Manapanthal

Manapanthal

Theatrical Poster
Directed by V. N. Reddy
Produced by T. R. Ramanna
Written by Duraiyur K. Moorthy
Starring S. S. Rajendran
S. A. Ashokan
B. Sarojadevi
E. V. Saroja
P. Kannamba
K. A. Thangavelu
M. Saroja
Production
company
R. R. Pictures
Distributed by R. R. Pictures
Release dates
10 February 1961
Running time
150 minutes
Country India
Language Tamil

Manapanthal is 1961 Indian Tamil drama film was directed by V. N. Reddy and produced by T. R. Ramanna with distributor by R. R. Pictures. The film was written by Duraivur K. Moorthy, with music by M. S. Viswanathan and T. K. Ramamoorthy. The film stars S. S. Rajendran , S. A. Ashokan B. Sarojadevi and E. V. Saroja in the lead roles with P. Kannamba, Chittor V. Nagaiah, Rama Rao, K. A. Thangavelu and M. Saroja in supporting roles.[1]

Plot

Two brothers hailing a wealthy family with the elder on Rajasekaran(S. A. Ashokan) being an alcoholic, while the younger one Gunasekaran(S. S. Rajendran) is successful medial practitioner. The widowed mother Kannamba(P. Kannamba) showers her love and affection on her two sons and tries to her elder alcoholic son, with little success. The younder son Gunasekaran stayed in another town with a widowed mother Dharuvamma(K. Malathi) and her springhtly daughter Malathy(E. V. Saroja), who falls in love with him, he too seems to shows some interest in her.

However, on a rail journey to his hometown, he meets elderly man Dharmalingam(Chittor V. Nagaiah) with an attractive daughter Suguna(B. Sarojadevi) and both falls in love, hope to marry soon. Mean while, the drunkard sons mother hopes marriage will reform him and fixed him marriage with an attractive girl suguna without realising that her younger son is love with her.

The wedding happens, and the younger brother Gunasekaran, due to an accident, is unable to attend it and has no knowledge that the bride is hiis sweet heart Suguna. Later, when he meets her, he is shocked . The husband suspects his wife and brother when he comes to known she was her sweet heart earlier. He decides to kill them. Meanwhile, the Kannamba dies, leaving behing all the property to her daughter-in-law.

Now, the Gunasekaran puts on an act of having become on alcoholic and makes overtures to his sister-in-law Suguna, who slaps him. Watching, this her husband realise the truth and a apologises to her. The family is reunited. While a train journey, Gunasekar notice a young women dressed as bride lying on the railway track to commit suicide. The train stops in time and the gunasekar find that the women is Malathy, who is still in love with him. The two marry and live happily.

The comedy is well-handled by ace comedian K. A. Thangavelu with M. Saroja as his sweet heart and noted comedian Rama Rao as her Astrologer- father. This doctor Navadeenal shudders if anyone mentions the Word Operation in his presence and that is part of the comedy.[1]

Cast

Crew

Soundtrack

Manapanthal
Soundtrack album by M. S. Viswanathan - T. K. Ramamoorthy
Released 1961
Recorded 1961
Genre Melody
Length 27:28
Language Tamil
Producer M. S. Viswanathan - T. K. Ramamoorthy

The music was composed by Viswanathan-Ramamoorthy, while the lyrics were written by Kannadasan.[2]Playback singers are P. B. Srinivas, S. C. Krishnan, P. Suseela, T. S. Bagavathi, S. Janaki & L. R. Eswari.

The songs were well received, and contributed to the success of the film. Two songs - "Unakkum Matttum Unakkum", sung by P. Suseela, and "Udalukku Uyir Kaaval", sung by P. B. Srinivas - became hits.[1]

No Song Singer Lyrics Length(m:ss)
1 Unakku Mattum Unakku P. Suseela Kannadasan 3:21
2 Orey Raagam Orey Thaalam 3:36
3 Unakku Mattum Unakku (Sad) 2:27
4 Paarthu Paarthu Nindrathile P. B. Srinivas P. Suseela 3:28
5 Muthu Muthu Pacharisi S. Janaki & L. R. Eswari 4:41
6 Udalukku Uyir Kaaval P. B. Srinivas 4:10
7 Ammavukku Manasukkuley S. C. Krishnan 3:13
8 Petretuthu Peyarumittu T. S. Bagavathi 3:52

Reception

Randor Guy of The Hindu stated that the film would be "Remembered for the performances of Rajendran, Asokan, Saroja Devi, Saroja and Kannamba, the melodious music, deft direction and impressive cinematography."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Randor Guy (26 April 2014). "Blast from the past - Manapandhal 1961". "The Hindu". Retrieved 2015-11-30.
  2. "Manapanthal songs". mymazaa. Retrieved 2015-11-30.

External links

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