Unnai Ninaithu | |
---|---|
Directed by | Vikraman |
Written by | Vikraman |
Produced by | K. Muralitharan V. Swaminathan G. Venugopal |
Starring | Suriya Sneha Laila |
Cinematography | Balasubramaniem |
Edited by | V. Jaishankar |
Music by | Sirpy |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 163 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Unnai Ninaithu (transl. Thinking About You) is a 2002 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film written and directed by Vikraman. It stars Suriya, Laila and Sneha in the lead roles while Ramesh Khanna, Charle, R. Sundarrajan and Ramji play supporting roles. The film was released on 10 May 2002 and became a commercial success, becoming one of Suriya's successful films in the beginning of his career. It was remade into Telugu by the same director as Cheppave Chirugali. The second half of the film was used in the 2007 Kannada film Krishna.[1][2]
Plot
Surya works as a receptionist in a lodge in Chennai. He, along with his friend Gopi, manages the entire lodge. Actually, the lodge is owned by Surya's father but has been leased due to financial troubles. Radha is the daughter of the new manager for the lodge who stays next to the lodge along with her mother and family. Radha gets attracted towards Surya upon seeing his good nature, but Surya tells his past love story to Radha.
A few days ago Nirmala lived in the same house where Radha lives now. Surya likes Nirmala and helps her family financially. Slowly, Surya and Nirmala fall in love, and Nirmala's parents decide to get them married. Selvam is Suriya's friend who stays with him during his initial days. Later, Selvam secures a good job and starts earning well. Selvam also gets attracted towards Nirmala and tries to impress her. Nirmala's parents consider Selvam to be a better match for Nirmala as he earns more than Surya. They convince Nirmala to marry Selvam.
Surya gets heartbroken knowing this, but one day, he finds Selvam in a shopping mall with another girl. Surya understands that Selvam has no intention of marrying Nirmala and is planning only for an illegitimate relationship with her. Surya informs this to Nirmala, who misunderstands that he is trying to break her relationship with Selvam by cooking up false stories. Nirmala, along with her family, moves to a big house given by Selvam. Surya, unable to bear Nirmala being deceived by Selvam, locates him in a mall and beats him up. Nirmala sees this and defends Selvam, ordering Surya to never see her again.
The story comes to the present, and Radha is even more impressed upon listening to Surya's past love story. One day, Surya finds Nirmala and gets to know that Selvam has broken the promise to marry her and humiliated her and her family and they had to leave everything and return to poverty. Surya is worried seeing Nirmala and her family's poor state and again offers help. Nirmala had plans of pursuing MBBS before. Surya helps her in writing the entrance examination. She gets admission only in a private medical college where the fee is high. Surya sells his lodge to the lessee and gives the money to Nirmala to use it for the education fee.
Five years pass by, and Nirmala completes her medical degree and gets a job posting, as well. All these years, Surya gave her financial and moral support in pursuing her education. Meanwhile, Radha also remains unmarried as she loves Surya, but she never expressed it to him. Nirmala is about to leave to another city for a job along with her family. At the railway station, she conveys her interest in marrying Surya, who refuses her proposal by saying that he helped her only because he once loved her and didn't wish to see her in poverty, but did not harbour any feelings for her. He says that he knows that Radha is in love with him and that she has been declining all marriage alliances coming her way for the last five years waiting for Surya. Surya also says that Radha's love is more genuine than Nirmala's because Nirmala ditched him when she found a better guy than Surya, while Radha was rejecting all other proposals for him. Radha overhears the conversation and feels happy. The movie ends with both Surya and Radha getting united.
Cast
- Suriya as Suriya
- Laila as Nirmala
- Sneha as Radha
- R. Sundarrajan as Chittoor Chinnamani
- Charle as Mei Meiyappan
- Ramesh Khanna as Gopi
- Thalaivaasal Vijay as Nirmala's father
- Sathyapriya as Radha's mother
- Pallavi as Nirmala's mother
- Chitra Lakshmanan as Vaidyalingam
- Balu Anand as Radha's father
- Ramji as Selvam
- Kulir Kumaresan as Room Boy
- Uma Maheshwari as Radha's sister
- Sheela as Radha's sister
- Hari Prashanth as Nirmala's brother
- Delhi Ganesh as Surya's Lodge owner
- Pandu as Vaidyalingam's follower
- Mayilsamy as Vaidyalingam's Patient
- Kovai Senthil as Producer's mad son
- Visweswara Rao
Production
Vijay, who worked with Vikraman in Poove Unakkaga (1996), was chosen by him to play the lead role in Unnai Ninaithu and the actor shot for the film for a few days before opting out of the project, owing to creative differences. He was subsequently replaced by Suriya.[3][4] Vikraman also briefly considered casting actor Prashanth, before finalising Suriya.[5]
The team predominantly shot the film in Chennai and Visakhapatnam areas, while songs were shot in Malaysia, Thailand and Sri Lanka. The team travelled to Kandy and the Ramboda Falls to film sequences across Sri Lanka, and it became the first film by director Vikraman to be shot outside India.[6] Dubbing artist Jayageetha dubbed for Sneha, while Dubbing artist Savitha Reddy dubbed for Laila.
Soundtrack
The music was composed by Sirpy.[7]
Title | Singers | Lyrics | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
"Chocklet Chocklet" | Tippu | Na. Muthukumar | 4:41 |
"Pombalainga Kadhal" | Manikka Vinayagam, P. Unnikrishnan | Pa. Vijay | 5:38 |
"Ennai Thalattum" | Unni Menon, Sujatha |
4:38 | |
"Yaar Indha Devathai" | Hariharan | 4:15 | |
"Yaar Indha Devathai" II | Unni Menon | 4:15 | |
"Sil Sil Silala" | P. Unnikrishnan, Sujatha | 4:21 | |
"Happy New Year" | P. Unnikrishnan, Sujatha | Kalaikumar | 4:30 |
"Ennai Thalattum" (solo) | Sujatha | Pa. Vijay | 4:42 |
Release and reception
The film was released on 10 May 2002.[8] A reviewer from The Hindu wrote, "the story must have had a strong theme to begin with and the screenplay surely aims at conveying something different. But things do not progress in that direction", and adds that "the treatment lacks punch".[9] The reviewer from Sify gave the film a negative review, adding "the film is very slow and one feels that the story is as old as the hills", adding that it is a "rehash of the director's earlier hits and is long winded and extremely slow paced mainly due to illogical story, songs pushed into the narrative and a jarring comedy track".[10] Cinesouth wrote "A typical Vikraman film. Amidst many an embarrassments, the film manages to win our hearts. Let's accept it".[11] The film went on to perform well at the box office, and did exceptional business in town and village theatres across Tamil Nadu.[12]
Accolades
Award | Category | Nominee | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
2002 Filmfare Awards South | Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actress – Tamil | Sneha | [13] |
2002 Tamil Nadu State Awards | Best Film | Unnai Ninaithu | [14] |
Best Music Director | Sirpy | ||
Best Lyricist | Ravishankar | ||
Best Male Playback Singer | Unni Menon |
References
- ^ "Movie review – Cheppave Chirugali". Idlebrain.com. Archived from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
- ^ "Surya's film stolen". Behindwoods. 1 November 2007. Archived from the original on 18 February 2023. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
- ^ "When Suriya replaced Vijay mysteriously". Behindwoods. 26 February 2013. Archived from the original on 27 July 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
- ^ Tulika (7 December 2001). "Love's labour lost". Rediff.com. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
- ^ "Cinebits". Nilacharal. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
- ^ Mannath, Malini (13 May 2002). "Unnai Ninaithu". Chennai Online. Archived from the original on 25 August 2004. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ^ "Unnai Ninaithu". JioSaavn. 10 May 2002. Archived from the original on 4 March 2023. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
- ^ "Unnai Ninaithu (2002)". Screen 4 Screen. Archived from the original on 15 November 2023. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
- ^ Rangarajan, Malathi (17 May 2002). "Unnai Ninaithu". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 10 February 2003. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ^ "Unnai Ninaithu". Sify. 25 April 2003. Archived from the original on 24 April 2017. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
- ^ "Unnai Ninaithu". Cinesouth. Archived from the original on 4 August 2002. Retrieved 30 September 2024.
- ^ Pillai, Sreedhar (24 July 2002). "A chip off the old block". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 26 November 2002. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ^ "Manikchand Filmfare Awards: Sizzling at 50". Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2023.
- ^ "Tamil Nadu announces film awards for three years". IndiaGlitz. 1 October 2004. Archived from the original on 24 October 2004. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
External links
- 2002 films
- 2000s Indian films
- 2000s Tamil-language films
- 2002 romantic drama films
- Films directed by Vikraman
- Films scored by Sirpy
- Films shot in Chennai
- Films shot in Malaysia
- Films shot in Sri Lanka
- Films shot in Thailand
- Indian romantic drama films
- Tamil films remade in other languages
- Tamil-language Indian films