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Ramu (1966 film)

Ramu is a 1966 Indian Tamil-language drama film directed by A. C. Tirulokchandar and written by Javar N. Seetharaman. The film stars Gemini Ganesh and K. R. Vijaya, with Ashokan, Nagesh, V. K. Ramasamy, O. A. K. Thevar and Master Rajkumar (as the title character) in supporting roles. A remake of the Hindi film Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein (1964), it revolves around a boy losing his voice due to witnessing his mother's death, and his father's efforts to restore his voice.

Ramu
Theatrical release poster
Directed byA. C. Tirulokchandar
Screenplay byJavar N. Seetharaman
Story byKishore Kumar
Produced byM. Murugan
M. Kumaran
M. Saravanan
StarringGemini Ganesan
K. R. Vijaya
CinematographyT. Muthusamy
D. Rajagopal
Edited byR. G. Gopu
Music byM. S. Viswanathan
Production
company
Uma Productions
Distributed byAVM Productions
Release date
  • 10 June 1966 (1966-06-10)
Running time
149 minutes[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Ramu was produced by Uma Productions, a subsidiary of AVM Productions. The film was released on 10 June 1966 and emerged a commercial success, winning the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil. It was also remade in Telugu under the same title two years later in 1968 by the same studio and director, with Rajkumar reprising his role.

Plot

Raja, a soldier in the Indian Army, returns to his village to be with his wife Seetha and son Ramu during Pongal. He receives a telegram ordering him to report for duty and has to leave. During the war, Raja's superior is wounded and succumbs in Raja's arms. Before dying, he mentions his unmarried daughter. In Raja's absence, dacoits invade Raja's village and torch several houses, including Raja's. Ramu who witnesses Seetha's death in the fire, and loses his voice due to trauma. He awaits his father's return everyday. Raja returns, unaware of the events that transpired. After reuniting with Ramu, he learns of his wife's death and son's loss of voice. Raja and Ramu leave the village for the latter's treatment. Ramu and Raja pass through a village, where the wealthy Seethalakshmi "Lakshmi" lives alone, having recently lost her father. Ganganna, her maternal uncle, has two sons: Rangan, who is as unscrupulous as his father, and Muthu, who is sympathetic. Ganganna, lusting for Lakshmi's wealth, orders her to marry Rangan and when she refuses, Ganganna harasses her. He sends mediators to convince Lakshmi, to no avail. When Raja is fetching water, Ramu inadvertently drops firewood on the way. Rangan, who was passing by, slaps Ramu for doing so. Raja beats Rangan and Rangan strikes Raja on the head, who faints. Lakshmi takes Raja and Ramu to her home, and nurses the former back to recovery. Workers are prevented from tilling Lakshmi's lands by Ganganna, so Raja helps Lakshmi by hiring a tractor and completing the work with minimal labour force. Raja helps Lakshmi in managing her farm in other ways too and Lakshmi gradually becomes attracted to him. Lakshmi becomes close to Ramu who reciprocates. Raja, however, refuses to return Lakshmi's feelings as he is still not over his deceased wife. Raja saves Lakshmi from attempted molestation by Rangan, and discovers she is his deceased superior's daughter. To kill time, Ramu goes to a nearby forest and becomes acquainted with a mentally unstable man, formerly a Tamil teacher. Rangan and Ganganna ask Sangili, a dacoit, to kill Raja. Ramu, who recognises Sangili, tells his father that Sangili was responsible for Seetha's death. Raja locates Sangili, beats and forces him to leave the village. Sangili returns to kill him, but is thwarted by Ramu and again subdued by Raja before being arrested. The physician treating Ramu recommends he be taken to an ENT specialist in Madras for treatment and Raja assents. The ENT specialist advises psychological treatment. The psychologist is unable to offer a solution. Raja becomes dejected, and after he is robbed, attempts suicide with his son, but both reconsider after listening to a prayer and return to Lakshmi's village. She insists that they continue living with her. Raja agrees after Ramu wants to be with Lakshmi. At night, Rangan secretly harvests crops from Lakshmi's land and his own, and frames Raja for doing so. Raja is arrested, and Ramu's dog is tied in one of Rangan's houses since it witnessed Rangan's harvesting. Ramu hears his dog barking and enters the house to free it, but he too gets tied up there. The Tamil teacher, searching for Ramu, enters the house and sees Ganganna there; Ganganna previously cheated on the Tamil teacher's daughter, leading to her drowning herself in a well. The Tamil teacher intimidates him into falling into the same well. Lakshmi comes to the house in search of Ramu, but Rangan tries to molest her. The dog escapes and brings Raja, who was released, to the spot. Raja fights Rangan, and a fire breaks out, causing Lakshmi to faint. Before the fire can engulf her, Ramu suddenly gets his voice back and shouts for her; Lakshmi awakens and the two walk out safely. Rangan is arrested by the police, and the Tamil teacher surrenders claiming responsibility for killing Ganganna. Later, Raja tries to leave the village with Ramu, but Ramu refuses to leave Lakshmi. Raja agrees to marry her and remains.

Cast

Production

Development

While in Bombay (now Mumbai) for the production of the film Do Kaliyaan (1968), M. Saravanan of AVM Productions chanced upon a film banner featuring Kishore Kumar and a boy with him. Saravanan learned the Hindi film's name, Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein (1964), and was told by Chinna Menon, the manager of the Bombay branch of AVM, that it was unsuccessful, but he was convinced the story was different. After enquiring further about the story, he learned that it was about a mute boy. Saravanan asked Menon for a print of Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein to watch, but Menon did not take it seriously. Meanwhile, Subramaniam of Venus Pictures had bought the rights to remake the film in Tamil for 10,000 (equivalent to 510,000 or US$6,400 in 2020), but eventually sold the rights to Saravanan for the same amount plus an additional 5000.[4]

Saravanan screened Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein for his father Meiyappan, brothers Murugan and Kumaran, directors Krishnan–Panju, screenwriter Javar N. Seetharaman and director A. C. Tirulokchandar. Krishnan–Panju detested the film, and Seetharaman believed a film featuring a child in a prominent role could only succeed if the child had powerful dialogues, evidenced by the success of AVM's previous film Kalathur Kannamma (1960); he was sceptical since the boy in Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein was mute. Saravanan suggested writing in how the boy becomes mute, an idea Seetharaman accepted and began writing the screenplay. Tirulokchandar was finalised as director,[5] and was paid 40,000.[6] After the title Ramu was finalised, friends of Saravanan had misgivings, but he refused to change the title.[7] The film was produced by Murugan, Kumaran and Saravanan under Uma Productions, a subsidiary of AVM. Cinematography was handled by T. Muthusamy and D. Rajagopal, editing by R. G. Gope, and art direction by A. K. Sekhar.[1]

Casting and filming

After Kalathur Kannamma, Gemini Ganesh had not been approached by AVM for any film. When he met them and asked why, AVM told him they could not afford to meet his financial demands which was substantially higher than the 10,000–20,000 they were paying other actors. Ganesh said he would be willing to act for any amount.[8][9] Though Murugan, Kumaran and Saravanan planned to cast Jaishankar as they felt he was the right person to subdue the bandits onscreen, Meiyappan felt Ganesan could better convey the character's grief regarding his wife's death and son losing his voice; they were agreed with their father's choice of Ganesh.[10]

K. R. Vijaya was cast after the producers were impressed with her performance in Karpagam (1963).[11] Yogendrakumar, later known as Master Rajkumar, was chosen to play the title character from over 100 children who screen tested. This was his first Tamil film; he had previously appeared in several Kannada, Telugu and Malayalam films. Meiyappan felt the name Yogendrakumar was not appealing to Tamil audiences and gave him his new name.[12][13] Ramu was predominantly filmed in the village of Kaduvetti.[14] The climax scene, depicting Ramu and Seethalakshmi in a burning room, was filmed over the course of five days, with kerosene used to light the fire.[12] When the fire was weakening, more kerosene was added, leading to increased fire. Vijaya was quickly helped out, but not Rajkumar as he was tied up, so Tirulokchandar ran in and saved him.[2][11] The final length of the film was 4,272 metres (14,016 ft).[3]

Soundtrack

The music composed by M. S. Viswanathan. The lyrics of all songs were penned by Kannadasan.[15] The song "Nilave Ennidam" is set in the Hindustani raga Bageshri,[16][17] and "Kannan Vandhan" is set to Yaman.[18][19] During the recording of this song, the original singer was unable to match the "weighty" singing of co-performer Sirkazhi Govindarajan, so he was replaced with T. M. Soundararajan.[20]

Track listing
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Kannan Vandhan"T. M. Soundararajan, Sirkazhi Govindarajan5:33
2."Muthu Chippi"P. Susheela4:13
3."Nilave Ennidam"P. B. Sreenivas, P. Susheela4:40
4."Pachai Maram Ondru" (duet)P. Susheela, P. B. Sreenivas2:56
5."Pachai Maram Ondru" (solo)P. Susheela3:40
Total length:21:02

Release and reception

Ramu was released on 10 June 1966.[21] The film was a commercial success, running for over 100 days in theatres, and won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil.[22][10] Kalki appreciated Tirulokchandar's direction, Seetharaman's writing, and called Ramu a pleasing family film.[23] Kumar, after watching the film, said it made him realise how weak he had written the original film, and appreciated Seetharaman for making a superior product.[10] His brother Ashok appreciated Seetharaman for making "suitable changes" that made the Tamil film more successful.[24]

Legacy

Ramu was remade in Telugu under the same title (1968) by the same studio and director, with Rajkumar reprising his role.[11][25] K. Bhagyaraj revealed that the inspiration for the story of Mundhanai Mudichu (1983) was a poster of Ramu that Bhagyaraj had seen as a child. The poster featured the protagonist with his motherless son. Bhagyaraj wondered how it would be if he himself were in that position, and prepared the story of Mundhanai Mudichu. Unlike Ramu, the protagonist's son was changed from a preteen to an infant.[26]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Dhananjayan 2014, p. 191.
  2. ^ a b முத்துராமன், எஸ்.பி. (5 August 2015). "சினிமா எடுத்துப் பார் 20- பரவிய தீ!". Hindu Tamil Thisai (in Tamil). from the original on 2 November 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  3. ^ a b Dhananjayan 2014, p. 192.
  4. ^ Saravanan 2013, pp. 180–182.
  5. ^ Saravanan 2013, pp. 182–183.
  6. ^ Saravanan 2013, pp. 188–189.
  7. ^ Saravanan 2013, p. 184.
  8. ^ Saravanan 2013, p. 185.
  9. ^ "#100YearsOfGeminiGanesan: Remembering the thespian Gemini Ganesan". The Times of India. 17 November 2020. from the original on 17 September 2022. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  10. ^ a b c மாதவன், பிரதீப் (4 November 2016). "தோல்விப் படத்திலிருந்து ஒரு வெற்றி" [A hit from a flop film]. Hindu Tamil Thisai (in Tamil). from the original on 17 December 2021. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  11. ^ a b c முத்துராமன், எஸ்.பி. (12 August 2015). "சினிமா எடுத்துப் பார் 21- அந்த புகழ்பெற்ற நடிகர்!". Hindu Tamil Thisai (in Tamil). from the original on 2 November 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  12. ^ a b கிருஷ்ணவேணி, வே. (18 April 2019). " 'எனக்குக் கோபம் வரும்போது காலை உதைப்பேன், அதே மாதிரி நீயும் பண்ணு'னு சிவாஜி சொன்னார்..! – 'ராமு' ராஜ்குமார்". Ananda Vikatan (in Tamil). from the original on 1 November 2022. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  13. ^ "விழுந்தது கற்களல்ல... காசுகள்!". Dinamani (in Tamil). 24 May 2009. from the original on 10 November 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
  14. ^ Saravanan 2013, p. 186.
  15. ^ "Ramu". JioSaavn. 31 December 1966. from the original on 2 November 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  16. ^ Sundararaman 2007, p. 148.
  17. ^ Mani, Charulatha (16 March 2012). . The Hindu. Archived from the original on 23 August 2019. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  18. ^ Sundararaman 2007, p. 137.
  19. ^ மணியன், பி.ஜி.எஸ். (7 June 2019). "மறக்கமுடியாத திரையிசை: காதல் மன்னனின் தயக்கம்!". Hindu Tamil Thisai (in Tamil). from the original on 4 November 2022. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  20. ^ Krishnamachari, Suganthy (19 December 2013). "Temple bell timbre". The Hindu. from the original on 30 October 2021. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  21. ^ Saravanan 2013, p. 180.
  22. ^ Dhananjayan 2014, p. 193.
  23. ^ "ராமு". Kalki (in Tamil). 26 June 1966. p. 21. from the original on 31 October 2022. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  24. ^ Dhananjayan, G. (15 August 2016). "Artistic amends – Flops a reservoir of hot story ideas". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 18 July 2017. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  25. ^ Narasimham, M. L. (4 April 2019). "Ramu (1968)". The Hindu. from the original on 3 November 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  26. ^ " 'ராமு' போஸ்டர் இன்ஸ்பிரேஷன்தான் 'முந்தானை முடிச்சு' - கே.பாக்யராஜ் பிரத்யேகப் பேட்டி". Hindu Tamil Thisai (in Tamil). 1 September 2019. from the original on 2 September 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2022.

Bibliography

External links

ramu, 1966, film, ramu, 1966, indian, tamil, language, drama, film, directed, tirulokchandar, written, javar, seetharaman, film, stars, gemini, ganesh, vijaya, with, ashokan, nagesh, ramasamy, thevar, master, rajkumar, title, character, supporting, roles, rema. Ramu is a 1966 Indian Tamil language drama film directed by A C Tirulokchandar and written by Javar N Seetharaman The film stars Gemini Ganesh and K R Vijaya with Ashokan Nagesh V K Ramasamy O A K Thevar and Master Rajkumar as the title character in supporting roles A remake of the Hindi film Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein 1964 it revolves around a boy losing his voice due to witnessing his mother s death and his father s efforts to restore his voice RamuTheatrical release posterDirected byA C TirulokchandarScreenplay byJavar N SeetharamanStory byKishore KumarProduced byM MuruganM KumaranM SaravananStarringGemini GanesanK R VijayaCinematographyT MuthusamyD RajagopalEdited byR G GopuMusic byM S ViswanathanProductioncompanyUma ProductionsDistributed byAVM ProductionsRelease date10 June 1966 1966 06 10 Running time149 minutes 1 CountryIndiaLanguageTamilRamu was produced by Uma Productions a subsidiary of AVM Productions The film was released on 10 June 1966 and emerged a commercial success winning the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil It was also remade in Telugu under the same title two years later in 1968 by the same studio and director with Rajkumar reprising his role Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Casting and filming 4 Soundtrack 5 Release and reception 6 Legacy 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksPlot EditRaja a soldier in the Indian Army returns to his village to be with his wife Seetha and son Ramu during Pongal He receives a telegram ordering him to report for duty and has to leave During the war Raja s superior is wounded and succumbs in Raja s arms Before dying he mentions his unmarried daughter In Raja s absence dacoits invade Raja s village and torch several houses including Raja s Ramu who witnesses Seetha s death in the fire and loses his voice due to trauma He awaits his father s return everyday Raja returns unaware of the events that transpired After reuniting with Ramu he learns of his wife s death and son s loss of voice Raja and Ramu leave the village for the latter s treatment Ramu and Raja pass through a village where the wealthy Seethalakshmi Lakshmi lives alone having recently lost her father Ganganna her maternal uncle has two sons Rangan who is as unscrupulous as his father and Muthu who is sympathetic Ganganna lusting for Lakshmi s wealth orders her to marry Rangan and when she refuses Ganganna harasses her He sends mediators to convince Lakshmi to no avail When Raja is fetching water Ramu inadvertently drops firewood on the way Rangan who was passing by slaps Ramu for doing so Raja beats Rangan and Rangan strikes Raja on the head who faints Lakshmi takes Raja and Ramu to her home and nurses the former back to recovery Workers are prevented from tilling Lakshmi s lands by Ganganna so Raja helps Lakshmi by hiring a tractor and completing the work with minimal labour force Raja helps Lakshmi in managing her farm in other ways too and Lakshmi gradually becomes attracted to him Lakshmi becomes close to Ramu who reciprocates Raja however refuses to return Lakshmi s feelings as he is still not over his deceased wife Raja saves Lakshmi from attempted molestation by Rangan and discovers she is his deceased superior s daughter To kill time Ramu goes to a nearby forest and becomes acquainted with a mentally unstable man formerly a Tamil teacher Rangan and Ganganna ask Sangili a dacoit to kill Raja Ramu who recognises Sangili tells his father that Sangili was responsible for Seetha s death Raja locates Sangili beats and forces him to leave the village Sangili returns to kill him but is thwarted by Ramu and again subdued by Raja before being arrested The physician treating Ramu recommends he be taken to an ENT specialist in Madras for treatment and Raja assents The ENT specialist advises psychological treatment The psychologist is unable to offer a solution Raja becomes dejected and after he is robbed attempts suicide with his son but both reconsider after listening to a prayer and return to Lakshmi s village She insists that they continue living with her Raja agrees after Ramu wants to be with Lakshmi At night Rangan secretly harvests crops from Lakshmi s land and his own and frames Raja for doing so Raja is arrested and Ramu s dog is tied in one of Rangan s houses since it witnessed Rangan s harvesting Ramu hears his dog barking and enters the house to free it but he too gets tied up there The Tamil teacher searching for Ramu enters the house and sees Ganganna there Ganganna previously cheated on the Tamil teacher s daughter leading to her drowning herself in a well The Tamil teacher intimidates him into falling into the same well Lakshmi comes to the house in search of Ramu but Rangan tries to molest her The dog escapes and brings Raja who was released to the spot Raja fights Rangan and a fire breaks out causing Lakshmi to faint Before the fire can engulf her Ramu suddenly gets his voice back and shouts for her Lakshmi awakens and the two walk out safely Rangan is arrested by the police and the Tamil teacher surrenders claiming responsibility for killing Ganganna Later Raja tries to leave the village with Ramu but Ramu refuses to leave Lakshmi Raja agrees to marry her and remains Cast EditGemini Ganesh as Raja K R Vijaya as Seethalakshmi Lakshmi Ashokan as Rangan 1 Nagesh as Muthu 1 V K Ramasamy as Ganganna 1 O A K Thevar as Sangili 1 V S Raghavan as Doctor 1 Master Rajkumar as Ramu V Nagayya special appearance in the song Kannan Vandhan 2 S V Subbaiah as the mad Tamil teacher 3 Ramadas as Lakshmi s father 1 C S Pushpalatha as Seetha 1 S N Lakshmi as Kannamma 1 Production EditDevelopment Edit While in Bombay now Mumbai for the production of the film Do Kaliyaan 1968 M Saravanan of AVM Productions chanced upon a film banner featuring Kishore Kumar and a boy with him Saravanan learned the Hindi film s name Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein 1964 and was told by Chinna Menon the manager of the Bombay branch of AVM that it was unsuccessful but he was convinced the story was different After enquiring further about the story he learned that it was about a mute boy Saravanan asked Menon for a print of Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein to watch but Menon did not take it seriously Meanwhile Subramaniam of Venus Pictures had bought the rights to remake the film in Tamil for 10 000 equivalent to 510 000 or US 6 400 in 2020 but eventually sold the rights to Saravanan for the same amount plus an additional 5000 4 Saravanan screened Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein for his father Meiyappan brothers Murugan and Kumaran directors Krishnan Panju screenwriter Javar N Seetharaman and director A C Tirulokchandar Krishnan Panju detested the film and Seetharaman believed a film featuring a child in a prominent role could only succeed if the child had powerful dialogues evidenced by the success of AVM s previous film Kalathur Kannamma 1960 he was sceptical since the boy in Door Gagan Ki Chhaon Mein was mute Saravanan suggested writing in how the boy becomes mute an idea Seetharaman accepted and began writing the screenplay Tirulokchandar was finalised as director 5 and was paid 40 000 6 After the title Ramu was finalised friends of Saravanan had misgivings but he refused to change the title 7 The film was produced by Murugan Kumaran and Saravanan under Uma Productions a subsidiary of AVM Cinematography was handled by T Muthusamy and D Rajagopal editing by R G Gope and art direction by A K Sekhar 1 Casting and filming Edit After Kalathur Kannamma Gemini Ganesh had not been approached by AVM for any film When he met them and asked why AVM told him they could not afford to meet his financial demands which was substantially higher than the 10 000 20 000 they were paying other actors Ganesh said he would be willing to act for any amount 8 9 Though Murugan Kumaran and Saravanan planned to cast Jaishankar as they felt he was the right person to subdue the bandits onscreen Meiyappan felt Ganesan could better convey the character s grief regarding his wife s death and son losing his voice they were agreed with their father s choice of Ganesh 10 K R Vijaya was cast after the producers were impressed with her performance in Karpagam 1963 11 Yogendrakumar later known as Master Rajkumar was chosen to play the title character from over 100 children who screen tested This was his first Tamil film he had previously appeared in several Kannada Telugu and Malayalam films Meiyappan felt the name Yogendrakumar was not appealing to Tamil audiences and gave him his new name 12 13 Ramu was predominantly filmed in the village of Kaduvetti 14 The climax scene depicting Ramu and Seethalakshmi in a burning room was filmed over the course of five days with kerosene used to light the fire 12 When the fire was weakening more kerosene was added leading to increased fire Vijaya was quickly helped out but not Rajkumar as he was tied up so Tirulokchandar ran in and saved him 2 11 The final length of the film was 4 272 metres 14 016 ft 3 Soundtrack EditThe music composed by M S Viswanathan The lyrics of all songs were penned by Kannadasan 15 The song Nilave Ennidam is set in the Hindustani raga Bageshri 16 17 and Kannan Vandhan is set to Yaman 18 19 During the recording of this song the original singer was unable to match the weighty singing of co performer Sirkazhi Govindarajan so he was replaced with T M Soundararajan 20 Track listingNo TitleSinger s Length1 Kannan Vandhan T M Soundararajan Sirkazhi Govindarajan5 332 Muthu Chippi P Susheela4 133 Nilave Ennidam P B Sreenivas P Susheela4 404 Pachai Maram Ondru duet P Susheela P B Sreenivas2 565 Pachai Maram Ondru solo P Susheela3 40Total length 21 02Release and reception EditRamu was released on 10 June 1966 21 The film was a commercial success running for over 100 days in theatres and won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil 22 10 Kalki appreciated Tirulokchandar s direction Seetharaman s writing and called Ramu a pleasing family film 23 Kumar after watching the film said it made him realise how weak he had written the original film and appreciated Seetharaman for making a superior product 10 His brother Ashok appreciated Seetharaman for making suitable changes that made the Tamil film more successful 24 Legacy EditRamu was remade in Telugu under the same title 1968 by the same studio and director with Rajkumar reprising his role 11 25 K Bhagyaraj revealed that the inspiration for the story of Mundhanai Mudichu 1983 was a poster of Ramu that Bhagyaraj had seen as a child The poster featured the protagonist with his motherless son Bhagyaraj wondered how it would be if he himself were in that position and prepared the story of Mundhanai Mudichu Unlike Ramu the protagonist s son was changed from a preteen to an infant 26 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j Dhananjayan 2014 p 191 a b ம த த ர மன எஸ ப 5 August 2015 ச ன ம எட த த ப ப ர 20 பரவ ய த Hindu Tamil Thisai in Tamil Archived from the original on 2 November 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 a b Dhananjayan 2014 p 192 Saravanan 2013 pp 180 182 Saravanan 2013 pp 182 183 Saravanan 2013 pp 188 189 Saravanan 2013 p 184 Saravanan 2013 p 185 100YearsOfGeminiGanesan Remembering the thespian Gemini Ganesan The Times of India 17 November 2020 Archived from the original on 17 September 2022 Retrieved 4 November 2022 a b c ம தவன ப ரத ப 4 November 2016 த ல வ ப படத த ல ர ந த ஒர வ ற ற A hit from a flop film Hindu Tamil Thisai in Tamil Archived from the original on 17 December 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2021 a b c ம த த ர மன எஸ ப 12 August 2015 ச ன ம எட த த ப ப ர 21 அந த ப கழ ப ற ற நட கர Hindu Tamil Thisai in Tamil Archived from the original on 2 November 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 a b க ர ஷ ணவ ண வ 18 April 2019 எனக க க க பம வர ம ப த க ல உத ப ப ன அத ம த ர ந ய ம பண ண ன ச வ ஜ ச ன ன ர ர ம ர ஜ க ம ர Ananda Vikatan in Tamil Archived from the original on 1 November 2022 Retrieved 31 October 2022 வ ழ ந தத கற களல ல க ச கள Dinamani in Tamil 24 May 2009 Archived from the original on 10 November 2022 Retrieved 10 November 2022 Saravanan 2013 p 186 Ramu JioSaavn 31 December 1966 Archived from the original on 2 November 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Sundararaman 2007 p 148 Mani Charulatha 16 March 2012 A Raga s Journey Bewitching Bhagesri The Hindu Archived from the original on 23 August 2019 Retrieved 23 August 2019 Sundararaman 2007 p 137 மண யன ப ஜ எஸ 7 June 2019 மறக கம ட ய த த ர ய ச க தல மன னன ன தயக கம Hindu Tamil Thisai in Tamil Archived from the original on 4 November 2022 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Krishnamachari Suganthy 19 December 2013 Temple bell timbre The Hindu Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Saravanan 2013 p 180 Dhananjayan 2014 p 193 ர ம Kalki in Tamil 26 June 1966 p 21 Archived from the original on 31 October 2022 Retrieved 31 October 2022 Dhananjayan G 15 August 2016 Artistic amends Flops a reservoir of hot story ideas The Times of India Archived from the original on 18 July 2017 Retrieved 5 March 2018 Narasimham M L 4 April 2019 Ramu 1968 The Hindu Archived from the original on 3 November 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 ர ம ப ஸ டர இன ஸ ப ர ஷன த ன ம ந த ன ம ட ச ச க ப க யர ஜ ப ரத ய கப ப ட ட Hindu Tamil Thisai in Tamil 1 September 2019 Archived from the original on 2 September 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2022 Bibliography EditDhananjayan G 2014 Pride of Tamil Cinema 1931 2013 Blue Ocean Publishers OCLC 898765509 Saravanan M 2013 2005 AVM 60 Cinema in Tamil 3rd ed Rajarajan Pathippagam OCLC 1158347612 Sundararaman 2007 2005 Raga Chintamani A Guide to Carnatic Ragas Through Tamil Film Music 2nd ed Pichhamal Chintamani OCLC 295034757 External links EditRamu at IMDb Ramu at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ramu 1966 film amp oldid 1123701925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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