Oru Maravathoor Kanavu
Oru Maravathoor Kanavu | |
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File:Oru Maravathoor Kanavu.jpg
Poster
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Directed by | Lal Jose |
Produced by | Siyad Koker |
Written by | Sreenivasan |
Starring | Mammootty Biju Menon Mohini Divya Unni Sreenivasan Kalabhavan Mani Sukumari Nedumudi Venu |
Music by | Vidyasagar |
Cinematography | Vipin Mohan |
Edited by | Ranjan Abraham |
Production
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Distributed by | Kokers Evershine Anoopama |
Release dates
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Running time
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140 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Malayalam |
Oru Maravathoor Kanavu (Malayalam: ഒരു മറവത്തൂർ കനവ്) is a 1998 Malayalam comedy-drama musical film directed by Lal Jose and written by Sreenivasan. It stars Mammootty, Biju Menon, Mohini, Divya Unni, Sreenivasan, Kalabhavan Mani, Sukumari and Nedumudi Venu. The music was composed by Vidyasagar.
It was the directorial debut of Lal Jose, who had previously worked as an assistant director in many Malayalam films.[1] Playback singer Devanand also debuted through this film.[2] The film was well received upon release and was a box-office success.[3] The films plot lines are vague adaptation of a box-office hit French film Jean de Florette, the center plot of the movie and many scenes are exactly transposed with a keralite reference. But film failed in plot-wise and left the audience with a sour aftertaste by not adapting the second part of the film Manon des Sources. [4]
Plot
Michael (Biju Menon), his wife Mary (Mohini) and their son buy a farmland in Maravathoor that was coveted by a rich man (Nedumudi Venu). In order to drive away all prospective buyers the rich man and his nephew Maruthu (Sreenivasan) try everything. When they realise that Michael has bought the farm, they block up a spring water source on the farm to make things hard for Michael and thus force him to sell the farm.
Michael and his family stay at the house of Annie (Divya Unni) and her grandmother (Sukumari), while they work on the farm. The farm struggles due the lack of availability of water, and due to Michael's vices (gambling and alcoholism). To support Michael, his brother Chandy (Mammootty) comes to Maravathoor. Chandy is an active party worker in Southern Kerala and acts as a muscle for his party's needs. His arrival changes the fortunes of the farm and halts the activities of Nedumudi Venu.
To support Chandy's activities, Antappan (Kalabhavan Mani) and friends (party workers/goons) arrives as well from Chandy's hometown. To eliminate Chandy's threat, Nedumudi Venu spreads a rumour of an illicit relationship between Michael's wife, Mary and Chandy. Evil plans of the rich man comes to a fruition when one morning Maravathoor wakes to the news that Chandy and Mary have run away together.
The movie ends with Chandy coming back to bury his deceased brother Michael and has to face the wrath of his nephew and the villagers. He explains that he left that day earlier because the leader, Korah Sir of his political party has died. Later Michael comes to see Chandy and says under the influence of Alcohol he gambled away his money and accidentally caused the death of his wife. Michael tells about the rumor that's been passing around the village and Chandy comforts Michael not to worry - Let the rumor stay as it is. He produces a series of cordial letters him and Michael made to each other to support his story. The scandal is resolved and Chandy finds his home again in Maravathoor.
Cast
- Mammootty as Chandy
- Biju Menon as Michael (Younger brother of Chandy)
- Mohini as Mary (Wife of Michael)
- Divya Unni as Annie
- Sreenivasan as Maruthu
- Kalabhavan Mani as Antappan (Friend of Chandy)
- james
- Sukumari (Grandmother of Annie)
- Nedumudi Venu
- Oduvil Unnikrishnan
- Ottapalam Pappan
- Cherthala Lalitha
Soundtrack
The soundtrack features seven songs composed by Vidyasagar and lyrics penned by Gireesh Puthenchery.[5]
- "Kanninila" — Biju Narayanan & Sujatha
- "Kanninila" — K. S. Chithra & Chorus
- "Karunaamayane" — K. S. Chithra
- "Karunaamayane" — K. J. Yesudas
- "Mohamaay" — K. S. Chithra & Raveendran
- "Pandengadee Naattil" — K. S. Chithra & Chorus
- "Sundariye Sundariye" — K. J. Yesudas, Pushpavanam Kuppuswamy & Sujatha
- "Thaarakkoottam" — M. G. Sreekumar, G. Venugopal & Srinivas
- "Thinkalkkuri" — K. S. Chithra & Raveendran (Music: Raveendran)
- "Thinkalkkuri Thottum" — Devanand, K. S. Chithra & Raveendran (Music: Raveendran)
Box office
The film was super hit and ran more than 100 days in theatres.[6][7]
References
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- ↑ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5ar8L-9xcw
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- ↑ http://www.news18.com/news/india/lal-jose-eyeing-bollywood-with-diamond-necklace-remake-642179.html
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- Use dmy dates from November 2015
- Use Indian English from November 2015
- All Wikipedia articles written in Indian English
- Pages with broken file links
- 1998 films
- Malayalam-language films
- Articles containing Malayalam-language text
- 1990s Malayalam-language films
- 1990s comedy-drama films
- Indian films
- Directorial debut films