Pazhaniappa Kalloori

2007 Indian film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pazhaniappa Kalloori (transl.Pazhaniappa College) is a 2007 Indian Tamil-language drama film written and directed by R. Pavan and produced by Anbalaya Films. The film stars Naveen Chandra (credited as Pradeep), Arjumman Mughal, Madhu Shalini and Akshaya Rao in lead roles. It was released on 21 December 2007.

Directed byR. Pavan
Produced byK. Prabhakaran
Starring
CinematographyG. B. Krishna
Quick facts Directed by, Produced by ...
Pazhaniappa Kalloori
Poster
Directed byR. Pavan
Produced byK. Prabhakaran
Starring
CinematographyG. B. Krishna
Music byR. P. Patnaik
Production
company
Release date
  • 21 December 2007 (2007-12-21)
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
Close

Cast

Production

The film was first announced by Anbalaya Films in September 2004 under the title of Pasanga, Ponnunga, Oru College. Film Institute graduate R. Pavan was revealed to be the director, with R. P. Patnaik as composer and G. B. Krishna as cinematographer.[1] Production delays meant that the film progressed slowly. Arjumman Mughal made her film debut,[2] and Naveen Chandra (credited as Pradeep) made his Tamil debut.[3] The film was largely shot at A. V. C. College in Mayiladuthurai.[4]

Soundtrack

Soundtrack was composed by R. P. Patnaik, in his second Tamil film after Jayam (2003).[5] The song "Parangimalai" is based on his own song "Ameerpet" from Telugu film Eeswar while "En Meesai" is based on "Tiya Tiyani" from Telugu film Sreeram.[citation needed]

  • Parangimalai – Silambarasan
  • Vayasu Pasangala – Karthik
  • En Meesai Suriyan – Mathangi
  • Pattam Poochi – Tippu
  • Vaa Endral – Tippu
  • Goyango – Malathi
  • Wine Shopla – R. P. Patnaik

Release and reception

The film was released on 21 December 2007.[6] S. R. Ashok Kumar of The Hindu opined that "Director Pavan should have burnt the midnight oil more to do the script, packing it with enough incidents with twist and turns to sustain audience interest. As it is his first film one can pardon him, but will the audience?"[7] Malini Mannath from Chennai Online noted "the film, which seems like mindless entertainment during the first half, takes a more serious turn in the second, with a message weaved in" and that the story "depicts a typical college campus with characters and incidents that we have seen in many earlier campus films".[8] A reviewer from Webdunia criticised Anbalaya Films for producing a film full of fighting, smoking and drinking scenes.[9]

The film did not perform well commercially, with The Times of India calling it a "debacle" and News18 noting it was poorly publicised.[10][11]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI