Neelathamara (2009 film)
Neelathamara | |
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Jaya Menon | |
Cinematography | Vijay Ulaganath |
Edited by |
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Music by | Vidyasagar |
Production company | Revathy Kalamandhir |
Distributed by | ) |
Release date |
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Country | India |
Language | Malayalam |
Budget | ₹1.5 crores[1] |
Neelathamara (transl. The Blue Lotus) is a 2009 Indian
Plot
Beena, a program producer with NDTV 24x7, is in her ancestral village for a television program. She wants her fiancé Anand to meet her grandmother, who has just been discharged from the hospital. Beena, the daughter of K.P. Haridas, who died a few years back, is not in good terms with her mother Ratnam over her second marriage. Ratnam happens to visit the house at the same time. There she meets Kunjimalu, a middle-age lady who was once a housemaid in her teenage days. Kuttimalu is welcomed by grandmother with the same warmth that she enjoyed long back, and she says that her daughters are now well settled and are leading happy lives. Ratnam is also affectionate towards Kunjimalu, who had once had an affair with Haridas.
In the night, while arranging the old books of Haridas, Ratnam comes across the snaps of Kunjimalu, which he had taken in his college days. She hands them over to Kunjimalu, which takes her back to the old days. The story switches to the late 1970s, when Kunjimalu had arrived as a maid with Appukuttan, her cousin and her grandmother. Kunjimalu succeeds in winning the heart of Haridas's mother in no time. She was an innocent village girl who always found fun in sharing secrets with Ammini, a girl of her age.
Ammini informs her about the myth of Neelathamara (blue lotus). According to believers, if they offer a one rupee note at the temple pond and prays deeply to the god, the flower will blossom the next morning and his/her wish will turn into truth. The arrival of Haridas, a final-year law student, adds more color to her life. He succeeds in alluring Kunjimalu in a short span, and they start to have a romantic and physical relationship. Kunjimalu believes that Haridas really loves her but she fails to understand that it was just fun that Haridas is looking for. Her prayer at the river pond results in blossoming of Neelathamara, which takes her to cloud nine. But news of the engagement of Haridas to Ratnam comes in as a shock, which breaks her down mentally. She slowly realizes that Haridas was never serious in his affair with her and tries to overcome the grief by silently serving Ratnam, his new wife. Ratnam one day learns of the affair and, when asked, Haridas replies casually, which makes her go berserk. Ratnam orders Kunjimalu to leave the house' she accepts silently. She is taken home by Appukuttan, whom she married.
Years later, Haridas is no more and both ladies have matured. The film ends with Kunjimalu once again with full heart preparing to take care of the
Cast
- Archana Kavias Kunjimalu (Old Film - Ambika)
- Kailashas Haridas (Old Film - Ravi Kumar)
- Samvrutha Sunil as Rathnam (Old Film - Bhavani)
- Amala Paul as Beena
- Tony Kattukaran as Anand
- Rima Kallingal as Shaarathe Ammini (Old Film - Jayaragini)
- Sreedevi Unni as Maluamma (Old Film - Santha Devi)
- Suresh Nair as Appukuttan (Old Film - Sathar)
- Joy Mathai as Achuthan Nair (Old Film - Bahadoor)
- Jaya Menonas Elder Rethnam
- Parvathi T. as Elder Kunjimalu
- Mullanezhi as the old man sitting under the banyan tree
Production
The performance of
Soundtrack
Neelathamara | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Feature Film Soundtrack | ||||
Length | 19:59 | |||
Language | Malayalam | |||
Label | Satyam Audios | |||
Producer | Vidyasagar | |||
Vidyasagar chronology | ||||
|
This film features a successful soundtrack composed by Vidyasagar with lyrics penned by Vayalar Sarath Chandra Varma. Vijay Prakash, famous through recent A. R. Rahman songs, was introduced to Malayalam through this film. The track "Anuraga Vilochananayi", sung by Shreya Ghoshal and V.Shreekumar (Shreekumar Vakkiyil), turned out to be one of the most successful songs of the year. It was the chart topper for many continuous weeks.[4]
Vidyasagar won the
# | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
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1 | "Anuraga Vilochananayi" | Shreya Ghoshal, Shreekumar Vakkiyil | 4:36 |
2 | "Neelathamare" | Karthik | 4:24 |
3 | "Pakalonnu" | Balaram
|
4:51 |
4 | "Entho Mudo" | Cherthala Ranganatha Sharma | 2:57 |
5 | "Needhaya Radha" | Cherthala Ranganatha Sharma | 3:11 |
Box office
The film was commercial success.[8]
References
General
Specific
- ^ a b P. M. ‘Neelathamara' blooms again . The Hindu. Retrieved 30 November 2009
- ^ Times of India. Retrieved 4 December 2009
- ^ Sreedhar Pillai. Archana Kavi gets bold. TNN. Times of India. Retrieved 10 July 2010
- ^ Nita Sathyendran. Chart-throb. The Hindu. Retrieved 14 January 2010
- ^ Filmfare Awards winners. TNN. Times of India. Retrieved 9 August 2010
- ^ Award ceremony. The Hindu. Retrieved 16 January 2010
- ^ Vanitha film awards 2009 announced Archived 14 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Keral TV. Retrieved 11 February 2010
- ^ Moviebuzz (2 January 2010). "2009- A Flashback!". Sify. Archived from the original on 22 October 2016.
External links
- Neelathamara at IMDb