Raakilipattu
It has been suggested that this article be merged into Snegithiye. (Discuss) Proposed since August 2024. |
Raakilipaatu | |
---|---|
Directed by | Priyadarshan |
Written by | Priyadarshan Chandrakant Kulkarni Maharajan |
Produced by | Mukesh R Mehta |
Starring | Jyothika Sharbani Mukherjee Tabu Ishitta Arun |
Cinematography | Jeeva |
Edited by | N. Gopalakrishnan |
Music by | Vidyasagar Background score: S. P. Venkatesh |
Distributed by | Surya Cine Arts |
Release date |
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Country | India |
Language | Malayalam |
Raakilipaatu (transl. Rock music) is a 2007 Indian Malayalam mystery-thriller film directed by Priyadarshan and starring Jyothika, Sharbani Mukherjee, Tabu and Ishitta Arun. The music was composed by Vidyasagar. The film's story is loosely based on the 1999 Marathi film Bindhaast written by Chandrakant Kulkarni. The film had a delayed release in 2007 and was shot in Tamil as Snegithiye (2000). The Malayalam version was dubbed in Hindi as Friendship (2007).[2][3][4]
Plot
[edit]Best friends Josephine and Radhika are carefree pranksters at a prestigious ladies' college. They stay up late, break rules and wreak havoc at their hostel, much to their lecturers' annoyance. They also form a rivalry against Gita, the college queen bee. Malathi, Radhika's aunt, wants her niece to complete her studies, so that she can take over her late parents' multi-million business. In order to straighten Radhika out, Malathi arranges for her to get married.
At this point, Josephine and Radhika are introduced to Gayathri, a fiercely independent and strong police officer and an alumnus of their college. During an event at the college, Gayathri explains how women in the country lose their independence and livelihood after getting married. Convinced that they should avoid marriage as long as possible, Josephine and Radhika pretend that Radhika has a boyfriend from overseas, named Ramesh, in order to avoid Malathi from arranging anymore suitors. However, this fantasy takes a whole new turn, when an actual person named Ramesh calls and sends Radhika letters, claiming to be her boyfriend. To end this nuisance, Josephine and Radhika invite Ramesh to their hostel during the college dance program and plan to trick him into blurt out the truth. Josephine instructs Radhika to bring her aunt's guns for their safety.
However, a mysterious shooter kills Ramesh before the girls can confront him. Fearing that suspicion would fall on them, they decide to dispose of the body by hiding it in the air ventilator. Unexpectedly, the body slides down the vent and lands on the auditorium stage, in the middle of a performance. Gayathri, who is the guest of honour at the event, takes charge of the case. She finds Radhika's necklace on the body and the two girls are brought in for questioning. At the police station, an old woman shows up claiming that Ramesh is her son and has gone missing. Realising that the noose is tightening and that the story of their innocence would not stand, Josephine and Radhika escape police custody and hide in an abandoned mansion, on the outskirts of the city.
Knowing that they are now the prime suspects of Ramesh's murder, they decide to find the real killer before Gayathri catches up on them. Josephine suspects Malathi of framing them in order to inherit Radhika's wealth. When they finally seise the chance to meet her, Malathi explains that she had known all along that the girls had been fooling her. The young man who was pretending to be Ramesh, was actually a family friend, named Vikram, whom Malathi had been planning to marry Radhika off to.
Through their college friends, the girls discover that Gita had gone missing on that fateful night. After much difficulty, the girls find Gita hiding in at a border town. However, Gita reveals that she too is on the run from Gayathri, because she had witnessed Gayathri killing Vikram [aka Ramesh] that night. On the night of the murder, she had returned to the hostel to take some medications and had inadvertently witnessed the murder and had fled from the scene, fearing Gayathri would use her influence to cover up the crime. Unfortunately, Gayathri manages to catch up on the trio. However, the woman who had pretended to be Ramesh's mother arrives on the scene. She turns out to be a CBI officer, who had been investigating Gayathri and knows that the girls are not responsible for Vikram's murder.
Gayathri ends up going insane because of her mental stress. The CBI officer reveals that Gayathri had murdered Vikram to avenge her sister's paralysis. Vikram and his friends had gang-raped Gayathri's sister in the past, after Gayathri found out he was a womaniser and stopped her sister from dating him. To escape justice, she had no choice, but to frame Josephine and Radhika as the murderers. The film concludes with Gayathri institutionalised at a mental asylum, where the three girls, now close friends, pay her a visit.[5]
Cast
[edit]- Jyothika as Josephine / Josootty / Jo
- Sharbani Mukherjee as Radhika Menon
- Tabu as ACP Gayathri Varma
- Ishitta Arun as Geetha Damodaran
- Shweta Menon as police officer Jayashree
- Lakshmi as Malathi Menon (Radhika's aunt)
- K. P. A. C. Lalitha as Eliama Pothen (Josootty's mother)
- Major Ravi as Ramesh / Vikram
- Mita Vasisht as Prema Narayanan, the undercover police officer
- Sukumari as the hostel warden and a history professor
- Shanthi Williams as the college principal
- Manasi Scott as Manasi, Josephine's friend
- Suchithra as Advocate Soumini
- Manju Pillai as a police constable
- Poornima Parameswaran as Kutti Paru
- Jomol as Savitri, Gayathri's sister
- Deepti Bhatnagar in a special appearance
- Shari as Arundathi (cameo)
- Philomina as Vikram's neighbour (cameo)
- Neelam Singh as Neelam, Geetha's Friend
- Manjula Vijayakumar as college professor
Production
[edit]Soundtrack
[edit]Music by Vidyasagar. The song "Sarike Ninne Kannan" was reedited to show Jyothika's glasses reading 2006 instead of 2000 due to the film's delay.[6]
Song title | Singers |
---|---|
"Dhum Dhum Dhooreyetho" | K. S. Chitra, Sujatha Mohan, Sangeethaa-Sangeetha Sajith |
"Omana Thinkal" | K. S. Chitra, Sujatha Mohan, Sangeethaa-Sangeetha Sajith |
"Saarike Ninne" | K. S. Chitra, Sujatha Mohan |
"Mazha Paithu Thorna" | M. G. Sreekumar, Sujatha Mohan |
"Palapoovin Lolakunde" | M. G. Sreekumar, Sujatha Mohan |
"Rappadippakshi Idhile" | M. G. Sreekumar, Sujatha Mohan |
"Anthinila Manathu" | M. G. Sreekumar, Ila Arun |
Kanniludakkiya Kanthari | M. G Sreekumar |
Release
[edit]The film, initially slated for a 2000 release along with its Tamil version, the Tamil version released first. However, the Malayalam version got shelved after the box office failure of Tamil version. The Malayalam version was revived in 2006 and scheduled to release on 15 February 2007 before it was delayed to 18 April 2007.[1]
Reception
[edit]A critic from Indiaglitz wrote that "Rakkilipattu is definitely a watchable film for its narrative styles and splendor, rarely seen in recent day Malluwood cinema which has to compromise a lot in making, frames and sequences due to its restricted budgets. At least an occasional outing like this will definitely refresh the regulars in cinema halls who are tied down into stories of family feuds, logicless humor and rows over ancestral properties".[7][8]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Rakkilipattu in theatres soon". Indiaglitz. 12 February 2007.
- ^ "Friendship (2007) | Friendship Hindi Movie | Movie Reviews, Showtimes". NOWRUNNING. 23 January 2007.
- ^ "'Seeta Kalyanam' revived". Sify. 14 July 2004. Archived from the original on 19 May 2022.
- ^ "Home » Cinema News » It Looks Actress Jomol Is Making A Comeback?". Indiaglitz. 23 December 2016.
- ^ "രാക്കിളിപ്പാട്ട്: പ്രിയദര്ശന്റെ പൊളിച്ചെഴുത്ത്". Filmibeat (in Malayalam). 1 January 2004.
- ^ "rakkilipattu - Sarike Ninne kannan song". 22 April 2013 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Rakkilipattu review. Rakkilipattu Malayalam movie review, story, rating". Indiaglitz. 20 February 2007. Archived from the original on 21 January 2022. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
- ^ "Malayalam Movie Review : Rakkilipattu". bharatfamily.com. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.