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Muthu (film)

Muthu (transl. Pearl) is a 1995 Indian Tamil-language masala film[3] written and directed by K. S. Ravikumar, and produced by Kavithalayaa Productions. The film stars Rajinikanth and Meena, with Sarath Babu, Radha Ravi, Senthil, Vadivelu, Jayabharathi, Subhashri and Ponnambalam all acting in supporting roles. It is a remake of the Malayalam film Thenmavin Kombath (1994). The film revolves around a zamindar and his worker falling in love with the same woman who, unknown to the zamindar, loves the worker exclusively.

Muthu
Theatrical release poster
Directed byK. S. Ravikumar
Screenplay byK. S. Ravikumar
Based onThenmavin Kombath
Produced byRajam Balachander
Pushpa Kandaswamy
StarringRajinikanth
Meena
CinematographyAshok Rajan
Edited byK. Thanikachalam
Music byA. R. Rahman
Production
company
Distributed bySivasakthi Movie Makers
Release date
  • 23 October 1995 (1995-10-23)
Running time
165 minutes[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
Box office¥400 million ($3.06 million)[2]

After Rajinikanth narrated the outline of Thenmavin Kombath, he told Ravikumar to develop the screenplay of the remake without watching the original film. Although largely written to suit the tastes of Tamil-speaking audiences, the remake retains the core premise of the original, while adding new plot details and characters. Ashok Rajan acted as the film's cinematographer. Principal photography began in June 1995 and took place in Mysore, Madras and Kerala. The film was edited by K. Thanikachalam and the music composed by A. R. Rahman, with lyrics written by Vairamuthu.

Muthu was released on 23 October 1995, during the Diwali holiday period. It became a silver jubilee hit. Rajinikanth won various awards for his performance, including the Tamil Nadu State Film Award and the Cinema Express Award, both for Best Actor. A dubbed Japanese version titled Muthu Odoru Maharaja (transl. Muthu – The Dancing Maharaja) was released in 1998 and became the highest-grossing Indian film in Japan until it was surpassed by RRR (2022). The film sparked a short-lived boom of Indian films released in Japan and helping Rajinikanth gain a large fan following there. The film was remade in Kannada as Sahukara in 2004.

Plot edit

Muthu is a charioteer working for zamindar Raja Malayasimman. While watching a play, Raja falls in love with an actress, Ranganayaki, when the garland she throws inadvertently falls on him. When Raja sees another of her plays and witnesses her being harassed by a local village chief, he tells Muthu to rescue her. Muthu fights the village chief's goons and rescues Ranganayaki. When more goons appear, Raja advises Muthu to take Ranganayaki safely away in their two-horse chariot while he manages the goons. Muthu agrees and escapes with her.

Ranganayaki dislikes Muthu's company but is forced to continue accompanying him. They both become tired and leave the horses to seek their own route, landing in Kerala. Muthu, not knowing Malayalam, gets into trouble for asking passersby for a kiss as wrongly tutored by Ranganayaki. Finally, she comes to his rescue. After learning what she had meant, Muthu surprises Ranganayaki by kissing her. They fall in love and return to Raja's palace.

Ranganayaki is secretly escaping her abusive brother-in-law, Pratap Rayudu, who killed her sister and is now searching for her. So, she requests to continue staying at the palace. Her associates also join. Raja's maternal uncle Ambalathar, keen to take control of Raja's wealth, plans to get his daughter Padmini married to Raja. Raja's mother Sivakamiyammal keeps requesting her son to marry, referring to Padmini. But Raja, dreaming of marrying Ranganayaki, nods his head, and Sivakami sends word to her brother Ambalathar. When Ambalathar arrives and speaks of marriage, Raja reveals his intention to marry Ranganayaki. Angered, Ambalathar brings Rayudu to the palace, who forcibly tries to take Ranganayaki until Muthu subdues him and sends him away.

To remove Ranganayaki and Muthu from the palace and get his daughter married, Ambalathar provokes Raja, through his informer Kaali at the palace, by alleging that Muthu is romancing Ranganayaki. Kaali deliberately misinterprets the discussions between Muthu and Ranganayaki (who are at a distance) as Muthu compelling Ranganayaki to marry him. Believing Kaali's words and what he had seen, an enraged Raja throws Muthu out of the palace after having him beaten up by Kaali. Muthu, who is in shock, does not fight back. Sivakami, who had gone to a temple with Ranganayaki, returns and is shocked on learning what happened. She berates Raja, revealing the fact that Ranganayaki loves Muthu (not Raja) as well as the truth about Muthu's past.

Years ago, Muthu's father was the zamindar of the estate. Since he was childless, he named Raja, the son of his cousin Rajasekhar, his successor. Soon after, his wife conceived and died while giving birth to Muthu. At Ambalathar's instigation, Rajasekhar fraudulently obtained the zamindar's signature on blank papers and forced all of the property to be transferred to his name. Oblivious, the zamindar donated land to the villagers who returned to complain that the lands were not in his name. The zamindar realised what happened, but instead of punishing Rajasekhar, handed over the entire property to him and decided to leave the palace with his infant son Muthu. Sivakami pleaded that she be given the responsibility of raising Muthu. The zamindar agreed but said that his son must be raised as a commoner. After the zamindar left, a remorseful Rajasekhar committed suicide, and Sivakami moved to another village.

Sivakami says she had lied to the public that the zamindar's son had died, and that the zamindar currently lives nearby as a mystic nomad. Raja, realising his mistake, decides to go meet the zamindar and bring him back. Kaali, having overheard this conversation, reports to Ambalathar, who decides to murder Raja and frame Muthu so that he can take over the property. Kaali beats Raja, throws him into a waterfall and informs everyone that Muthu killed Raja. Muthu beats Kaali and makes him reveal that Ambalathar asked him to kill Raja. The villagers chase Ambalathar until Raja arrives with his bride Padmini. Raja was rescued by the zamindar and decided to marry Padmini. He forgives Ambalathar. Raja tells Muthu of his true identity, and Muthu rushes to meet his father, only to find that he has already left the place. Muthu becomes the new zamindar but prefers to identify as a worker.

Cast edit

Production edit

Development edit

Rajinikanth wanted K. S. Ravikumar to direct a film for him, and Ravikumar agreed to do so once he finished work on Periya Kudumbam (1995).[9] After buying the rights to remake the 1994 Malayalam film Thenmavin Kombath,[10] Rajinikanth narrated the outline of that film and so told Ravikumar to develop a screenplay of the remake, but he did not let Ravikumar watch the film. The project did not initially have a producer, so Rajinikanth offered to take care of financial matters, but Ravikumar refused. Ravikumar developed the screenplay at the Woodlands Hotel with help from his assistant directors including Ramesh Khanna, while occasionally going to Rajinikanth's office.[9] The film was initially titled Velan before being retitled Muthu.[11] This also marks Rajinikanth’s first collaboration with the director.[9] Although Ravikumar was the primary dialogue writer, Rajinikanth wrote certain "punch" dialogues like "Kedaikkaradhu kedaikkama irukkadhu. Kedaikkama irukardhu kedaikadhu" (transl. What is to be obtained would not be lost. What is not to be obtained would be lost).[9]

After completing three-fourths of the script, Ravikumar got permission to watch Thenmavin Kombath and was shocked to see the film's lack of resemblance to his screenplay. Rajinikanth told Ravikumar he did not want him to watch the film to avoid getting "inspired".[9] Though Ravikumar took enough liberties to suit the tastes of Tamil-speaking audiences,[1] the remake retained the original's core premise of a boss and his worker falling in love with the same woman and several other plot points such as the worker and his lover losing their way and ending up in a new land.[9] New plot details and characters were added, including the protagonist's zamindar father and flashback scenes revolving around him.[9][12]: 22:53–24:00  According to Kalaipuli S. Thanu, he was originally going to produce the film, but could not due to "various reasons".[13] It was soon picked up by K. Balachander's Kavithalayaa Productions,[14] and produced by Rajam Balachander and Pushpa Kandaswamy. The cinematography was handled by Ashok Rajan, and editing was handled by K. Thanikachalam.[11]

Casting edit

Rajinikanth played two roles: Muthu and his unnamed father.[12]: 21:21–22:22  According to Madhuvanti Arun, Rajinikanth offered her to do the role of Ranganayaki, but she was not selected because she was considered too young.[15] Television anchor Pepsi Uma said Rajinikanth offered her the role as well, but she declined.[16] Ravikumar, however, has stated that Meena was his first choice for the role. Her mother was concerned about the amount of screen time Meena would receive when compared to Subhashri (who was cast as Padmini), but Meena still took the role. Arvind Swamy was initially approached to portray Raja Malayasimman but was hesitant to act the scene where his character would slap Muthu. He was a fan of Rajinikanth and felt slapping the actor would anger his fans.[9] Jayaram was later approached for the role but hesitated for the same reason.[17] Though Jayaram suggested making changes to the scene, Ravikumar refused to do so. Sarath Babu was finally cast for the role, at Rajinikanth's suggestion.[9] Vadivelu and Radha Ravi were cast as Valayapathy and Ambalathar, characters not present in the Malayalam original but created by Ravikumar.[12]: 22:53  Radha Ravi was not initially interested in playing Ambalathar since he had grown weary of playing negative roles, but Rajinikanth's insisted.[18] Rajinikanth wanted Ravikumar to make a cameo appearance as a Tamil-speaking Malayali. Ravikumar agreed after initial reluctance and dyed his hair white to portray the character.[8][19]

Filming edit

Principal photography began on 1 June 1995.[20] The first shooting schedule took place in Mysore. While filming the introductory song "Oruvan Oruvan", the team brought two horses via lorry to each place where the film was to be shot. Ravikumar did not want to allocate four or five days for filming the song; instead he "used up about 20–30 minutes every day at all the locations we shot at. That way, [he] had a very colourful introduction song".[9] After filming the opening scenes of the song, the team shot the climax scene involving a crowd of more than 5,000 people. Following this, scenes including Muthu's father were shot at the Lalitha Mahal.[9][21][22] The rest of the film was shot at Travancore Palace in Madras (renamed Chennai in 1996),[9] and Kerala.[8] A blue skirt Meena had worn while shooting some scenes had faded as a result of her sitting under the "scorching" sunlight for so long, so an identical skirt was prepared before she began filming the "Kuluvalile" song sequence.[23]

The song "Thillana Thillana" was shot at AVM Studios, during the final shooting schedule which took place alongside post-production. According to Ravikumar, the song's dance choreographer, B. H. Tharun Kumar, told him "he just needed one set on a single floor in AVM and that he'd change the colour of the set to suit the mood of the song. Everything – from the costumes of Rajini and Meena and dancers to the background – were matching".[24] He added, "We'd pack up by night and the technicians would change the colour of the entire set overnight, and be ready for shoot at 7 am again. The top lights had already been fixed, so they'd do the other small lights and we will go for take by 9 am. We'll wrap up by 6 pm, and then, the technicians would start work on the colour of the set again".[24] The introductory "Super Star" title card first used in Annaamalai (1992) was also used here.[25]

Music edit

Muthu's soundtrack was composed by A. R. Rahman, with lyrics written by Vairamuthu.[26] It is the first film where Rahman, Rajinikanth and Ravikumar worked together.[9][27] A Hindi version of the soundtrack, titled Muthu Maharaja, features lyrics by P. K. Mishra,[28] whereas the Telugu soundtrack contains lyrics written by Bhuvana Chandra.[29] The songs were recorded at the Panchathan Record Inn in Madras.[26] The soundtrack was released on 8 October 1995 under the Pyramid label. The audio launch was held at Kalaivanar Arangam in Madras, where Rajinikanth, Kamal Haasan along with Ravikumar, Rahman and Vairamuthu unveiled the audio cassettes to the public.[30] The songs from Muthu were later retained in its Kannada remake in 2004, Sahukara, though Rajesh Ramanath was credited for its music.[31]

Themes edit

Some critics have felt that the dialogue "Naan eppo varuven, epdi varuvennu yarukkum theriyathu. Aana vara vendiya nerathula correcta vandhuduven" (transl. Nobody knows when or how I will come, but I will come when the time is right) hinted at Rajinikanth's political aspirations.[32][33][34] Writing for PopMatters, Ranjani Krishnakumar felt that Muthu singing "Katchiyellam ippo namakkedhukku, kaalathin kaiyyil adhu irukku" (transl. Why do we need a [political] party now; time will tell) also underlined Rajinikanth's political manoeuvres,[35] while critic Naman Ramachandran feels Rajinikanth was actually dispelling rumours of him joining politics through those lyrics.[27] Writing for Mint, Shoba Narayan said that Rajinikanth's heroines play to every traditional stereotype and cited Ranganayaki's name as an example, adding, "the names set the tone for the character."[36]

Release edit

Muthu was released on 23 October 1995, during the Diwali holiday frame,[37][38] and began screening during the openings of Kuruthipunal and Chandralekha.[39] In Madras, the film was distributed by Sivasakthi Pandian through Sivasakthi Movie Makers,[40] and in Coimbatore by Tirupur Subramaniam.[41] Though Ravikumar initially feared the film would fail since screenings were declining during the third week of its run at Udhayam Theatre, Rajinikanth was confident it would succeed; it ultimately ran there for over 88 days at full capacity and became a silver jubilee hit.[9] The film was dubbed into Telugu under the same title and Rajinikanth's voice was dubbed by Mano.[42] It was also dubbed in Hindi as Muthu Maharaja.[28]

Reception edit

Ananda Vikatan gave the film a rating of 42 out of 100, wrote that the film was consistent and described it as an engaging masala entertainer. They also praised the song sequences for their vibrancy.[43] R. P. R. of Kalki felt the film was not as fast-paced as most Rajinikanth films, unsure whether this was the editor's fault or the writer's. He said the film put more emphasis on the songs than the dialogues.[44] D. S. Ramanujam of The Hindu gave a mixed review, comparing it unfavourably to Thenmavin Kombath and criticising the "wishy-washy" screenplay, but appreciated the flashbacks focusing on Muthu's father and the cinematography.[45] Reviewing the Telugu dubbed version, Bhargav Shastry of Fullhyd.com wrote, "The lingual divide should not be a problem to have a try at this entertainer. The dubbing is a bit patchy. Rehman scores on the music front. People unaware of Rajnikanth's popularity can go and check out on what makes this star is an icon."[46]

Accolades edit

Event Award Awardee Ref.
Tamil Nadu State Film Awards Best Actor Rajinikanth [47]
[48]
Best Lyricist Vairamuthu
Best Choreographer B. H. Tharun Kumar
Cinema Express Awards Best Actor – Tamil Rajinikanth [49]
Film Fans Association Awards Best Actor Rajinikanth
Kalasagar Awards Best Actor Rajinikanth

Japanese version edit

In 1996, Japanese film critic Jun Edoki discovered the film at a video shop in Little India, Singapore. He said, "[Muthu] was absolutely fascinating—even without subtitles".[50] Edoki then approached several Japanese distributors, wanting release the film in Japan. Eventually, Xanadeux [ja] agreed to release it.[51] In 1998, they dubbed the film in Japanese. It was given the Japanese title Muthu Odoru Maharaja (ムトゥ 踊るマハラジャ), meaning Muthu – The Dancing Maharaja.[3]

Muthu Odoru Maharaja initially had a limited release, starting on 13 June 1998 at Cinema Rise in Tokyo's Shibuya district, where it completed a 23-week run. It sold 127,000 tickets and grossed ¥208 million ($1.59 million), becoming the theatre's highest-grossing film of 1998, with distributor Atsushi Ichikawa describing it as "the Titanic of the art theaters".[50] It then received a nationwide release across 100 theatres,[2] drawing nearly 250,000 in audiences[50] and grossing ¥400 million ($3.06 million).[2]

Prior to Muthu, the previous highest-grossing Indian film in Japan was the Hindi film Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman from 1992, which was released there in 1997. Muthu surpassed it and became the most successful Indian film in Japan, as well as 1998's top film in the category of independent "first-run show" theatres. The success of Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman and Muthu sparked a short-lived boom of Indian films released in Japan, ending in 1999.[3] Muthu was also the second highest-grossing 1995 Indian film overseas, behind only another Hindi film, Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge.[52] In 2022, the Telugu film RRR surpassed the gross collection of Muthu Odoru Maharaja and became the highest-grossing Indian film in Japan.[53]

On 14 December 2006, the then Prime Minister of India, Manmohan Singh, made a special note about the reach of Muthu in Japan during his speech at the National Diet of Japan.[54] A 4K remaster of the film was released in Japan on 23 November 2018.[2]

Legacy edit

Muthu helped Rajinikanth and Meena gain a large fan following in Japan.[55][56] The video for "Thillana Thillana" became famous for Meena's belly dance, which features many closeup shots of her navel.[57] Meena danced to the song on an episode of the talk show Simply Kushboo.[58] The film itself has been frequently aired on Sun TV and recorded large viewership there.[59][60] As well, many dialogues attained popularity such as "Kedaikkaradhu kedaikkama irukkadhu. Kedaikkama irukardhu kedaikadhu",[9] "Naan eppo varuven, epdi varuvennu yarukkum theriyathu. Aana vara vendiya nerathula correcta vandhuduven",[32] and the Malayalam dialogue "Eruki anachu oru umma tharum" (Hug me tight, and kiss me).[61] Sivasakthi Pandian used the profits he made from distributing Muthu to finance his first film as a producer, Vaanmathi (1996).[40]

The attire worn by Rajinikanth in "Kuluvalile" – a white shirt and lungi – became popular.[62][63] A 100-second fight sequence from Muthu was used in the French film I Do (2006) with permission from Kavithalayaa Productions.[64] In 2017, artist Rajesh Arachi released an English-language comic book adaptation of Muthu. It was published by Chelvam Comics.[65][66] In the same year, a film tribute to Rajinikanth titled 12-12-1950 was released. The main characters are named after Rajinikanth's films, one of them being Muthu.[67] In 2018, GRT Hotels in Chennai started creating dishes named after Rajinikanth's films, with one being named Muthu, consisting of "gun powder arancini in the shape of pearls".[68] In early 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic in India, a song spreading awareness about COVID-19, titled "Corona Corona" and set the tune of "Thillana Thillana", became viral.[69][70]

A dialogue by Muthu, "Indha thummalu, irumalu, vikkalu, kottavi, nalladhu, kettadhu, pasi, thookkam, porappu, irappu, panam, pattam, padhavi, idhellam thaana varum. Vandhalumm yaennu ketka mudiyadhu. Ponalum thadukka mudiyathu" (transl. Cough, hiccups, yawning, good, bad, hunger, sleep, birth, death, money, title, position, all these things will come on their own. You cannot ask for them. If they come, you cannot ask why they came and if they go, neither can you complain about them.) was used by Suriya in his dubsmash for spreading awareness on voting rights in 2016.[71][72]

References edit

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Bibliography edit

External links edit

muthu, film, muthu, transl, pearl, 1995, indian, tamil, language, masala, film, written, directed, ravikumar, produced, kavithalayaa, productions, film, stars, rajinikanth, meena, with, sarath, babu, radha, ravi, senthil, vadivelu, jayabharathi, subhashri, pon. Muthu transl Pearl is a 1995 Indian Tamil language masala film 3 written and directed by K S Ravikumar and produced by Kavithalayaa Productions The film stars Rajinikanth and Meena with Sarath Babu Radha Ravi Senthil Vadivelu Jayabharathi Subhashri and Ponnambalam all acting in supporting roles It is a remake of the Malayalam film Thenmavin Kombath 1994 The film revolves around a zamindar and his worker falling in love with the same woman who unknown to the zamindar loves the worker exclusively MuthuTheatrical release posterDirected byK S RavikumarScreenplay byK S RavikumarBased onThenmavin KombathProduced byRajam BalachanderPushpa KandaswamyStarringRajinikanthMeenaCinematographyAshok RajanEdited byK ThanikachalamMusic byA R RahmanProductioncompanyKavithalayaa ProductionsDistributed bySivasakthi Movie MakersRelease date23 October 1995 1995 10 23 Running time165 minutes 1 CountryIndiaLanguageTamilBox office 400 million 3 06 million 2 After Rajinikanth narrated the outline of Thenmavin Kombath he told Ravikumar to develop the screenplay of the remake without watching the original film Although largely written to suit the tastes of Tamil speaking audiences the remake retains the core premise of the original while adding new plot details and characters Ashok Rajan acted as the film s cinematographer Principal photography began in June 1995 and took place in Mysore Madras and Kerala The film was edited by K Thanikachalam and the music composed by A R Rahman with lyrics written by Vairamuthu Muthu was released on 23 October 1995 during the Diwali holiday period It became a silver jubilee hit Rajinikanth won various awards for his performance including the Tamil Nadu State Film Award and the Cinema Express Award both for Best Actor A dubbed Japanese version titled Muthu Odoru Maharaja transl Muthu The Dancing Maharaja was released in 1998 and became the highest grossing Indian film in Japan until it was surpassed by RRR 2022 The film sparked a short lived boom of Indian films released in Japan and helping Rajinikanth gain a large fan following there The film was remade in Kannada as Sahukara in 2004 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 4 Music 5 Themes 6 Release 6 1 Reception 6 2 Accolades 7 Japanese version 8 Legacy 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksPlot editMuthu is a charioteer working for zamindar Raja Malayasimman While watching a play Raja falls in love with an actress Ranganayaki when the garland she throws inadvertently falls on him When Raja sees another of her plays and witnesses her being harassed by a local village chief he tells Muthu to rescue her Muthu fights the village chief s goons and rescues Ranganayaki When more goons appear Raja advises Muthu to take Ranganayaki safely away in their two horse chariot while he manages the goons Muthu agrees and escapes with her Ranganayaki dislikes Muthu s company but is forced to continue accompanying him They both become tired and leave the horses to seek their own route landing in Kerala Muthu not knowing Malayalam gets into trouble for asking passersby for a kiss as wrongly tutored by Ranganayaki Finally she comes to his rescue After learning what she had meant Muthu surprises Ranganayaki by kissing her They fall in love and return to Raja s palace Ranganayaki is secretly escaping her abusive brother in law Pratap Rayudu who killed her sister and is now searching for her So she requests to continue staying at the palace Her associates also join Raja s maternal uncle Ambalathar keen to take control of Raja s wealth plans to get his daughter Padmini married to Raja Raja s mother Sivakamiyammal keeps requesting her son to marry referring to Padmini But Raja dreaming of marrying Ranganayaki nods his head and Sivakami sends word to her brother Ambalathar When Ambalathar arrives and speaks of marriage Raja reveals his intention to marry Ranganayaki Angered Ambalathar brings Rayudu to the palace who forcibly tries to take Ranganayaki until Muthu subdues him and sends him away To remove Ranganayaki and Muthu from the palace and get his daughter married Ambalathar provokes Raja through his informer Kaali at the palace by alleging that Muthu is romancing Ranganayaki Kaali deliberately misinterprets the discussions between Muthu and Ranganayaki who are at a distance as Muthu compelling Ranganayaki to marry him Believing Kaali s words and what he had seen an enraged Raja throws Muthu out of the palace after having him beaten up by Kaali Muthu who is in shock does not fight back Sivakami who had gone to a temple with Ranganayaki returns and is shocked on learning what happened She berates Raja revealing the fact that Ranganayaki loves Muthu not Raja as well as the truth about Muthu s past Years ago Muthu s father was the zamindar of the estate Since he was childless he named Raja the son of his cousin Rajasekhar his successor Soon after his wife conceived and died while giving birth to Muthu At Ambalathar s instigation Rajasekhar fraudulently obtained the zamindar s signature on blank papers and forced all of the property to be transferred to his name Oblivious the zamindar donated land to the villagers who returned to complain that the lands were not in his name The zamindar realised what happened but instead of punishing Rajasekhar handed over the entire property to him and decided to leave the palace with his infant son Muthu Sivakami pleaded that she be given the responsibility of raising Muthu The zamindar agreed but said that his son must be raised as a commoner After the zamindar left a remorseful Rajasekhar committed suicide and Sivakami moved to another village Sivakami says she had lied to the public that the zamindar s son had died and that the zamindar currently lives nearby as a mystic nomad Raja realising his mistake decides to go meet the zamindar and bring him back Kaali having overheard this conversation reports to Ambalathar who decides to murder Raja and frame Muthu so that he can take over the property Kaali beats Raja throws him into a waterfall and informs everyone that Muthu killed Raja Muthu beats Kaali and makes him reveal that Ambalathar asked him to kill Raja The villagers chase Ambalathar until Raja arrives with his bride Padmini Raja was rescued by the zamindar and decided to marry Padmini He forgives Ambalathar Raja tells Muthu of his true identity and Muthu rushes to meet his father only to find that he has already left the place Muthu becomes the new zamindar but prefers to identify as a worker Cast editRajinikanth as Muthu and his father 4 Meena as Ranganayaki 4 Sarath Babu as Raja Malayasimman 4 Radha Ravi as Ambalathar 5 Senthil as Thennappan 6 Vadivelu as Valayapathy 6 Jayabharathi as Sivakamiyammal 6 Subhashri as Padmini 6 Ponnambalam as Kaali 6 Vichithra as Rathidevi 6 Raghuvaran as Rajasekhar 6 Tiger Prabhakar as S P Pratap Rayudu 6 Gandhimathi as Poongavanam 6 Pandu as Pallavarayan 6 Jyothi Lakshmi special appearance in the song Kokku Saiva Kokku 7 Kumarimuthu as Kamalakannan 6 K S Ravikumar as the Tamil speaking Malayali 8 Production editDevelopment edit Rajinikanth wanted K S Ravikumar to direct a film for him and Ravikumar agreed to do so once he finished work on Periya Kudumbam 1995 9 After buying the rights to remake the 1994 Malayalam film Thenmavin Kombath 10 Rajinikanth narrated the outline of that film and so told Ravikumar to develop a screenplay of the remake but he did not let Ravikumar watch the film The project did not initially have a producer so Rajinikanth offered to take care of financial matters but Ravikumar refused Ravikumar developed the screenplay at the Woodlands Hotel with help from his assistant directors including Ramesh Khanna while occasionally going to Rajinikanth s office 9 The film was initially titled Velan before being retitled Muthu 11 This also marks Rajinikanth s first collaboration with the director 9 Although Ravikumar was the primary dialogue writer Rajinikanth wrote certain punch dialogues like Kedaikkaradhu kedaikkama irukkadhu Kedaikkama irukardhu kedaikadhu transl What is to be obtained would not be lost What is not to be obtained would be lost 9 After completing three fourths of the script Ravikumar got permission to watch Thenmavin Kombath and was shocked to see the film s lack of resemblance to his screenplay Rajinikanth told Ravikumar he did not want him to watch the film to avoid getting inspired 9 Though Ravikumar took enough liberties to suit the tastes of Tamil speaking audiences 1 the remake retained the original s core premise of a boss and his worker falling in love with the same woman and several other plot points such as the worker and his lover losing their way and ending up in a new land 9 New plot details and characters were added including the protagonist s zamindar father and flashback scenes revolving around him 9 12 22 53 24 00 According to Kalaipuli S Thanu he was originally going to produce the film but could not due to various reasons 13 It was soon picked up by K Balachander s Kavithalayaa Productions 14 and produced by Rajam Balachander and Pushpa Kandaswamy The cinematography was handled by Ashok Rajan and editing was handled by K Thanikachalam 11 Casting edit Rajinikanth played two roles Muthu and his unnamed father 12 21 21 22 22 According to Madhuvanti Arun Rajinikanth offered her to do the role of Ranganayaki but she was not selected because she was considered too young 15 Television anchor Pepsi Uma said Rajinikanth offered her the role as well but she declined 16 Ravikumar however has stated that Meena was his first choice for the role Her mother was concerned about the amount of screen time Meena would receive when compared to Subhashri who was cast as Padmini but Meena still took the role Arvind Swamy was initially approached to portray Raja Malayasimman but was hesitant to act the scene where his character would slap Muthu He was a fan of Rajinikanth and felt slapping the actor would anger his fans 9 Jayaram was later approached for the role but hesitated for the same reason 17 Though Jayaram suggested making changes to the scene Ravikumar refused to do so Sarath Babu was finally cast for the role at Rajinikanth s suggestion 9 Vadivelu and Radha Ravi were cast as Valayapathy and Ambalathar characters not present in the Malayalam original but created by Ravikumar 12 22 53 Radha Ravi was not initially interested in playing Ambalathar since he had grown weary of playing negative roles but Rajinikanth s insisted 18 Rajinikanth wanted Ravikumar to make a cameo appearance as a Tamil speaking Malayali Ravikumar agreed after initial reluctance and dyed his hair white to portray the character 8 19 Filming edit Principal photography began on 1 June 1995 20 The first shooting schedule took place in Mysore While filming the introductory song Oruvan Oruvan the team brought two horses via lorry to each place where the film was to be shot Ravikumar did not want to allocate four or five days for filming the song instead he used up about 20 30 minutes every day at all the locations we shot at That way he had a very colourful introduction song 9 After filming the opening scenes of the song the team shot the climax scene involving a crowd of more than 5 000 people Following this scenes including Muthu s father were shot at the Lalitha Mahal 9 21 22 The rest of the film was shot at Travancore Palace in Madras renamed Chennai in 1996 9 and Kerala 8 A blue skirt Meena had worn while shooting some scenes had faded as a result of her sitting under the scorching sunlight for so long so an identical skirt was prepared before she began filming the Kuluvalile song sequence 23 The song Thillana Thillana was shot at AVM Studios during the final shooting schedule which took place alongside post production According to Ravikumar the song s dance choreographer B H Tharun Kumar told him he just needed one set on a single floor in AVM and that he d change the colour of the set to suit the mood of the song Everything from the costumes of Rajini and Meena and dancers to the background were matching 24 He added We d pack up by night and the technicians would change the colour of the entire set overnight and be ready for shoot at 7 am again The top lights had already been fixed so they d do the other small lights and we will go for take by 9 am We ll wrap up by 6 pm and then the technicians would start work on the colour of the set again 24 The introductory Super Star title card first used in Annaamalai 1992 was also used here 25 Music editMain article Muthu soundtrack Muthu s soundtrack was composed by A R Rahman with lyrics written by Vairamuthu 26 It is the first film where Rahman Rajinikanth and Ravikumar worked together 9 27 A Hindi version of the soundtrack titled Muthu Maharaja features lyrics by P K Mishra 28 whereas the Telugu soundtrack contains lyrics written by Bhuvana Chandra 29 The songs were recorded at the Panchathan Record Inn in Madras 26 The soundtrack was released on 8 October 1995 under the Pyramid label The audio launch was held at Kalaivanar Arangam in Madras where Rajinikanth Kamal Haasan along with Ravikumar Rahman and Vairamuthu unveiled the audio cassettes to the public 30 The songs from Muthu were later retained in its Kannada remake in 2004 Sahukara though Rajesh Ramanath was credited for its music 31 Themes editSome critics have felt that the dialogue Naan eppo varuven epdi varuvennu yarukkum theriyathu Aana vara vendiya nerathula correcta vandhuduven transl Nobody knows when or how I will come but I will come when the time is right hinted at Rajinikanth s political aspirations 32 33 34 Writing for PopMatters Ranjani Krishnakumar felt that Muthu singing Katchiyellam ippo namakkedhukku kaalathin kaiyyil adhu irukku transl Why do we need a political party now time will tell also underlined Rajinikanth s political manoeuvres 35 while critic Naman Ramachandran feels Rajinikanth was actually dispelling rumours of him joining politics through those lyrics 27 Writing for Mint Shoba Narayan said that Rajinikanth s heroines play to every traditional stereotype and cited Ranganayaki s name as an example adding the names set the tone for the character 36 Release editMuthu was released on 23 October 1995 during the Diwali holiday frame 37 38 and began screening during the openings of Kuruthipunal and Chandralekha 39 In Madras the film was distributed by Sivasakthi Pandian through Sivasakthi Movie Makers 40 and in Coimbatore by Tirupur Subramaniam 41 Though Ravikumar initially feared the film would fail since screenings were declining during the third week of its run at Udhayam Theatre Rajinikanth was confident it would succeed it ultimately ran there for over 88 days at full capacity and became a silver jubilee hit 9 The film was dubbed into Telugu under the same title and Rajinikanth s voice was dubbed by Mano 42 It was also dubbed in Hindi as Muthu Maharaja 28 Reception edit Ananda Vikatan gave the film a rating of 42 out of 100 wrote that the film was consistent and described it as an engaging masala entertainer They also praised the song sequences for their vibrancy 43 R P R of Kalki felt the film was not as fast paced as most Rajinikanth films unsure whether this was the editor s fault or the writer s He said the film put more emphasis on the songs than the dialogues 44 D S Ramanujam of The Hindu gave a mixed review comparing it unfavourably to Thenmavin Kombath and criticising the wishy washy screenplay but appreciated the flashbacks focusing on Muthu s father and the cinematography 45 Reviewing the Telugu dubbed version Bhargav Shastry of Fullhyd com wrote The lingual divide should not be a problem to have a try at this entertainer The dubbing is a bit patchy Rehman scores on the music front People unaware of Rajnikanth s popularity can go and check out on what makes this star is an icon 46 Accolades edit Event Award Awardee Ref Tamil Nadu State Film Awards Best Actor Rajinikanth 47 48 Best Lyricist VairamuthuBest Choreographer B H Tharun KumarCinema Express Awards Best Actor Tamil Rajinikanth 49 Film Fans Association Awards Best Actor RajinikanthKalasagar Awards Best Actor RajinikanthJapanese version editIn 1996 Japanese film critic Jun Edoki discovered the film at a video shop in Little India Singapore He said Muthu was absolutely fascinating even without subtitles 50 Edoki then approached several Japanese distributors wanting release the film in Japan Eventually Xanadeux ja agreed to release it 51 In 1998 they dubbed the film in Japanese It was given the Japanese title Muthu Odoru Maharaja ムトゥ 踊るマハラジャ meaning Muthu The Dancing Maharaja 3 Muthu Odoru Maharaja initially had a limited release starting on 13 June 1998 at Cinema Rise in Tokyo s Shibuya district where it completed a 23 week run It sold 127 000 tickets and grossed 208 million 1 59 million becoming the theatre s highest grossing film of 1998 with distributor Atsushi Ichikawa describing it as the Titanic of the art theaters 50 It then received a nationwide release across 100 theatres 2 drawing nearly 250 000 in audiences 50 and grossing 400 million 3 06 million 2 Prior to Muthu the previous highest grossing Indian film in Japan was the Hindi film Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman from 1992 which was released there in 1997 Muthu surpassed it and became the most successful Indian film in Japan as well as 1998 s top film in the category of independent first run show theatres The success of Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman and Muthu sparked a short lived boom of Indian films released in Japan ending in 1999 3 Muthu was also the second highest grossing 1995 Indian film overseas behind only another Hindi film Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge 52 In 2022 the Telugu film RRR surpassed the gross collection of Muthu Odoru Maharaja and became the highest grossing Indian film in Japan 53 On 14 December 2006 the then Prime Minister of India Manmohan Singh made a special note about the reach of Muthu in Japan during his speech at the National Diet of Japan 54 A 4K remaster of the film was released in Japan on 23 November 2018 2 Legacy editMuthu helped Rajinikanth and Meena gain a large fan following in Japan 55 56 The video for Thillana Thillana became famous for Meena s belly dance which features many closeup shots of her navel 57 Meena danced to the song on an episode of the talk show Simply Kushboo 58 The film itself has been frequently aired on Sun TV and recorded large viewership there 59 60 As well many dialogues attained popularity such as Kedaikkaradhu kedaikkama irukkadhu Kedaikkama irukardhu kedaikadhu 9 Naan eppo varuven epdi varuvennu yarukkum theriyathu Aana vara vendiya nerathula correcta vandhuduven 32 and the Malayalam dialogue Eruki anachu oru umma tharum Hug me tight and kiss me 61 Sivasakthi Pandian used the profits he made from distributing Muthu to finance his first film as a producer Vaanmathi 1996 40 The attire worn by Rajinikanth in Kuluvalile a white shirt and lungi became popular 62 63 A 100 second fight sequence from Muthu was used in the French film I Do 2006 with permission from Kavithalayaa Productions 64 In 2017 artist Rajesh Arachi released an English language comic book adaptation of Muthu It was published by Chelvam Comics 65 66 In the same year a film tribute to Rajinikanth titled 12 12 1950 was released The main characters are named after Rajinikanth s films one of them being Muthu 67 In 2018 GRT Hotels in Chennai started creating dishes named after Rajinikanth s films with one being named Muthu consisting of gun powder arancini in the shape of pearls 68 In early 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic in India a song spreading awareness about COVID 19 titled Corona Corona and set the tune of Thillana Thillana became viral 69 70 A dialogue by Muthu Indha thummalu irumalu vikkalu kottavi nalladhu kettadhu pasi thookkam porappu irappu panam pattam padhavi idhellam thaana varum Vandhalumm yaennu ketka mudiyadhu Ponalum thadukka mudiyathu transl Cough hiccups yawning good bad hunger sleep birth death money title position all these things will come on their own You cannot ask for them If they come you cannot ask why they came and if they go neither can you complain about them was used by Suriya in his dubsmash for spreading awareness on voting rights in 2016 71 72 References edit a b Dhananjayan 2011 p 177 a b c d 見る極楽浄土 4K版 ムトゥ 踊るマハラジャ 新写真8枚到着 Natalie in Japanese 9 November 2018 Archived from the original on 18 November 2018 Retrieved 15 January 2019 a b c Matsuoka Tamaki 2008 Asia to Watch Asia to Present The Promotion of Asian Indian Cinema in Japan PDF Senri Ethnological Studies Reitaku University p 246 Archived PDF from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 18 November 2010 a b c Ramachandran 2014 p 162 A supervillain for a superstar Cinema Express 12 January 2020 Archived from the original on 2 November 2020 Retrieved 28 October 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Muthu Cast and Crew Moviefone Archived from the original on 30 October 2020 Retrieved 5 November 2020 Veteran actor Jyothi Lakshmi passes away Deccan Chronicle 10 August 2016 Archived from the original on 5 November 2020 Retrieved 5 November 2020 a b c The Hindu 2012 p 38 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Lakshmi V 23 October 2020 25YearsOfMuthu Rajini sir was confident that Muthu would work KS Ravikumar The Times of India Archived from the original on 26 October 2020 Retrieved 26 October 2020 KS Ravikumar Even if it s a remake I only take the basic story and do my own screenplay The Times of India 21 September 2020 Archived from the original on 20 October 2020 Retrieved 21 October 2020 a b ச தன ப ர ந த தம ழ படங கள 308 எஸ கண ஷ Tamil films which achieved milestones 308 S Ganesh Dinamalar in Tamil Nellai 15 August 2017 Archived from the original on 30 October 2020 Retrieved 26 October 2020 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c Jina 12 July 2020 MUTHU ல அப ப CHARACTER க க ப ர இல ல த ர ய ம K S Ravikumar Opens Up for the First Time Did you know the father character in Muthu has no name K S Ravikumar Opens Up for the First Time in Tamil Galatta Tamil Archived from the original on 27 January 2022 Retrieved 8 November 2020 via YouTube Thanu reveals that Rajinikanth was interested in Drishyam remake Sify 5 April 2021 Archived from the original on 6 April 2021 Retrieved 6 April 2021 Ramachandran 2014 p 161 ம த த படத த ல ரங கந யக வ டத த ல நட க க ரஜ ன அழ த த ர மத வந த ச ன னத தகவல News18 in Tamil 15 December 2022 Archived from the original on 15 December 2022 Retrieved 15 December 2022 ஷ ர க க ன பட வ ய ப ப மற த த ப ப ச உம க ரணம என ன Pepsi Uma interview Kumudam in Tamil Kumudam 24 June 2020 From 9 39 to 9 43 Archived from the original on 15 June 2023 Retrieved 15 June 2023 via YouTube Slap in the face for Kamal Rediff com 18 August 2000 Archived from the original on 2 October 2018 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Srinivasan Sudhir 27 December 2014 Spirited act The Hindu Archived from the original on 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Special Kasturi amp Sons Ltd Ramachandran Naman 2014 2012 Rajinikanth The Definitive Biography Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 342111 5 External links editMuthu at IMDb Muthu at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muthu film amp oldid 1183912669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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