Deiva Vaakku

1992 Indian film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Deiva Vaakku (transl.God's promise) is a 1992 Indian Tamil-language drama film directed by M. S. Madhu and produced by T. Siva. The film stars Karthik and Revathi. It was released on 11 September 1992.[1]

Directed byM. S. Madhu
Screenplay byM. S. Madhu
Produced byT. Siva
Starring
Quick facts Directed by, Screenplay by ...
Deiva Vaakku
DVD cover
Directed byM. S. Madhu
Screenplay byM. S. Madhu
Produced byT. Siva
Starring
CinematographyR. Ravi Shankar
Edited byG. Jayachandran
R. R. Ilavarasan
Music byIlaiyaraaja
Production
company
Amma Creations
Release date
  • 11 September 1992 (1992-09-11)
Running time
130 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
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Plot

Amsaveni channels the voice of the Goddess in childhood. After water is found miraculously after a drought through her, the grateful villagers treat her like the Goddess. Her duplicitous elder brother Vallathar exploits his younger sister's powers to enrich himself. When Amsaveni falls in love with a misunderstood drunk-with-heart-of-gold Thambidurai, Vallathar is unhappy. He does not wish Amsaveni to marry Thambidurai due to the difference in status between the two and, more importantly, because after Amsaveni's marriage the source of his income will stop. So, Vallathar tries to prevent Thambidurai from marrying his sister.

Cast

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.[2][3] The song "Indha Ammanukku Entha Ooru" is set to the raga Mohanam,[4] "Oorellam Saamiyaga" is set to Natabhairavi.[5] and "Valli Valli Ena" is set to Shivaranjani,[6][7]

More information Song, Singer(s) ...
SongSinger(s)LyricsDuration
"Indha Ammanukku Entha Ooru"IlaiyaraajaVaali4:53
"Katthuthadi Raakkozhi"Gangai Amaran4:49
"Oorellam Saamiyaga"Jayachandran, S. Janaki4:54
"Oru Paatale Solli"S. P. BalasubrahmanyamVaali4:58
"Valli Valli Enna"Ilaiyaraaja, S. Janaki4:55
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Critical reception

Malini Mannath of The Indian Express wrote, "Here the storyline is thin, the script is not that engaging, but the effective camera work [..] A superb performance by petite Revathi [..] saves the film from being run-of-the-mill".[8] K. N. Vijiyan of New Straits Times wrote, "This movie should be of special interest to those who frequently seek advice from temple mediums".[9] C. R. K. of Kalki praised Revathi's performance, but felt the hard work of many actors was wasted due to the cliched characters and incidents and concluded whether or not actors are tired of portraying same kind of roles again, audience are tired of it.[10]

References

Bibliography

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