5. "Yaakai Thiri"   Sunitha Sarathy, A. R. Rahman, Pop Shalini 04:39
6. "Jana Gana Mana"   A. R. Rahman, Karthik 04:55
7. "Nee Mazhai" (Additional song as a background score) Sunitha Sarathy, Karthik 01:10
8. "En Jeevane" (Additional song as a background score) Manicka Vinayagam 02:25

See also

  • Hyperlink cinema - the film style of using multiple inter-connected story lines.
  • Yuva (2004) - the simultaneously made Hindi version of the film

References

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External links