Thondan
Directed bySamuthirakani
Written bySamuthirakani
Produced byR. Manikandan
StarringSamuthirakani
Vikranth
Sunaina
Arthana Binu
Gouri Nair
Namo Narayana
CinematographyN. K. Ekambaram
Richard M. Nathan
Edited byA. L. Ramesh
Music byJustin Prabhakaran
Production
company
Vasundara Devi Cine Films
Distributed byVasundara Devi Cine Films
Release date
  • 26 May 2017 (2017-05-26)
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Thondan (transl.Votary) is a 2017 Indian Tamil-language vigilante drama film written and directed by Samuthirakani. The film stars Samuthirakani himself, with Vikranth, Sunaina, Arthana Binu, Gouri Nair, and Namo Narayana amongst others in pivotal roles. The music is composed by Justin Prabhakaran with editing by A. L. Ramesh. The venture began production in December 2016 and had a theatrical release on 26 May 2017.

Plot

Narayanan (Namo Narayana) is the son of State Minister Pandiyanar (G. Gnanasambandam) in Vellore. Narayanan has been using his father's name and power, to make money by corruption much to the latter's dismay. Despite Pandiyanar being an MLA and minister for only three years, Narayanan has amassed a huge fortune and industrial empire by hook and crook. One day, some goons try to kill a man in daylight, as instructed by Narayanan. The man is lying in a pool of blood, and a local person witnesses this and informs this to the ambulance. The ambulance driver is Maha Vishnu (Samuthirakani), a kindhearted man who has never let anyone whom he has taken in his ambulance die. Vishnu admits the man in the hospital, and he is saved. Narayanan is angry with Vishnu for saving his enemy, for which he replies that saving the lives of people is his duty.

Vishnu is married to Bagalamugi (Sunaina). He has a father (Vela Ramamoorthy) and sister Mahishasuramardini (Arthana Binu). The latter is stalked by Vicky (Vikranth), a drunkard and jobless youth who happens to be a friend of Vishnu. Vishnu convinces Vicky to reform and attend the medical technician course. Vicky completes it successfully and saves people's lives, earning the love of Vishnu and his family. Mahi has a friend named Gowri (Gouri Nair), who is stalked by Narayanan's brother Chinna Pandi (Soundararaja), and she beats him in a bus. Insulted by this, Chinna Pandi beats Gowri up with a wooden log. Enraged, Mahi and the students kill him. Vishnu arrives with his ambulance to admit Chinna Pandi to the hospital. To avoid traffic, he takes the outer bypass, infuriating Narayanan. Chinna Pandi succumbs to the injury. Narayanan blames Vishnu for this and beats him up, but he is saved by the public. Narayanan vows to kill Vishnu.

Vishnu gets mad after his father loses his hearing ability and his wife suffers a miscarriage. Deeply saddened by this, he confronts Narayanan, who pleads that he is innocent. Vishnu believes that being a common man, he cannot do anything against a powerful man who has political support. Narayanan has constantly bribed local police Inspector Uthaman (Anil Murali) and various government officials and has them under his control. Vishnu is helped by Sub-Inspector Rahman (Poraali Dileepan). Vishnu plans to destroy Narayanan and bring him to justice. He is covertly invited to join by the ruling party by the District secretary, who despite being an MLA, had been not made a minister because Pandianar's caste has more votes in their district. Vishnu declines, and proceeds by himself. He gathers all the details of the properties owned by Narayanan and a video footage of him insulting Uthaman and the government officials while bribing from Narayanan's auditor, who helps Vishnu because he once saved his wife's life. Vishnu realizes that Narayanan used Pandiyanar's name to earn huge amounts of money and buy so many properties by corruption. Vishnu sends the evidences them to IT, Vigilance, and other departments. He also sends the video footage to Uthaman's wife and the government officials' wives, who lose respect among their family. Uthaman and the government officials decide to stop supporting Narayanan for his further actions.

The IT department raids Narayanan's house, confiscates all of his belongings, and arrests him. Pandiyanar is sacked from the State cabinet, and woes in despair. Narayanan is goaded to escape from the hospital, through the info that the State govt is planning his suicide to repair damage, and he is chased by the Police. He evades them temporarily, but meets with an accident in town center. While he is struggling, Vishnu comes with his ambulance and saves him.

Cast

  • Samuthirakani as Maha Vishnu, an ambulance driver
  • Vikranth as Vicky, Vishnu's friend and Mahi's love interest
  • Sunaina as Bagalamugi, Vishnu's wife
  • Arthana Binu as Mahishasuramardini (Mahi), Vishnu's sister and Vicky's love interest
  • Gouri Nair as Gowri, Mahi's friend and chinna pandi's love interest
  • Namo Narayana as Narayanan, the main antagonist
  • Ganja Karuppu as Xavier, Vishnu's assistant
  • Vela Ramamoorthy as Vishnu and Mahi's father
  • Anil Murali as Inspector Uthaman, a bribe victim of Narayanan
  • Poraali Dileepan as Sub-Inspector Rahman, Vishnu's friend
  • G. Gnanasambandam as Pandiyanar, Narayanan's father
  • Soundararaja as Chinna Pandi, Narayanan's brother
  • Badava Gopi as Unnmai TV Reporter Aryabhatham
  • Erode Gopal as Sikkal Shanmugasundaram, Bagalamugi's father
  • Indrani as Pandiyanar's wife
  • Nasath as Vaikuntham, Bagalamugi's younger brother
  • Pichaikkaran Moorthy
  • Nithya Ravindran
  • Baboos
  • V. Murugavel
  • Soori as "Ilaikadai" Ramar (guest appearance)
  • Thambi Ramaiah as Income Tax Officer (guest appearance)

Production

In May 2016, Samuthirakani revealed that he was set to work with Jayam Ravi for the second time after Nimirndhu Nil on a project titled Thondan, using a script that he had initially written for Sasikumar. He stated that production would begin by the end of the year, with Allari Naresh also selected to play a role.[1][2] However Jayam Ravi's busy schedule during 2016 and 2017 meant that the pair could not eventually work together.[3]

The film re-materialised during December 2016, with Vikranth signed on to portray the role originally assigned to Naresh, while Samuthirakani himself would play the lead role. Vikranth revealed that he would star in the project alongside commitments to work in Suseenthiran's ventures Vennila Kabaddi Kuzhu 2 and Nenjil Thunivirundhal. Samuthirakani stated the film would be about "simple men, their lives, problems and pain" and "these are people who provide a service to the society; they might earn a less salaries, but they definitely get more satisfaction out of life".[4] He added that the film would tackle several social issues in India including demonetisation, corruption in politics, the farmers' plight, jallikattu and the harassment of women.[5][6] Production began during early December 2016, with Sunaina added to the cast after Samuthirakani was impressed with her performance in Neerparavai (2012).[7][8]

Soundtrack

Thondan
Soundtrack album by
Released9 April 2017
Recorded2016–17
Length18:38
LanguageTamil
LabelU1 Records
ProducerJustin Prabhakaran
Justin Prabhakaran chronology
Kaalakkoothu
(2017)
Thondan
(2017)
Oru Nalla Naal Paathu Solren
(2018)

The film's music was composed by Justin Prabhakaran and featured five songs. The album was released on 9 April 2017 through Yuvan Shankar Raja's U1 Records label.

Track list
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Thondan Thondan"YugabharathiDiwakar3:13
2."Chellakutti Joraa"VivekJustin Prabhakaran, Prashanthini3:25
3."Poi Varavaa"YugabharathiSean Roldan4:31
4."Ettoorum Kekkum"YugabharathiPradeep Kumar4:08
5."Vaasamulla Poovaa"YugabharathiVaikom Vijayalakshmi, Daya Bijibal3:21
Total length:18:38

Release

The film had a theatrical release across Tamil Nadu on 26 May 2017, alongside Radha Mohan's Brindavanam, and earned mixed to negative reviews. The satellite rights of the film were sold to Zee Tamil. Baradwaj Rangan of Film Companion wrote "All of which would be okay...if there was a grain of good filmmaking. But the utterly generic bring-down-the-bad-guy story is preposterous, and scenes go on and on."[9]

Reception

Anupama Subramaniam of the Deccan Chronicle wrote Thondan is an "interesting film sans entertainment values" and "all is well and good, but things do become a bit self-righteous and annoying when a fictional film begins to give you lessons on ethics and morality".[10] India Today's review stated that "Thondan is Samuthirakani's TED Talk in Tamil that runs for more than two hours", adding that it is "an uninteresting social commentary".[11] On a positive note, film critic Santhosh Mathevan wrote, "Kani documents a lot of true events, and he also comes out with some real time and cinematic references in his screenplay." He also criticised, "Usually, the mercury level of preaching would always touch the peak of thermometer in every of Kani's movie. But, Thondan has let the mercury bulb burst, as the film seems to be a 138 minute-tight-pack of loads of moral values to teach."[12] Sify.com stated the film was "filled with a plethora of messages in an over preachy tone".[13] A critic from The New Indian Express wrote the film was "a basket of moral lectures", concluding "Thondan is what you feared would happen once Appa (2016) did as well as it did".[14] Baradwaj Rangan rated the film 1 out of 5 and wrote, "As expected, actor and director Samuthirakani, delivers yet another sermon disguised as a movie".[15] The film took a lukewarm opening at the Chennai box office and fared averagely commercially.

References

  1. "Planning a film with Jayam Ravi: Samuthirakani". 6 July 2016. Archived from the original on 20 October 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  2. "Jayam Ravi's next film with Samuthirakani has been titled as Thondan". Archived from the original on 6 December 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  3. "Planning a film with Jayam Ravi: Samuthirakani". 6 July 2016. Archived from the original on 21 January 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2020 via www.thehindu.com.
  4. "Samuthirakani: An ambulance driver". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 4 April 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  5. "Samuthirakani, on his finest work till date". Deccan Herald. 20 May 2017. Archived from the original on 20 October 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  6. Subramanian, Anupama (7 April 2017). "Thondan is not a political film: Samuthirakani". Deccan Chronicle. Archived from the original on 20 October 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  7. "Sunaina joins the cast of Samuthirakani's Thondan with Vikranth". Behindwoods. 17 December 2016. Archived from the original on 30 January 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  8. "Samuthirakani: Not only in cinema, harassment against women happens everywhere". Sify. Archived from the original on 24 May 2017.
  9. "Thondan Movie Review – Film Companion".
  10. Subramanian, Anupama (27 May 2017). "Thondon movie review: Interesting film sans entertainment values". Deccan Chronicle. Archived from the original on 24 March 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  11. Srivatsan (28 May 2017). "Thondan movie review: An unrealistic film with lots of 'messages'". India Today. Archived from the original on 21 August 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  12. "Thondan: He serves too much for the community". www.santhoshmathevan.com. Archived from the original on 21 August 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  13. "Thondan review: Old fashioned & Preachy". Sify. Archived from the original on 26 May 2017.
  14. "Thondan movie review: A big basket of moral lectures". The New Indian Express. Archived from the original on 24 March 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  15. Rangan, Baradwaj (2 June 2017). "Thondan Movie Review". Film Companion. Archived from the original on 7 September 2017. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
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